ON-SITE TECHNICAL INFORMATION

Similar documents
WineEng - NZ Winery Resources Future Challenges. The National Conference & Exhibition of the WEA

2017 PWGT Spring Workshop. Christian BUTZKE Professor of Enology Purdue Wine Grape Team

Wine Preparation. Nate Starbard Gusmer Enterprises Davison Winery Supplies August, 2017

Alcohol management in the winery

2009 Australian & New Zealand Winemakers P/L

Brettanomyces prevention

Water Technologies & Solutions. wine processing. 21 st century membrane technology

Dr. Christian E. BUTZKE Enology Professor Indiana Wine Grape Council. (765) FS Room

Dr. Christian E. BUTZKE Enology Professor PURDUE UNIVERSITY

membrane technology forum Frederick Liberatore & Jamie Vinsant Minneapolis, Minnesota 3-5 June, 2015

Tartrate Stability. Mavrik North America Bob Kreisher, Ph.D

Managing Wine Faults and Taints

Sculpting and Restoring the Wine You Want

Wine Treatments & Techniques

Christian Butzke & Jill Blume enology.butzke.com

A brief look into driving style in red wine production. Timothy Donahue M.S. Director of Winemaking College Cellars of Walla Walla

Winemaking Summarized

The Pall Oenofine XL System. Single Step Protein Stabilization and Clarification Eric Bosch Winery Engineers Association June 2012

During this November trip 9 wineries have been visited 5 wineries had been audited in March and 4 were new to join the program.

Bottling Day Considerations Preserving Your Hard Work. Luke Holcombe cell

Michael T. Frow Susan L. Kerr. ChE 4273 Dr. Miguel Bagajewicz

Solid Phase Micro Extraction of Flavor Compounds in Beer

POWERED BY COLD BREW NITRO COFFEE FULL EQUIPMENT LINE

MAKING WINE WITH HIGH AND LOW PH JUICE. Ethan Brown New Mexico State University 11/11/2017

TORR Dispensing. Represented by Portavin. Welcome to this new and innovative way to provide wine by the glass. Key Elements

Acta Chimica and Pharmaceutica Indica

ClearFlux. Dialyzer Regeneration System

TESTING WINE STABILITY fining, analysis and interpretation

INSTRUCTIONS FOR CO-INOCULATION

(a) Dead-end/conventional filtration fluid flow perpendicular to the filter medium. (b) Crossflow filtration fluid flow parallel to the filter

SIGMA The results count

CONCENTRATION OF AROMA AND VITAMIN RICH FRUIT JUICES BY COMPLEX MEMBRANE TECHNOLOGY

Timing of Treatment O 2 Dosage Typical Duration During Fermentation mg/l Total Daily. Between AF - MLF 1 3 mg/l/day 4 10 Days

ChAteau de Sours. Martin Krajewski Saint Quentin de Baron. Tél. +33 (0) Fax. +33 (0)

Ganimede. simply a better wine...

EXTRACTION PROCEDURE

SIGMA It s the result that counts

How to fine-tune your wine

When quality comes first. Solutions for craft brewers

Chair J. De Clerck IV. Post Fermentation technologies in Special Beer productions Bottle conditioning: some side implications

Stuck / Sluggish Wine Treatment Summary

POWERED BY NITRO COLD BREW COFFEE FULL EQUIPMENT LINE

Novozymes & Gusmer Enterprises WINE ENZYMES SOLUTIONS

FLOTTWEG CENTRIFUGES FOR WINE PRODUCTION Maximum Purity, Improved Quality, Higher Yields

RESOLUTION OIV-OENO

WINE ON TAP. Draft Guide

Presenter: Jasha Karasek

JUICE EXTRACTION AND FILTRATION JUICE EXTRACTION METHOD AND EQUIPMENT

Initial Grape Processing Mass Balance Calculations

Natural cork - an extraordinary product

Notes on acid adjustments:

HONEY. Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations

Viniflora PRELUDE Product Information

DR. BRUCE ZOECKLEIN, PROFESSOR EMERITUS, VIRGINIA TECH

Traditional Method Sparkling Winemaking

Introduction. 12 CO H 2 O = C 12 H 22 O O 2 carbon dioxide + water = sucrose + oxygen

