Characteristics of Kloeckera:
- SO2 sensitivity is similar to that of Saccharomyces
- Cold tolerant so can readily grow in musts at temperatures between 10-15 oC
- Can survive much further into the fermentation, sometimes all the way to the end
- Can sometimes form thick, slimy scum, or stringy clumps that fall out later as fluffy lees
- Can make prodigious amounts of ethyl acetate (odor of airplane glue or nail plish) and amyl acetate (odor of bananas)
- Efficient in quickly depleting nutrients, particularly thiamine and other vitamins
- Microscopically, it resembles bowling pins or thin lemons with a knob on each end
Lisa Van de Water advises using a phase constrast microscope to examine the must for microbes. Before fermentation begins, if more than 5 or 10 non-Saccharomyces yeasts are seen in a 40x field, a problem is developing. Read about Kloeckera and more in the excellent online article Monitoring Microbes During Fermentation.
1. Wikipedia Glossary of Winemaking Terms
2. Lisa Van de Water, Monitoring Microbes During Fermentation
3. P. Ribéreau-Gayon, D. Dubourdieu, B. Donèche, and A. Lonvaud, Handbook of Enology, Volume 1, The Microbiology of Wine and Vinifications, Second Edition, 2006, John Wiley & Sons, Ltd, pg. 41.
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