1

Reduction


Reduction in wine occurs when yeast become stressed during fermentation through lack of nutrients, oxygen and particularly poor cell wall integrity. The yeast produce hyrdrogen sulphide, H2S or rotten egg gas as a result.

« Back to Wine Words Index

Reduction in wine occurs when yeast become stressed during fermentation through lack of nutrients and oxygen. This results in poor cell wall integrity. Yeast require oxygen to produce the fatty acids and lipids necessary to build the cell walls. As they multiply by budding the fatty acids and lipids are diluted and the cell walls can no longer hold the acid wine out. The pH neutral insides of the cell becomes stressed by the acid that floods in through the leaky cell walls and the yeast produce hyrdrogen sulphide or rotten egg gas in response. Aerating the wine can help fix this. If a wine is still reduced after alcoholic fermentation has finished, small amounts of copper sulphate can be added to remove it. The compound formed falls out of solution and is removed with solids by racking or filtering the wine. If hydrogen sulphide is not removed it can be further reduced into more advanced sulphides called mercaptans that smells like garlic, onion and even burnt rubber. These compound are added to natural gas so we can smell it!

Winemakers can act both to prevent and cure this issue by aerating fermenting wines, ensuring the juice or must has sufficient nutrient to ferment to completion and building strong yeast cultures to inoculated with, if necessary.

Apart from the various aroma, reduction can give the wine a hard angular finish.

Some strains of yeast and grape varieties are more likely to produce sulphides than others.

Note sulphides and sulphur are completely different chemical.

Synonyms:
Reduction
Hydrogen Sulphide
Reduced
Mercaptan
Reduit
Rotten Egg Gas
H2S
Sulphide
« Back to Wine Words Index

Feeling Thirsty?

Antoniolo Gattinara Riserva DOCG 2016

Nebbiolo | Italy, Alto Piemonte

Seriously impressive gear. Antoniolo's 2016's have excellent, long linear shape. Galloni's call on power and intensity is spot on. I'd add grace and poise. Nuanced, complex, and layered. The fruit profile is excellent. This is one of the most exciting Nebbiolos I've had in some time. Given our rotating list of over 300 available Nebbiolos that is no small statement. I could wax lyrical about aromas and flavours, let's just say they are entrancing. The mouthfeel has a vitalising grip that sits
$140
$133ea in any 3+
$126ea in any 6+

Domaine Thibert Pouilly-Fuissé ‘Menetieres’ 2019

Chardonnay | Pouilly-Fuisse, Burgundy

To be labelled 1er Cru from the 2020 Vintage! “Wow – a special vibration to the aromatic here – the oak not visible, maybe a small accent of aniseed – but the ‘brilliant-est’ of these aromas. Not a wine of power. A wine of fluidity, of minerality that melts over the palate – another completely absorbing wine and a wonderfully persistent finish.” Bill Nanson, The Burgundy Report “There is enough reduction to mask the underlying fruit that citrus elements are discernib
$140
$135ea in any 3+
$130ea in any 6+
This is the largest and most famous Grand Cru; its fame based on its history as one of Chablis’ first vineyards. The appellation enjoys a southerly aspect with very white, dense and deep clay soil, resting on a limestone bed 80 cm below the ground, which brings to the wine those spicy notes so typical of this terroir. Note: from 4 separate parcels totaling 4.11 ha, 3 of which are all at the top of the slope. If Kimmeridgian could be distilled, it would likely smell exactly like the nos
$168
$163ea in any 3+
$158ea in any 6+

Roagna Barbaresco Pajè Vecchie Viti MAGNUM 2016

Nebbiolo | Piedmont, Barbaresco

The 2015 Barbaresco Pajè Vecchie Viti captures everything that makes Nebbiolo so seductive. The 2016 Barbaresco Pajè Vecchie Viti is an exotic, totally beguiling wine laced with super-classic Nebbiolo notes of rose petal, orange peel, cinnamon and macerated cherry. Aromatic, sensual and constantly changing in the glass, the Pajè Vecchie Viti is everything Nebbiolo and Barbaresco are supposed to be. The complexity here is just unreal. Antonio Galloni, Vinous