The Columbus Dispatch

Drinking without the booze

More zero-proof drinks being added to local menus

- Earl Hopkins Columbus Dispatch | USA TODAY NETWORK

As the “sober curious” craze continues to spill over to bars and restaurant­s across the country, Columbus residents are partaking in the rise of nonalcohol­ic offerings. h With local establishm­ents such as DEMARK, VASO Rooftop Lounge, Watershed Kitchen & Bar and others adding alcohol-free options, patrons are basking in the growing shift to zero-proof spirits and prime “mocktails.” h “For me, the trend overall rounds out the offering of hospitalit­y on the scope of the restaurant and bar industry,” said Joshua Gandee, beverage director at Watershed. “I feel like it was a part that was missing for a long time, so now to have that on a menu or as part of the conversati­on, shows inclusivit­y for individual­s who don’t drink at all, aren’t drinking for the night or are taking a round off.”

Gandee, who celebrated three years of sobriety last fall, said the expansion of these beverages allows nondrinkin­g customers to socialize alongside their friends without feeling left out. Instead of having a flat carbonated drink or diluted alternativ­e, bartenders have forged more intentiona­l and well-crafted flavors.

James Defrance, a bartender at the Refectory Restaurant on the Northwest Side, attributes the rise in alcohol-free items to the surge in demand.

“Nowadays, there are so many different groups of people who may want to have an interestin­g drink experience but aren’t looking to drink,” he said. “There are people with medical conditions, dietary restrictio­ns, religious restrictio­ns; they’re pregnant or there’s just not a time they are drinking.”

In his nine years of sobriety, Brandon Bir, 38, said he’s noticed an added effort to accommodat­e nonalcohol­ic drinkers in the past few years. Rather than pour up tasteless mocktails, the Gahanna resident said local bars and bartenders have been more intentiona­l in their craftsmans­hip, which has enhanced his and others’ drinking experience­s.

“It was really difficult to find those beverages, but more and more you see nonalcohol­ic spirits on bar shelves and people empathizin­g with people who don’t want to drink alcohol,” he said. “It’s really grown in popularity over the last two years and it’s accelerati­ng.”

According to the Internatio­nal Wines and Spirits Record, a market-research firm that tracks worldwide alcohol trends, global sales of no- and low-alcohol beverages are surging.

The London-based company released a new study in February that examined sales of beer, wine, spirits and ready-to-drink products that contain little or no alcohol.

The firm claims the consumptio­n of these products is expected to increase 31% by 2024 across 10 markets — the U.S., Canada, the UK, France, Germany, South Africa, Brazil, Spain, Japan and Australia.

“What we’re seeing is a moderation trend that’s sweeping across key global markets, and that’s bringing with it increased demand for reduced alcohol, or alcohol-free drinks,” says Mark Meek, CEO of London-based IWSR Drinks Market Analysis, in the study.

“While the traditiona­l alcohol market’s greater exposure to bars and restaurant­s saw it struggle in the wake of mass venue closures across the world,

no/low categories have seen largely positive, albeit muted, growth, with a volume consumptio­n increase in the 10 markets of approximat­ely +1% in 2020” according to informatio­n included in the study.

With this shift, Defrance said the Refectory — which will celebrate its 45th anniversar­y later this year — and other entities have added nonalcohol­ic cocktails and beer brands to supplement the growing trend.

For bartenders or establishm­ents unwilling to offer these options, Defrance said they are wrongfully disregardi­ng a large sector of patrons who are looking for an enjoyable experience without the booze.

“You’re missing the point and the opportunit­y to please somebody who is willing to pay for it, at which point, you’re completely not on the right track,” Defrance said.

Although he understand­s the importance of alcohol-free drinks, on a personal level, DENMARK General Manager Sean Taylor said he’s not much of a fan.

Taylor said alcohol-free cocktails and beers don’t capture the same enriching and lush flavors that come from barrelagin­g and other features. Instead, whiskeys typically taste like malt syrup and gins taste like pickle juice, he said.

“When people come up to the bar, they still want to feel included; they want something that makes them feel like they’re a part of the group,” Taylor said. “But the thing that makes a cocktail a cocktail is the alcohol, and those flavors are almost impossible to replicate without having alcohol in them.”

Although he’s not a fan of the noproof craze, Taylor said these options fit within the “culinary tree of flavors,” one that encourages bartenders to use an assortment of complex ingredient­s and additives to make a “mocktail” taste as close to a traditiona­l cocktail as possible.

As hospitalit­y specialist­s, Taylor said it’s important customers are able to enjoy themselves — alcohol-filled or not. And because of the growing trend and need for no-proof options, he’s developing a nonalcohol­ic menu at DENMARK.

“They (patrons) don’t have to drink a Coke while their friends are having whatever they’re drinking,” he said. “Inclusiven­ess is important, especially for Columbus. We can’t disclude anyone, especially non-drinkers.”

With the addition of more nonalcohol­ic drinks, Gandee said it’s pushed him and other bartenders to rethink how to craft no-proof cocktails and for bars to carry more zero-proof brews.

At Watershed, he’s been focused on seasonalit­y, locality and the freshness of his ingredient­s to substitute the taste of gin, whiskey and other alcoholic components. With that, he’s exchanged ideas on how to extract specific flavors to draw out the richness of nonalcohol­ic spirits with his bar staff.

These elements are sparking bartenders’ curiosity about the implementa­tion of more health-inspired drinks, Taylor said. Ingredient­s such as avocado, fresh-grated ginger, tonic syrup, apple cider vinegar, CBD and others have been in use, he said, as more mixologist­s have dabbled in experiment­al pairings.

“We’re a little behind in Ohio,” Taylor said. “If you go to places like Portland or Los Angeles, they’re doing Cbd-infused cocktails where what you’re vibing is actually good for you.”

In time, Taylor hopes every cocktail bar or restaurant will have no-proof options on their menu.

“I think we have years of evolution ahead of this,” he said. “We have some bars who never considered putting a zero-proof spirit list on their menus who are now doing it or considerin­g it.

As the trend continues to evolve, Gandee anticipate­s the conversati­ons around sobriety and alcohol-free menu items will change. Although he’s certain the world’s shared affinity for alcohol will remain, his hope is that more establishm­ents will begin developing these spirits, and meeting the increased demand among the city’s bargoers. ehopkins@dispatch.com @Earl_hopkins1

 ?? FRED SQUILLANTE/COLUMBUS DISPATCH ?? Beverage director Joshua Gandee of Watershed Kitchen & Bar says the nonalcohol drinks have been “missing for some time.”
FRED SQUILLANTE/COLUMBUS DISPATCH Beverage director Joshua Gandee of Watershed Kitchen & Bar says the nonalcohol drinks have been “missing for some time.”
 ?? FRED SQUILLANTE PHOTOS/COLUMBUS DISPATCH ?? “Genteel and tonic” nonalcohol drink available at Watershed Kitchen & Bar
FRED SQUILLANTE PHOTOS/COLUMBUS DISPATCH “Genteel and tonic” nonalcohol drink available at Watershed Kitchen & Bar
 ??  ?? A “n/aked as a jaybird”
A “n/aked as a jaybird”
 ??  ?? A “n/artini”
A “n/artini”

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