Red Wine Substitute | Replace It In Any Recipe

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Red wine can be swapped in any recipe using one of several common kitchen ingredients — the best choice depends on whether the dish needs acidity, fruit depth, or color from the wine.

Running out of red wine mid-recipe, or cooking for someone who avoids alcohol, doesn’t mean abandoning the dish. A handful of everyday ingredients — broth, vinegar, juice, or even tea — can step in for red wine in braises, sauces, stews, and pasta. The trick is matching the swap to what the wine was doing in the recipe: providing acidity, fruit flavor, color, or a combination of all three.

Red Wine Substitute: The Best Choice For Every Dish

No single substitute works for every recipe. The table below matches the right swap to the most common cooking situations, with exact ratios so nothing gets thrown off.

Substitute How To Use It Best For
Beef Broth + Red Wine Vinegar Mix ¾ cup beef broth with 1 tbsp red wine vinegar per cup of wine Braises, stews, pan sauces
Pomegranate Juice Use 1:1, straight from the bottle (100% juice) Braises, sauces, marinades
Red Grape Juice + Red Wine Vinegar ¾ cup grape juice + 1 tbsp vinegar per cup of wine Braises, sauces, marinades
Tomato Juice Use 1:1 Pasta sauces, braises, soups
Cranberry Juice (Unsweetened) Use 1:1; check label for 100% juice only Most recipes, adds tartness
Red Wine Vinegar + Water Equal parts vinegar and water (1:1 dilution) General cooking where acidity is all that’s needed
Non-Alcoholic Red Wine Use 1:1 All cooking — the closest flavor match

What Your Recipe Actually Needs From The Wine

Wine plays three roles in cooking — acidity, fruitiness, and color. When you know which one your recipe leans on, picking the substitute becomes straightforward.

For braises and stews where the wine deglazes the pan and tenderizes meat, beef broth mixed with red wine vinegar delivers the acidity and savory depth. Poultry or vegetable broth works in a pinch but won’t produce the same rich result with red meat.

Straight juice is noticeably sweeter than wine, so a tablespoon of vinegar per cup of juice brings the acidity back into balance as noted by Healthline’s guide to wine substitutions.

It works in soups and braises too, though the tomato flavor will come through.

Three Common Mistakes That Ruin The Swap

Most failures come from three simple errors. Using sweetened juice is the most common — standard grocery store cranberry or grape juice often contains added sugar that throws off the entire dish. Always check the label for “100% juice” with no sugar added. Over-vinegaring is the second pitfall. Red wine vinegar is far more concentrated than wine’s natural acidity. Diluting it with an equal amount of water (rather than using it straight) keeps the dish from tasting like a pickle. Choosing a weak broth for red meat is the third. Chicken or vegetable broth lacks the body to stand up to braised beef or lamb — beef broth is the right call.

If the recipe calls for a small amount of wine (a splash for deglazing), a simple water-and-vinegar mix with a pinch of sugar works as a neutral option. For larger amounts, stick with the juice-based swaps that bring actual flavor.

FAQs

Can I use white wine instead of red wine in a recipe?

Yes, dry white wine works as a 1:1 alcoholic substitute when the only problem is that you’re out of red wine. The flavor profile will be lighter and less fruity, so it’s best in recipes where red wine isn’t the dominant taste.

Does non-alcoholic red wine cook the same as regular wine?

Commercially de-alcoholized red wine behaves almost identically in cooking and is the closest match to regular wine’s flavor and acidity. Use it in a 1:1 ratio for any recipe without adjusting the other ingredients.

What’s the best vegan red wine substitute?

Pomegranate juice, red grape juice, or tomato juice used straight (1:1) are all vegan and gluten-free. For savory depth, add a splash of red wine vinegar to the juice to mimic wine’s tartness. Beef broth is not vegan.

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