The levels of resveratrol and related polyphenols in grapes naturally increase over the course of the fall and winter, making ice wine grapes particularly high in these molecules since that crop isn’t harvested until the winter months.
“There are lots of these molecules in the ice syrup grapes but only relatively small amounts make their way into the ice syrup because it is water-based,” Stuart says.
Stuart has helped design an industrially scalable process to enhance the levels of these beneficial molecules in ice syrup by extracting them from the waste pomace left over after the syrup has been produced and then adding them back into the syrup to create an anti-oxidant enhanced product.
“Our challenge was to find a way to do that. Our solution is to extract into a water soluble carrier molecule that loads up the ‘good’ molecules from grape pomace and thus dissolve them in water,” Stuart explains, adding the process can increase the antioxidant levels in a water-based product like ice syrup more than 1,000 fold.
Stuart’s work is only at lab scale currently, which he hopes will wrap up by the end of summer in order to be ready to start commercial-scale production and testing.
He hopes to secure funding to get a more complete profile of the polyphenols in the pomace, as well as complete some taste and flavour profiling on the carrier molecule they’ve chosen – one that is already widely used in the food industry.
Source: Aginnovation