Provenance Wines.
Not as substitute. As wine.
Provenance — origin, terroir, the lineage of place and hand. The wine world's word, always. The word that belongs here too. Every bottle in this cellar is a Provenance Wine. The grapes are real. The land is real. The vintage is real.
Most wines made without alcohol don't earn the name. Most are sweetened juice in heavy glass — built to look like wine without being one. The wines we carry are different. They're crafted by winemakers who refused that compromise, using methods that recover what dealcoholization usually destroys: structure, acidity, finish. Tasted blind, several surprise people who drink wine for a living.
What follows is the cellar. Every bottle chosen, considered, earned.
Karen Ornstein on the word, and what it returns → The Word for It
Every bottle below is rated on the Rienne Index™
Our curatorial framework for understanding sweetness, body, occasion, and serve. Click any bottle for the full reading.
Wines
For the table, the toast. Bolle from Burgundy, twice-fermented to recover what dealcoholization usually loses. Woody's brings California brightness. St. Buena Vida drinks like a Catalan aperitif. La Petite Victoire, a French Blanc de Blancs. Les Marées, coastal Provence in the glass.
La Petite Victoire