Mousiness, Brettanomyces, Cork Taints

Types of Sanitizers. Heat, w/ water or steam to saturate effect

Dr. Christian E. BUTZKE Associate Professor of Enology Department of Food Science. (765) FS Room 1261

GEA Plug & Win. Triple win centrifuge skids for craft brewers

Daniel Pambianchi 10 WINEMAKING TECHNIQUES YOU NEED TO KNOW MAY 20-21, 2011 SANTA BARBARA, CA

Fining, Filtration and Bottling. Kay Simon & Clay Mackey, Proprietors Chinook Wines Prosser, Washington

OenoFoss. Instant quality control throughout the winemaking process. Dedicated Analytical Solutions

ECOBULK WINE-STORE-AGE HIGHEST FOOD SAFETY AND COST-EFFECTIVENESS IN WINE PRODUCTION

SUCCESSFUL BOTTLING by Lum Eisenman

Innovative Water Conservation Measures Rainwater to Winery Practices

Beer Preparation for Packaging. Jamie Ramshaw M.Brew Simpsons Malt

Rapid Analysis of Soft Drinks Using the ACQUITY UPLC H-Class System with the Waters Beverage Analysis Kit

Genius simple solution to the trub pile. UKBrewer

Extraction of Acrylamide from Coffee Using ISOLUTE. SLE+ Prior to LC-MS/MS Analysis

DR. RENEE THRELFALL RESEARCH SCIENTIST INSTITUTE OF FOOD SCIENCE & ENGINEERING UNIVERSITY OF ARKANSAS

POSITION DESCRIPTION

3M Water Filtration Products High Flow Series. Recipe. Quality. Water

Determination of Melamine Residue in Milk Powder and Egg Using Agilent SampliQ Polymer SCX Solid Phase Extraction and the Agilent 1200 Series HPLC/UV

Aging with different types of oaks: adaptations according to berry profiles and winemaking.

YEAST STARTERS. Brewers make wort, YEAST MAKE BEER. A few keys to turning GOOD homebrew into GREAT homebrew

Analysis of Resveratrol in Wine by HPLC

MIC305 Stuck / Sluggish Wine Treatment Summary

Solid Phase Micro Extraction of Flavor Compounds in Beer

DISPENSED WATER EQUIPMENT

BARRELS, BARREL ADJUNCTS, AND ALTERNATIVES

New Developments and Applications of Resin Systems for the Treatment of Citrus Products Containing Pulp and Cloud

Press Release 03/06/2015 Törley - The Company

Emerging Applications

The Fruit Wine Industry Production, Marketing & Promotion. Dominic Rivard WinePlanet Consulting

, FAX

wine la sorda La Sorda 2015 technical data:

Oxygen Uptake old problem, new solutions

GAGGIA VALUES LONG ESPRESSO TRADITION AT HOME AS IN COFFEE SHOP EASY MULTIPLE CHOICE

IT HAD BETTER NOT BE MY FAULT

Innovative filtration. Let s be clear!

KEY STEPS OF ROSE WINEMAKING. Eglantine Chauffour, Enartis USA

September is NATIONAL PREPAREDNESS MONTH

PROCESSING THE GRAPES WHITE WINEMAKING

3M TM Water Filtration Products High Flow Series. Recipe. Quality. Water

Chapter 8: Troubleshooting

Rotting Grapes to Perfection: Winemaking. James Osborne PhD, Dept Food Science Oregon State University

TRUSTED RELIABLE QUALITY

FOOD PROCESSING INDUSTRY (BREWERIES, WINERIES WASTE)

GEA Wine Decanter. Make every grape count

Transcription:

WINE BEFORE VA REMOVAL HIGH PRESSURE DIAPHRAGM PUMP NANOFILTRATION MEMBRANES ACID ABSORBTION COLUMN CONCENTRATED WINE STREAM WINE AFTER VA REMOVAL DE-ACIDIFIED PERMEATE STREAM RECOMBINED WINE WITH 30% REDUCTION IN VA ON-SITE TECHNICAL INFORMATION System Flow Rate: 1,800-4,000 Litres/hr (475-1,000 gal/hr) VA Reduction / pass: 30-40% Preferred process: Tank to tank configuration Power required: 208/240V (30 amp), 480V (20 amp) or 380V (30 amp) Water required: Running water at 30 psi (minimum) Nitrogen required: Single cylinder Minimnum wine inlet temperature: 10ºC minimum. 13-15ºC preferred. 50ºF minimum. 50-60ºF preferred. Maximum residual sugar (RS) level: 3% (if higher please discuss) Minimum recommended volume: 1,200 Litres (320 gallons) (Use Sweetspotter for smaller volumes) Glycol cooling: Not required Clarity required for processing: Racked twice, minimum

