Hartford Courant

You paid how much for that mocktail?

Spirit-free drinks all the rage, but to many, they are not worth it

- By Alyson Krueger

On a Saturday night in December, Megan Horton sat at the bar of Nubeluz, a 50th-floor lounge on top of New York City’s newest Ritz Carlton hotel, savoring a drink. She was in town from San Francisco, where she works for Apple in client services, and was in the mood to splurge.

With the city skyline in view around her, she watched as the bartender crafted an Emerald Coin, a drink with honeydew, lemongrass, lime and celery, and served it in a coupe glass.

She drank it alongside a friend and other stylish patrons. The only difference: Her cocktail didn’t have any alcohol in it.

Horton, 43, stopped drinking regularly over the past few months, mainly because she no longer craves alcohol. “I partied for so many years, but now I don’t feel like drinking,” she said. “Something has shifted in my brain.”

When she came to New York City for a weekend girls’ trip last month, she was planning to order seltzers when she went out. “I love the ambiance, and I can still have fun without drinking,” she said. But she quickly realized most establishm­ents, including the city’s most popular bars, had a sophistica­ted and comprehens­ive list of spirit-free cocktails.

She didn’t even mind that the mocktails at Nubeluz cost $20, a few dollars less than those with alcohol. “It was so fun that I could get a cute cocktail along with my friend,” she said. “Plus, I’ll pay whatever to feel happy that I’m not hungover the next day.”

Across New York City, locals and tourists alike are indulging in elaborate, pricey spirit-free

cocktails. Far from your everyday “mocktail,” these are imagined by profession­al mixologist­s, crafted with premium ingredient­s including distilled alcohol-free spirits, and presented in sparkling glassware with garnishes.

“This isn’t just a bartender mixing cranberry juice and adding ginger ale and calling it a fancy cocktail,” said Chelsea Demark who creates beverages for bars including the Thompson Central Park. That hotel, which opened about a year ago,

serves a drink called a Bee’s Knees with a Twist, which costs $19 and includes spiritless gin, lime and honey (cocktails with alcohol range from $21 to $28).

To the naked eye, these booze-free cocktails are indistingu­ishable from the ones that will get you tipsy.

Miguel Lancha, who leads the cocktail program at Nubeluz, said he’s had multiple guests accidental­ly order spirit-free drinks off the menu. “I would say when they find out their drink has no alcohol, on the whole, they are pleasantly surprised,” he said, laughing.

Some sober patrons are thrilled with these options because it allows them to still enjoy the experience of going to a high-end cocktail destinatio­n. Others, however, say the cocktails don’t taste good, aren’t healthy enough or are simply not worth the high prices.

Still, they are selling. At the Thompson Central Park, one mocktail is sold for every five with alcohol, according to Demark.

“Our alcohol-free cocktails now make up almost 5% of our sales,” said Tony Mosca, the director of food and beverage at the Carlyle, the famed Upper East Side hotel. “It shows there is a market for this.”

“We are seeing people who are looking for an alcoholic beverage, but they might have a secondary drink, which might be alcohol-free,” he added.

Bemelmans Bar, the Carlyle’s piano bar, has four nonalcohol­ic options, including Pepito “The

Bad Hat” with spirit-free tequila, lime juice, orange syrup and club soda, which costs $26. Four more will be added within the year, according to Mosca.

Mixologist­s say they can now offer nonalcohol­ic cocktails because they have novel ingredient­s.

“There used to be no nonalcohol­ic spirits, so alcohol-free cocktails would just be juice and soda,” Lancha said. “Now the ingredient­s available to make the drinks are very modern and only getting better.”

Ritual Zero Proof, a company that produces nonalcohol­ic spirits for cocktails, for example, makes a whiskey, gin, tequila and rum alternativ­e. Seedlip is another company that makes nonalcohol­ic distilled spirits with a variety of flavor profiles, many of which match up with traditiona­l types of liquor.

One of the reasons nonalcohol­ic cocktails are so expensive is that the ingredient­s are also costly. Nonalcohol­ic spirits can retail for around $40 a bottle. “They are putting effort into the distillati­on just like a spirit is,” Demark said. “They cost us a good chunk of change, and often you have to use more of them than regular spirits to achieve the same results because the flavor isn’t as strong.”

Some patrons can tell. When Sandie Gong,

33, who works for a tech company and lives in

Brooklyn, got pregnant last year, she ordered spirit-free cocktails at five different bars in Brooklyn and Manhattan. “I remember one of the first drinks I had was an Aperol spritz, but it tasted like it was made entirely of sugar,” she said.

She didn’t just try cocktails. “I bought a $25 dollar bottle of nonalcohol­ic red wine that tasted like it had gone flat,” Gong said.

“I just love the taste of alcohol, and these drinks don’t taste like it,” she said. “I just want them to create a synthetic alcohol that tastes like alcohol.”

Indeed, mixologist­s say one of the challenges of nonalcohol­ic cocktails (and another reason the price is so high) is that zero-proof spirits can be more difficult to work with. They are also new, so there has been little time to get them right.

“You can shake the heck out of a gin, and it still tastes like gin, but if you do that with a nonalcohol­ic spirit, you might lose all the taste,” Demark said.

Another complaint from patrons is that drinking nonalcohol­ic cocktails still feels unhealthy.

“Most mocktails at restaurant­s are like sugarfille­d kids’ drinks,” said

Lisa Morse, 55, a clinical psychologi­st in New York City.

She tries to stay away from alcohol because it gives her a headache and impacts her sleep. She’s tried many spirit-free concoction­s at bars and restaurant­s — “I like the experience of having a cocktail without the negative health effects that come with alcohol,” she said — but has left not feeling good about what she put into her body.

Instead, she’s started to make cocktails at home by mixing seltzer with Ghia, a booze-free, low-sugar aperitif (a bottle costs around $40).

“If we have people for cocktails or dinner, it’s fun to have a drink and share in the experience,” she said.

 ?? KRISTA SCHLUETER/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Squaring the Circle is one of Nubeluz’s mocktails.
KRISTA SCHLUETER/THE NEW YORK TIMES Squaring the Circle is one of Nubeluz’s mocktails.

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