DOI: 10.3390/agronomy16131253 ISSN: 2073-4395

Cultivar-Specific Expression of the Vintage Effect in Furmint Grapes from the Tokaj Wine Region; Part II: Acid Balance, Potassium Accumulation and Tannin Content

Csaba Rácz, Krisztina Molnár, Tamás Dövényi-Nagy, Károly Bakó, István Kathy, István Szepsy, László Csige, Attila Csaba Dobos

Understanding how interannual climatic variability shapes must composition is critical for predicting wine quality under warming conditions, particularly for acid-retaining cultivars such as Vitis vinifera L. cv. Furmint. This study—conducted as a continuation of a previous investigation on Furmint berry weight, total soluble solids and total dry extract—evaluated titratable acidity, pH, potassium, ammonia and tannin content across three contrasting vintages (2022–2024) in the Tokaj wine region. Using a high-resolution meteorological dataset and an extensive climatic parameter matrix, exploratory analysis was conducted to evaluate responses, and the most influential thermal, radiation-related and water-balance related climatic factors associated with each must parameter were identified. Total acidity and pH showed consistent sensitivity to climatic variability: acidity decreased with mid-season warm nights and abundant summer rainfall, while pH was inversely associated with extreme heat events but increased under higher early-season rainfall and post-véraison irradiation. Potassium content exhibited partly atypical responses, showing positive correlations with late-season warm nights and frequent summer precipitation, and negative with early heat. Ammonia displayed weak to moderate climatic dependence, while tannic acid consistently decreased with higher thermal and irradiation loads. Overall, these results imply cultivar-specific climatic responses in Furmint and suggest that temperature extremes, nighttime heat and rainfall timing are important factors shaping must composition, providing a foundation to better understand the expression of vintage effects under climate change.

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