WINE BEFORE VA REMOVAL HIGH PRESSURE DIAPHRAGM PUMP NANOFILTRATION MEMBRANES ACID ABSORBTION COLUMN CONCENTRATED WINE STREAM WINE AFTER VA REMOVAL DE-ACIDIFIED PERMEATE STREAM RECOMBINED WINE WITH 30% REDUCTION IN VA ON-SITE TECHNICAL INFORMATION System Flow Rate: 1,700-4,000 Litres/hr (450-1,000 gal/hr) 4EP Reduction expected / pass: 25-30% 4EG Reduction expected / pass: 15-20% Preferred process: Tank to tank configuration Power required: 208/240V (30 amp), 480V (20 amp) or 380V (30 amp) Water required: Running water at 30 psi (minimun) Nitrogen required: Single cylinder Minimum wine inlet temperature: 10ºC minimum. 13-15ºC preferred 50ºF minimum. 50-60ºF preferred Maximum residual suger (RS) level: 3% (if higher, please call us) Min. recommended lot size: 2,000 Litres (530 gallons) (Use Sweetspotter for smaller volumes) Glycol cooling: Not required Clarity requied for processing: Racked twice, minimum

THE TECHNOLOGY Here is another classic example of a unique VA Filtration technology doing the job smarter. Our Lo-Cross-Flo mobile microfiltration system is not a cross flow filter system, but uses low cross flow filtration mode, where tangential wine flow is kept to a minimum. Instead, utilising the considerably increased surface area, to compensate for any loss in flow rate, we can feed semi dead-end, as well as have a lower flux rate per m² with an immediate lower trans-membrane pressure. And when needs be, the filtered solids within the membrane can be backwashed into a system storage tank where it can be further filtered using cross flow filtration. Ultimately this system, operating in Australia, South Africa and USA, creates a far gentler, one-step filtration for your wine. THE SPECIFICATIONS Flow rate: Power required: Final filtered quality: Membrane type: Maximum operating pressure: Average operating TMP: Maximum inlet turbidity of wine: Expected losses 2,000-4,000 Litres/hr (White) (530-1,000 gal/hr) 1,200-2,400 Litres/hr (Red) (320-640 gal/hr) 208/240V (20 amp), 480V (20 amp) or 380V (30 amp) <1 NTU Hollow fibre polyethersulfone or spiral wound 20 psi 3-8 psi 600 NTU (White), 200 NTU (Red) 1-2% of overall volume THE ADVANTAGES One step, sterile filtration No heat increase in process means less oxidization Less handling of your wine Your wine passes through bottling line filter cartridges

UNTAINTED WINE FOR GOOD Since 2004, we have been providing winemakers around the world with a unique single-pass treatment process to remove the musty, moldy aroma of TCA (2,4,6, Trichloroanisole) and TBA (2,4,6, Tribomoanisole). The wine passes through a system of filter media canisters that targets TCA/TBA and all related anisoles. Once again, this is a gentle, oncethrough filtration, and wine quality is untouched. One barrel to large volumes can be processed. THE SPECIFICATIONS Volumes processed: Processing Rate: Detectable TCA/TBA levels in wine: TCA levels treatable successfully: Levels analysed exiting the system: Wine quality after TCA/TBA removal: Single barrel to 400,000+ Litres (100,000+ gallons), 4-4,000 Litres/hr (1-1,000 gal/hr) < 2 µg/litre (0.5 µg/gallon) Depending on wine type < 30 µg/litre (7.5 µg/gallon) < 1µg/Litre (.25 µg/gallon) Excellent POTENTIAL CAUSES OF TCA There s quite a few but be particularly aware of chlorinated process water, barrels, wooden pallets, corks, filter media, oak chips, packaging products and wooden structures. CORK TAINT PROBLEM! WHAT DO I DO? First, send a sample of your suspect wine in a foil capped, glass container to a reputable lab. Then, if the results aren t good, send us two 750ml sample bottles for a TCA removal test. We ll have a result back to you in 2 days.

