BrainStuff Classics: What Happens to Wine Grape Waste? - podcast episode cover

BrainStuff Classics: What Happens to Wine Grape Waste?

Jun 26, 20213 min
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Episode description

After winemakers extract grapes' juice, they're left with a lot of fruit skins and pulp. Learn what happens to all that goo in this classic episode of BrainStuff, based on this article: https://science.howstuffworks.com/environmental/green-tech/sustainable/what-do-winemakers-do-with-grape-waste.htm

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Transcript

Speaker 1

Welcome to brain Stuff production of I Heart Radio. Hey brain Stuff Lauren Bogelbaum here with a classic episode from our archives. Or as much as we can all do at home and in our personal lives to support environmentally friendly practices, often the real work comes at the industrial scale. Today's question is a sticky one. What happens to the grape waste produced during wine making? Hi, brain Stuff, Lauren

Bogelbaum Here. It takes about two point six pounds that's one point two ms of grapes to produce a standard to seven and fifty million liter bottle of wine, and after the grapes are squeezed, about of that weight remains in the form of grape skins, seeds, and stems. Pomis or grape mark, as grape waste is called. Is something that the global wine industry produces a lot of, close to twelve million tons or eleven million metric tons every year. So what do wineries do with all that gooey stuff?

You might think that disposing of vast quantities of it would be a sticky problem, But even though the tasty juice has been squeezed out, the material that's left behind has a variety of uses, as A two five article from Wine Maker Magazine notes the exact composition of palmice depends upon what sort of wine has been made and

at what point the liquid was extracted. With white wine, for example, the juice is removed prior to fermentation, so the palmice is rich in sugar, nitrogen, and amino acids. With red wine, in which the grapes are fermented along with the juice before being pressed, there's less sugar left and not as much of the tannins that give wine

it's bitter taste. But fermented palmice still contains a whole lot of different components, including cellulose, tartaric acid, trace amounts of other organic acids, sugars, tannins, plant pigments, and some aromatic chemicals. One way to get rid of all of that palmice is to use it to make other types of alcoholic beverages. Palmis from white wine can be distilled

to make grappa, a traditional allion brandy. Palmas also traditionally has been recycled as fertilizer or animal feed, but scientists are increasingly interested in studying ways of extracting useful components of great mark for applications such as fuel alcohol production and biofuel energy production, as well as for the production

of biosurficants, which are used in environmental cleanups. Food scientists have also realized that palmas contains a lot of healthy stuff antioxidants, fiber, and compounds that help moderate blood sugar and create a feeling of fullness, just to name a few. These can be used to make other foods healthier. Palmas has been used as an ingredient in bread, cereal, pasta, cheese, ice cream, and has even been added to meat and seafood. In Northern California Wine Country, some wineries use it to

make cookies, flour, and culinary oils. You can even find teas made from wine grape skins if you're looking for a different sort of sip. Today's episode is based on the article what do Winemakers Do with grapewaist on how stuff Works dot Com, written by Patrick Jake Tiger. Brain Stuff is production of I heart Radio in partnership with how stuff Works dot Com and is produced by Tyler Clang.

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