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A special drop: characterising yeast isolates associated with fermented beverages produced by Australia's indigenous peoples

A special drop: characterising yeast isolates associated with fermented beverages produced by Australia's indigenous peoples
A special drop: characterising yeast isolates associated with fermented beverages produced by Australia's indigenous peoples

Way-a-linah, an alcoholic beverage produced from the fermented sap of Eucalyptus gunnii, and tuba, a fermented drink made from the syrup of Cocos nucifera fructifying bud, are two of several fermented beverages produced by Australian Aboriginal and Torres Strait people. Here we describe the characterisation of yeast isolates from samples associated with the fermentation of way-a-linah and tuba. Microbial isolates were obtained from two different geographical locations in Australia - the Central Plateau in Tasmania, and Erub Island in the Torres Strait. While Hanseniaspora species and Lachancea cidri were the most abundant species in Tasmania, Candida species were the most abundant in Erub Island. Isolates were screened for tolerance to stress conditions found during the production of fermented beverages and for enzyme activities relevant to the appearance, aroma and flavour of these beverages. Based on screening results, eight isolates were evaluated for their volatile profile during the fermentation of wort, apple juice and grape juice. Diverse volatile profiles were observed for beers, ciders and wines fermented with different isolates. These findings reveal the potential of these isolates to produce fermented beverages with unique aroma and flavour profiles and highlight the vast microbial diversity associated with fermented beverages produced by Australia's Indigenous peoples.

Fermentation, Non-saccharomyces, Yeast
0740-0020
Varela, Cristian
84214356-34dc-45bd-947f-bbab84c0f57d
Alperstein, Lucien
b8469eb8-aeff-446d-a3d0-3db4e9254050
Sundstrom, Joanna
6c6b3452-dfb3-4b5c-aa42-c721eed7b9bb
Solomon, Mark
9e821e99-033f-4fa9-8caf-441ca433ae8f
Brady, Maggie
3e6a6a17-240a-4981-912b-6b9a2ecab746
Borneman, Anthony
1489572d-e8df-4476-9629-8ebd4eb2729a
Jiranek, Vladimir
8e5a8dfd-f5b2-43e3-928b-11dff324abc7
Varela, Cristian
84214356-34dc-45bd-947f-bbab84c0f57d
Alperstein, Lucien
b8469eb8-aeff-446d-a3d0-3db4e9254050
Sundstrom, Joanna
6c6b3452-dfb3-4b5c-aa42-c721eed7b9bb
Solomon, Mark
9e821e99-033f-4fa9-8caf-441ca433ae8f
Brady, Maggie
3e6a6a17-240a-4981-912b-6b9a2ecab746
Borneman, Anthony
1489572d-e8df-4476-9629-8ebd4eb2729a
Jiranek, Vladimir
8e5a8dfd-f5b2-43e3-928b-11dff324abc7

Varela, Cristian, Alperstein, Lucien, Sundstrom, Joanna, Solomon, Mark, Brady, Maggie, Borneman, Anthony and Jiranek, Vladimir (2023) A special drop: characterising yeast isolates associated with fermented beverages produced by Australia's indigenous peoples. Food Microbiology, 112, [104216]. (doi:10.1016/j.fm.2023.104216).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Way-a-linah, an alcoholic beverage produced from the fermented sap of Eucalyptus gunnii, and tuba, a fermented drink made from the syrup of Cocos nucifera fructifying bud, are two of several fermented beverages produced by Australian Aboriginal and Torres Strait people. Here we describe the characterisation of yeast isolates from samples associated with the fermentation of way-a-linah and tuba. Microbial isolates were obtained from two different geographical locations in Australia - the Central Plateau in Tasmania, and Erub Island in the Torres Strait. While Hanseniaspora species and Lachancea cidri were the most abundant species in Tasmania, Candida species were the most abundant in Erub Island. Isolates were screened for tolerance to stress conditions found during the production of fermented beverages and for enzyme activities relevant to the appearance, aroma and flavour of these beverages. Based on screening results, eight isolates were evaluated for their volatile profile during the fermentation of wort, apple juice and grape juice. Diverse volatile profiles were observed for beers, ciders and wines fermented with different isolates. These findings reveal the potential of these isolates to produce fermented beverages with unique aroma and flavour profiles and highlight the vast microbial diversity associated with fermented beverages produced by Australia's Indigenous peoples.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 9 January 2023
e-pub ahead of print date: 10 January 2023
Published date: 1 June 2023
Additional Information: Copyright © 2023 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Keywords: Fermentation, Non-saccharomyces, Yeast

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 482986
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/482986
ISSN: 0740-0020
PURE UUID: 1a4710c7-6a61-4a19-abd5-89b89fcba91d
ORCID for Vladimir Jiranek: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-9775-8963

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 18 Oct 2023 16:37
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 04:12

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Contributors

Author: Cristian Varela
Author: Lucien Alperstein
Author: Joanna Sundstrom
Author: Mark Solomon
Author: Maggie Brady
Author: Anthony Borneman
Author: Vladimir Jiranek ORCID iD

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