No-Alcohol Wines

White wine. Photo by Manos Angelakis.

I don’t think I have a personal prejudice against low calorie, no-alcohol wines. Still, through the years, I have tasted a number of these bottles and thought most had very little to no taste.

But the product line, Ventessa by Mezzacorona, has proved to me that I can be wrong about this and should try more of these wines just to make sure I know what I’m talking about.

I received two sample bottles – a white and a light blush rosé. Perhaps they were the exception, but they tasted good in the glass and also were good in cooking. All things considered, I think they would make an excellent libation for warm weather, both spring and summer.

Ventessa Pinot Grigio. Photo courtesy of Ventessa.

The wines are designated Vigneti delle Dolomiti IGT and are made in Trentino, which is in Italy’s Adige Valley region. Both Ventessa expressions are hand-picked and estate-bottled, made with 100% Pinot Grigio without any chemical alterations.

Both offer delicate floral notes. The white shows casaba melon and white peach with hints of white flowers and rosé citrus fruits, especially red grapefruit, plus a hint of plum and comice pears. Both were very interesting!

They are well-priced in the $10 to $15 range, depending on the retailer.

Another couple of interesting samples I received were two reds – one from Spain and the other from Argentina.

Montecillo no alcohol wine. Photo courtesy of Montecillo.

The 2013 Montecillo Reserva from Rioja Alta is a lovely blend of 90% Tempranillo, 8% Garnacha, and 2% Mazuelo. I’d had many bottles from that producer when I lived in Manhattan because a good friend, Reinhold W., loved this brand and always opened a well-aged Montecillo bottle when we dined with him.

It’s one of those Riojas that require some bottle aging, because they are quite bold and tannic in their youth. At the winery, the wine is aged for 18 months in American oak followed by 12 months of bottle age to allow the tannins to soften and the flavors to build. It’s well-priced for the quality offered at under $25 per bottle.

Alavida no alcohol wine. Photo courtesy of Alavida.

Another interesting bottle is the Alavida Malbec 2021 from Domaine Bousquet. It’s Argentina’s first USDA-certified organic and kosher wine, and it’s one of few estate wines to achieve this unusual double status. The price is usually under $20.

The vines are grown at high-altitude vineyards in the Uco Valley, an area producing some of Mendoza’s finest wines. As an organic wine, it’s produced with no chemicals either in the vineyard or during production. This means that no pesticides or herbicides are used when farming, and no sulfites, preservatives, stabilizers, or other additives are added during the winemaking process.

In this wine, black plums and blueberries, minerals, and wild herb notes dominate the palate. As it opens, you get violets, licorice, and a hint of cigar box. In diapers now, it will only get better and smoother over the next few years.

Finally, I have two more bottles to mention – a Chardonnay and a Pinot Noir from Cristom Vineyards of Oregon’s Willamette Valley.

Cristom Chardonnay. Photo courtesy of Cristom.

The smoky 2019 Chardonnay Eola-Amity Hills has broad, intense flavors and tangy acidity. It offers aromas of cooked apple, honeysuckle, white peach, toast, and white blossoms. It’s ripe, lean, and balanced.

This is surprising because when I first tried it, it was herbal and showing yeasty aromas, finishing with intense hints of Meyer lemon zest and a refreshing finish. It’s well-priced at about $50 per 750ml bottle, and most critics rate it between 90 and 94 points out of 100.

Cristom Pinot Noir. Photo courtesy of Cristom.

The 2019 Cristom Pinot Noir Mt. Jefferson is another Oregon wine that’s very seductive with ripe strawberry and cranberry, orange peel, licorice, black tea, and hints of cloves and cinnamon. As tasted, it was full-bodied but tight with chewy, pronounced tannins.

It will be much better after 3 to 4 years in cellar and will probably peak by 10. Currently priced between $30 and $40 for the 750ml bottle.

To your health!

+ posts

Manos Angelakis is one of the founders, the former Managing Editor for 25 years, the current Managing Editor Emeritus, and Senior Food & Wine Writer of LuxuryWeb Magazine. He is an accomplished travel writer, photographer, and food and wine critic based in Hackensack, New Jersey. As a travel writer, he has written extensively about numerous cities and countries. Manos has also been certified as a Tuscan Wine Master and has traveled to wine-producing areas in order to evaluate firsthand the product of top-rated vineyards. In the past year, he has visited and written multiple articles about Morocco, Turkey, Quebec City, Switzerland, Antarctica, and most recently the South of France. Articles in other publications include Vision Times and Epoch Times.

0 Comments

Submit a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You may also like

Are Celebrity Wines Worth the Hype?

Are Celebrity Wines Worth the Hype?

Wines and celebrities are an iconic match. Both evoke a sense of lifestyle, luxury, and aspiration. So, it’s no surprise that some celebrities have ventured into the wine business, adding another income stream and supporting their brand image. Celebrity wines, like their owners, come in various styles. Some hip-hop artists favor Champagne, while others opt for rosé or non-alcoholic options.

read more
Traveling to Indulge Your Passion for True Crime

Traveling to Indulge Your Passion for True Crime

True crime is all the craze these days, but it might surprise you to learn that dark tourism in general is trending, with people indulging in travel to cemeteries (necro tourism), jails (prison travel), and paranormal travel (ghost tours, etc.). To cater to this growing hunger for dark tourism, in Level Best Books is releasing Vacations Can Be Murder: A True Crime Lover’s Travel Guide of New England by award-winning travel journalist, Dawn M Barclay.

read more