The Wine Lab

Vermouth and the Logic of Botanicals

Andreea Botezatu

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Vermouth is everywhere, yet rarely examined on its own.

Often encountered through classic cocktails rather than the glass itself, vermouth plays a defining role in balance, aroma, and structure while remaining largely unacknowledged. In this episode of The Wine Lab, we slow down and treat vermouth as what it truly is: wine, shaped by fortification, bitterness, and deliberate design.

We explore vermouth’s foundations in neutral grape varieties, the use of grape spirit for stability and extraction, and the careful construction of botanical profiles built around wormwood, roots, barks, citrus, and spice. Along the way, we trace its emergence from eighteenth-century Turin, its ties to apothecaries and café culture, and its evolution into a cornerstone of modern drinking culture.

This episode examines why bitterness matters, how extraction chemistry influences sensory balance, and why vermouth behaves like wine once the bottle is opened. More than a mixer, vermouth reveals how intention, chemistry, and restraint can reshape what wine can be.


Glossary

Vermouth
An aromatized, fortified wine flavored with botanicals, legally required to include wormwood.

Wermut
The German word for wormwood, from which the term vermouth is derived.

Wormwood (Artemisia spp.)
A bitter plant containing potent compounds that provide structural bitterness in vermouth.

Aromatized Wine
Wine that has been flavored with herbs, spices, fruits, or other botanicals after fermentation.

Fortification
The addition of distilled alcohol, typically neutral grape spirit, to raise alcohol content and improve stability.

Neutral Grape Variety
A grape selected for low aromatic intensity and high acidity, used as a base to showcase added flavors rather than varietal character.

Sesquiterpene Lactones
Bitter compounds found in plants like wormwood and gentian that contribute to vermouth’s structure and persistence.

Maceration
Extraction of compounds by soaking botanicals in wine or alcohol over time.

Infusion
Gentle extraction of aromatic compounds, often at lower temperatures.

Aperitif
A drink consumed before a meal, traditionally intended to stimulate appetite.

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