Marin Independent Journal

When there’s no alcohol in your glass

- By Eric Asimov

Wine is hard to imagine without the alcohol. It’s integral to its texture, flavor, complexity and, of course, the buzz.

Yet interest in alcohol-free wine has grown rapidly over the past couple of years.

According to Nielsen data, retail sales of nonalcohol­ic wines in the United States shot upward during the year ending Feb. 20, rising 34% over those 52 weeks after staying relatively stable from 2016-19. The rise was even more pronounced, 40%, in the last quarter of that year, which included Dry January, a month of voluntary abstinence stoked by social media.

The annual sales, worth roughly $36 million over the past year, are only a tiny fraction of the entire wine category, which saw more than $21 billion in that period. Only seven brands of alcohol-free wines had more than $1 million in sales, Nielsen reported.

That’s not much compared with other categories of nonalcohol­ic drinks like beer and cider, which offer a much greater selection than wine.

The option to drink wine without the physical and mental toll possibly exacted by alcohol? Cha-ching!

But interest has nonetheles­s grown fast enough in the past year that some in the wine trade now see it as an exciting opportunit­y.

“It’s the fastest-growing category in our portfolio right now,” says Kevin Pike, a proprietor of Schatzi Wines, a small importer and distributo­r in Milan, New York. “It’s up 1,000% and growing every day.”

Schatzi imports the EinsZwei-Zero series of alcohol-free wines from Leitz, an excellent and innovative riesling specialist in the Rheingau region of Germany. It is now selling three varieties: a riesling, a sparkling riesling and a sparkling rosé. The two sparklers also come in 250-milliliter cans, and Pike says he is hoping to add an alcohol-free pinot noir next year.

Another importer, Victor O. Schwartz of VOS Selections, brings in the Noughty alcoholfre­e sparkling chardonnay from Thomson & Scott, a merchant best-known for selling Skinny Prosecco. The bottles are intended for the diet-conscious, and Schwartz says the response to the wines has been great.

“I dipped my toe in the water and I was amazed at how much is going on in the alcohol-free zone,” he says. “I am already working on expanding the category in my portfolio. My customers want a range, and we will soon have a sparkling rosé from Noughty this summer.”

In the past, juice made of wine grapes and packaged in wine bottles has been marketed as an alternativ­e to wine. But grape juice and nonalcohol­ic wines are not at all the same.

Good grape juice can be a wonderful thing — delicious but usually very sweet. Nonalcohol­ic wine is produced by first making wine. Yeast ferment all or nearly all of the grape sugar into alcohol. Then, the alcohol is removed. The result is no more intoxicati­ng than grape juice, but it’s generally not as sweet and fundamenta­lly altered.

What’s the appeal? It’s not hard to fathom in a pandemic world that has become consumed not only with drinking wine — sales are way up on the alcoholic variety, too — but with healthfuln­ess, mindfulnes­s and the cluster of other self-care practices that are now referred to generally as “wellness.”

The option to drink wine without the physical and mental toll possibly exacted by alcohol? Chaching! Wine Intelligen­ce, a consumer research organizati­on, wrote recently that low- and no-alcohol wine was “an unmet consumer need,” particular­ly among younger people.

Practical reasons nonetheles­s are as important as any driven by social trends.

“I am thinking about people who are into fitness and wake up super early to run or work out, people who want to party but are the designated driver, people who want to take a night off from their regular bottle of wine with dinner, people who have to work after dinner,” Schwartz says. “All of these people enjoy drinking wine and don’t want to give that up, but are happy not to have alcohol interfere at these times with their busy and active lives.”

Just these sorts of practical concerns inspired Johannes Leitz of the Leitz winery to try to create a good nonalcohol­ic wine.

As Leitz tells it, a Norwegian chef, Odd Ivar Solvold, spoke to him a few years ago about the need for a good nonalcohol­ic wine, particular­ly in Norway, where the penalty for drunken driving, Solvold told him, was 10% of one’s annual income. He wanted something that was balanced and would match his cuisine, and he offered to pay Leitz that same price he got for his convention­al wines.

Leitz says he also had a personal desire for a nonalcohol­ic wine as heart issues were preventing him from consuming as much alcohol as had been customary for him.

Eliminatin­g the alcohol from a wine is not easy, at least, not if the nonalcohol­ic wine is going to be any good. The boiling point of alcohol, about 173 degrees, is lower than that of water, about 212 degrees. Theoretica­lly, you could simply heat the wine to 173 degrees for as long as it takes to boil off the alcohol. But that crude treatment would harm the flavor components of the wine, too.

Modern technology is more subtle. Both Leitz and Thomson & Scott use vacuum distillati­on, a process that essentiall­y separates a wine into its constituen­t parts at relatively low temperatur­es. The alcohol is then eliminated and the remaining parts reassemble­d.

Removing the alcohol is no minor surgery for a wine. Not only does it account for the intoxicati­ng effect, it contribute­s to the body and texture of a wine, as well as the flavors and potential for complexity.

In addition, no matter how relatively gentle the process, the removal of alcohol is nonetheles­s a harsh technologi­cal disruption of a wine. The sense of purity, energy and life that a good wine exudes is impossible in an alcohol-free bottle.

“You can’t compare it with wine,” Leitz says. “It’s different, and you might be a little disappoint­ed, but when you need a good beverage with really good food, mine comes closest to wine.”

In order to compensate for what’s missing, producers need to add something, usually a little sugar or grape juice to round out the texture. But Leitz says that the most important element in making a good nonalcohol­ic wine is the base wine itself.

“We are the only producer of nonalcohol­ic wine that uses their own wine,” he says. The riesling he uses, for example, would otherwise go into his EinsZwei-Dry, an excellent entry-level dry riesling.

I can’t say whether he’s really the only one. But I know that for its Noughty sparkling chardonnay, Thomson & Scott, a company based in London, buys chardonnay grapes from the La Mancha region of Spain and then sends the wine to Germany for vacuum distillati­on. Leitz rents his own unit and does it all on site.

Each of the bottles I tasted, the three from

Leitz and the Noughty, was maybe a bit sweet. None would be mistaken for a wine.

My favorite was the Leitz riesling, the still, not the bubbly. It was the only bottle where I could sense the varietal character of riesling — a touch of lime and apricot flashing intermitte­ntly.

Leitz’s sparkling riesling and sparkling rosé, made of pinot noir, both seemed simpler, as did the Noughty sparkling chardonnay. Partly, I think, this was because carbon dioxide is added to the wine for carbonatio­n, just as with a soft drink. This made them seem inert as opposed to the natural carbonatio­n that makes good sparkling wines feel alive.

 ?? FELIX SCHMITT — THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Nonalcohol­ic wines fill a need for the sober and occasional­ly abstinent, and the new generation of alcohol-free wines is promising.
FELIX SCHMITT — THE NEW YORK TIMES Nonalcohol­ic wines fill a need for the sober and occasional­ly abstinent, and the new generation of alcohol-free wines is promising.

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