LESS IS MORE Bottom line Lees can make you money. Our experience has shown that after picking, crushing and tanking, Lees still contains about 80% juice. With roughly 5% of your volume being Lees, that adds up. With your choice of a 10m² or a 4m² rotary drum vacuum filter, and treating from 400 litres up to 2,400 litres an hour from fully self-contained on a trailer, you will be increasing your profit. THE SPECIFICATIONS Flow rate: Power required - Uninterrupted: Final filtered quality: System type: Anticipated recovery: Cake disposal: On Site Requirements: 400-800 Litres/hr (4m²) (100-200 gal/ hr (4m²) 208/240V (30 amp) or 480V (20 amp) 20-30 NTU Rotary Drum Vacuum Filter 60-80% on Red wine lees 70-80% on White wine lees Winery responsibility Continuous water supply Sufficient 3 phase power supply

Have you had a stuck ferment? Have you tried a re-start, but the fermentation has stuck again? Are you struggling to re-start a fermentation due to excessive VA or ethanol content in the wine, but would rather not pay for both VA reduction and ethanol reduction? Would you like to stop your fermentation at 14.7% ethanol, but there is still 10 g/l of residual sugar remaining? NOW YOU CAN WITH OUR LATEST RESIDUAL SUGAR RE- DUCTION PROCESSTHE TECHNOLOGY Wines with residual sugar levels of up to 20 g/l (2%) can be reduced to less than 4g/l using a revolutionary membrane filtration process. The process, developed though extensive in-field testing, is designed to target the glucose/ fructose only and remove these compounds from solution. During the reduction of residual sugar, several other processes are possible, these include VA reduction, DES reduction as well as other low molecular undesirables present in the wine at the time. The ethanol content of the wine remains constant throughout the treatment. If ethanol reduction is required though, this can be achieved through our on-site ethanol reduction system. Typical losses depend on the starting content of the residual sugar in the wine. A typical example follows: Starting volume: Starting glucose/fructose: Required glucose/fructose: Sugar to be removed: Starting TA: Volume of sugar solution: Volume of wine at end of run: Ending TA: 10,000 liters 10 g/l 2 g/l 80 kg 7 g/l 400 liters (at end of run) 9,600 liters containing 2 g/l of glucose/fructose 6.1 g/l As one can see there is a reduction in the TA as well as the volume associated with the process. The remaining sugar solution is at a 20% concentration, with a TA of close to 15 g/l and can be utilized as a concentrate for additions to other ferments. The process is gentle on the wine and has been designed as usual with the integrity of the wine in focus.

THE SPECIFICATIONS Flow rate: Maximum starting R.S. Process temp: Power requirement: 500-1000 gal/hr Dependant on tolerable volume loss Cellar temp 208V/240V/480V - 3 phase, 30/20 amp On-site requirements: Volume of sugar solution: Wine feed turbidity: Wine in tank, water, nitrogen gas, floor drains 400 liters (at end of run) Less than 50 NTU

WINE BEFORE SMOKE REDUCTION HIGH PRESSURE DIAPHRAGM PUMP LMW PHENOL REMOVAL MEMBRANES SMOKE ADSORPTIONS COLUMN CONCENTRATED WINE STREAM WINE AFTER SMOKE REDUCTION PERMEATE WITHOUT SMOKE RECOMBINED WINE WITH REDUCTION IN SMOKE ON-SITE TECHNICAL INFORMATION System Flow Rate: Preferred process: Power required: Water required: Nitrogen required: Minimum wine inlet temperature: Maximum residual suger (RS) level: Min. recommended lot size: Glycol cooling: Clarity requied for processing: 1,700-4,000 Litres/hr (450-1,000 gal/hr) Tank to tank configuration 208/240V (30 amp), 480V (20 amp) or 380V (30 amp) Running water at 30 psi (minimun) Single cylinder 10ºC minimum. 13-15ºC preferred 50ºF minimum. 50-60ºF preferred 3% (if higher, please call us) 2,000 Litres (530 gallons) (Use Sweetspotter for smaller volumes) Not required Racked twice, minimum