Influence of Key Processes on the Aroma Formation of Cicada Black Tea
Xueke Li, Qiaoyi Zhou, Chengying Ma, Hongling Xia, Dongxia Liang, Aiqing Miao, Fanrong Cao, Caijin Ling

TL;DR
This study explores how processing steps affect the aroma of Cicada black tea, identifying key volatile compounds and optimal conditions for enhancing its unique flavor.
Contribution
The study identifies 12 key volatile compounds and optimal processing parameters that enhance the aroma of Cicada black tea.
Findings
Ninety volatile compounds were identified, with 12 key volatiles significantly contributing to Cicada black tea aroma.
Withering enhances floral and fruity aromas, while fermentation intensifies honey-like and sweet notes via carotenoid-derived volatiles.
Optimal aroma attributes were achieved with 55% moisture content during withering and 5 hours of fermentation.
Abstract
Cicada black tea is made from Empoasca onukii-infested tea leaves. The biochemical differences between Cicada black tea and regular black tea, and the dynamic changes in volatile components during processing, remain unclear. This study focused on the withering and fermentation stages, which most significantly affect the quality of black tea, to systematically investigate cicada black tea aroma formation. Ninety volatile compounds were identified, among which 12 key volatiles significantly contributed to the aroma characteristics. During withering, floral and fruity aromas were enhanced. Fermentation primarily intensified honey-like and sweet notes, which were mainly regulated by carotenoid-derived volatiles with low odor thresholds, such as β-Damascenone. Withering to a moisture content of 55% (17 h) and fermenting for 5 h comprised the optimal processing parameters to achieve the best…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTea Polyphenols and Effects · Heavy Metals in Plants · Fermentation and Sensory Analysis
