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Natural Product Research

Formerly Natural Product Letters
Volume 29, 2015 - Issue 7
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Articles

Comparison of aroma-active volatiles and their sensory characteristics of mangosteen wines prepared by Saccharomyces cerevisiae with GC-olfactometry and principal component analysis

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Pages 656-662
Received 20 Aug 2014
Accepted 21 Oct 2014
Published online: 27 Nov 2014

Mangosteen fruit is fermented with five different strains (i.e. GRE (Y1), Lalvin RC212 (Y2), Lalvin D254 (Y3), CGMCC2.23 (Y4) and CGMCC2.4 (Y5)) of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae to make mangosteen wines. A total of 36 volatile compounds of the mangosteen wines were identified by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry and gas chromatography-pulsed flame photometric detection. A total of 35 odour-active compounds were identified by gas chromatography-olfactometry analysis and by the detection frequency (DF) method. The compounds with high DF values included ethyl octanoate, ethyl hexanoate and 3-methyl-2-butene-1-thiol. Principal component analysis was used to characterise the differences of the flavour profiles of those mangosteen wines. The result demonstrated that the samples could be divided into three groups that were associated closely with aroma-active compounds.

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Funding

This research was funded by the Natural Science Foundation of Shanghai Institute of Technology [grant number YYY-11607]; the National Natural Science Foundation of China [grant number 21476140], [grant number 21306114]; ‘Twelfth Five Year’ National Science and Technology Support Program Topic [grant number 2011BAD23B01].
 

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