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Pyruvic acid

A yellowish liquid (also acetylcarboxylic acid or pyruvate) which smells of acetic acid and from which acetaldehyde is formed during alcoholic fermentation with the aid of the enzyme pyruvate decarboxylase and vitamin B1. During malolactic fermentation it is converted (reduced) to lactic acid. Only very small amounts remain in the wine. See a list of wine ingredients under total extract.

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Egon Mark

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Egon Mark
Diplom-Sommelier, Weinakademiker und Weinberater, Volders (Österreich)

The world's largest Lexicon of wine terms.

26,381 Keywords · 46,989 Synonyms · 5,323 Translations · 31,715 Pronunciations · 202,661 Cross-references
made with by our author Norbert F. J. Tischelmayer. About the Lexicon

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