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Here’s the best substitute for red wine in cooking! There are a few options to avoid opening a bottle, or non-alcoholic options.

Red wine substitute
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Making a recipe that calls for red wine, but don’t have a bottle? Or want to avoid cooking with alcohol? Many Mediterranean-style recipes like French and Italian recipes call for cooking with red wine. What does wine do? Cooking with wine helps to enhance the flavors in a dish: the acidity of the wine adds both a brightness and depth to the cooking. Red wine is often used to deglaze a pan or to add a complexity to sauce recipes.

Don’t have wine on hand, or don’t want to open a bottle? There are a few ingredients you might have on hand that work as a red win substitute. These options depend on the type of recipe and how the red wine is used: so make sure to read the details.

Best red wine substitute in cooking

1. Dry white wine.

A great red wine substitute in cooking? Dry white wine! If you happen to have a bottle of white you don’t mind opening, this is the best option. The flavor profile will be very similar. Though it won’t add a rosy color to a dark sauce, it will at least add the right flavor. (By the way, we don’t suggest the other way around: replacing white wine with the red variety! Most of the time that would add an undesirable color, like pink risotto!)

2. 100% pomegranate juice or cranberry juice.

Another red wine substitute in cooking? Pomegranate juice or cranberry juice! Use only the 100% juice versions of these two fruit juices, which are unsweetened. Sweetened pomegranate juice or cranberry juice cocktail have lots of added sugar. But the 100% juice versions are tart and red: they’re both a bit sweeter than wine, but they work in a pinch.

3. Red wine vinegar (plus water).

Another good red wine substitute? Red wine vinegar brings the signature acidity and tangy flavor of red wine, without the alcohol. It also carries a similar color to wine, though it’s less vibrant. Dilute it as a 50 / 50 mixture with water. So for every ½ cup wine, substitute ¼ cup red wine vinegar and ¼ cup water.

4. Vegetable, chicken, or beef broth.

In a pinch, you can use veggie, chicken or beef broth as a substitute for red wine in cooking! It won’t bring the acidity or complexity that wine does, but it will add a little extra flavor.

5. Water.

One last ditch red wine substitute? Water. You can substitute water for red wine in a pinch! It won’t bring any of that acidic flavor and complexity, but it will keep the liquid ratios of the recipe in tact.

About the authors

Alex & Sonja

Hi there! We’re Alex & Sonja Overhiser, authors of two cookbooks, busy parents, and a real life couple who cooks together. We founded the A Couple Cooks website in 2010 to share simple, seasonal recipes and the joy of cooking. We now offer thousands of original recipes, cooking tips, and meal planning ideas—all written and photographed by the two of us (and tested on our kids!).

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