Rice Wine Substitute: Best Alternatives for Any Recipe
What You’ll Learn in This Article
- What rice wine actually does in cooking — and why the substitute you pick matters more than you think
- The best rice wine substitutes ranked — with exact ratios and flavor notes for each one
- Non-alcoholic alternatives that actually work — so nobody gets left out of the recipe
- Substitutes that will ruin your dish — common mistakes even experienced cooks make
- How to choose the right substitute for your specific dish — a quick decision guide by recipe type
A recipe calls for rice wine and the bottle is nowhere in your pantry. Before you skip the ingredient entirely or grab the first thing that looks close, understand this: rice wine plays a specific role in cooking, and picking the wrong substitute can throw off an entire dish. The right alternative, however, is almost undetectable.
This guide covers every practical rice wine substitute worth using — alcoholic and non-alcoholic — with exact ratios, flavor comparisons, and a clear breakdown of what to avoid. Whether you are making a stir-fry, marinade, or braised dish, you will find the right swap here.

Supervised by
Daichi Takemoto
Authentic Bartender & Owner of Obanzai Nanchatte, Kobe
With 8 years of experience as a professional bartender and now the owner of "Obanzai Nanchatte" in Kobe, Daichi brings hands-on expertise in Japanese sake, whisky, and food pairing to every article on Kanpai Navi.
Table of Contents
- What Is Rice Wine in Cooking?
- Best Rice Wine Substitutes
- Dry Sherry
- Japanese Sake
- Mirin
- Dry White Wine
- Dry Vermouth
- Non-Alcoholic Substitutes
- Rice Wine Vinegar (Diluted)
- White Grape Juice
- Chicken or Vegetable Broth
- Apple Juice
- Substitutes to Avoid
- How to Choose the Right Substitute
- Frequently Asked Questions
- Can I use rice vinegar instead of rice wine?
- What is the closest substitute for Shaoxing wine?
- Is mirin the same as rice wine?
- Can I just leave rice wine out of a recipe?
- How long does rice wine last after opening?
- The Bottom Line
What Is Rice Wine in Cooking?
Rice wine is a broad term for fermented alcoholic beverages made from rice. In cooking — particularly Chinese, Japanese, and Korean cuisine — rice wine serves several functions that go beyond flavor. It tenderizes proteins, removes fishy and gamey odors, deglazes pans, and carries other flavors deeper into food during the cooking process.
The most common rice wines used in cooking are Chinese Shaoxing wine and Japanese sake. Though they share a rice base, they differ significantly in taste and brewing method. Understanding these differences helps you pick a substitute that actually works.
| Attribute | Shaoxing Wine | Japanese Sake |
|---|---|---|
| Origin | China (Zhejiang Province) | Japan |
| ABV | 14–20% | 13–16% |
| Flavor profile | Nutty, caramel, slightly sweet, deep amber | Clean, subtle, slightly sweet, nearly clear |
| Key role in cooking | Adds depth and color to braises, stir-fries, marinades | Tenderizes, removes odors, adds umami subtlety |
| Salt content | Some cooking-grade versions contain added salt | Cooking sake may contain added salt |
When a recipe says “rice wine,” it usually means Shaoxing wine in Chinese recipes and sake in Japanese recipes. The substitute you choose should match whichever one the recipe actually intends.
Best Rice Wine Substitutes
Not all substitutes are created equal. The best rice wine alternative depends on what role rice wine plays in your specific recipe — flavor base, tenderizer, deglazer, or odor remover. Below is a master comparison, followed by detailed notes on each option.
| Substitute | Best For | Ratio (per 1 tbsp rice wine) | Flavor Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Dry sherry | Chinese stir-fries, braises, marinades | 1 tbsp | Closest match to Shaoxing; nutty, slightly sweet |
| Japanese sake | Japanese dishes, light stir-fries, steaming | 1 tbsp | Cleaner and lighter than Shaoxing; ideal 1:1 swap |
| Mirin | Glazes, teriyaki, sweet sauces | 1 tbsp (reduce sugar in recipe) | Noticeably sweeter; adds gloss |
| Dry white wine | European-Asian fusion, pan sauces, seafood | 1 tbsp | More acidic; works when subtle flavor is fine |
| Dry vermouth | Quick deglazing, lighter dishes | 1 tbsp | Herbal undertone; surprisingly versatile |
Each substitute performs differently, so let us break them down.
Dry Sherry
Dry sherry is the single best substitute for Shaoxing rice wine in Chinese cooking. The flavor profiles overlap significantly — both have a nutty, slightly oxidized character with gentle sweetness. Fino or Amontillado sherry are the best styles to use. Avoid cream sherry, which is far too sweet.
Use dry sherry at a straight 1:1 ratio. In blind taste tests of stir-fries and braises, most people cannot tell the difference between Shaoxing wine and a quality dry sherry. It deglazes effectively, carries aromatics well, and adds comparable depth.
Japanese Sake
Sake is the natural substitute when a recipe calls for Japanese-style rice wine, but it also works reasonably well as a Shaoxing replacement. The flavor is cleaner and less nutty, so the finished dish will taste slightly lighter. For Japanese recipes — teriyaki bases, nimono (simmered dishes), steamed fish — sake is not really a substitute at all; it is the intended ingredient.
Use regular drinking sake or cooking sake at a 1:1 ratio. If using cooking sake with added salt, reduce other salt in the recipe slightly.
Mirin
Mirin is a sweet Japanese rice wine with roughly 14% ABV and a high sugar content. It works as a rice wine substitute in dishes that benefit from sweetness — glazes, teriyaki sauces, and sweet-savory braises. However, mirin is substantially sweeter than both Shaoxing wine and sake, so adjustments are necessary.
Use 1 tablespoon of mirin for every 1 tablespoon of rice wine, but reduce any added sugar in the recipe by about half a teaspoon. If the dish should not taste sweet at all (a light broth, for instance), mirin is not the right choice. For more on this ingredient, see our rice wine vinegar guide for related swaps.
Dry White Wine
A dry white wine — Sauvignon Blanc, Pinot Grigio, or unoaked Chardonnay — can stand in for rice wine in many recipes. The main difference is acidity: white wine is more tart than rice wine, which can shift the flavor balance slightly. This works to your advantage in seafood dishes and pan sauces where brightness is welcome, but it can clash in heavily soy-based recipes.
Use at a 1:1 ratio. Add a pinch of sugar (about a quarter teaspoon per tablespoon) if the recipe needs the subtle sweetness that rice wine provides.
Dry Vermouth
Dry vermouth is an underrated rice wine alternative. Its herbal complexity adds an interesting dimension to stir-fries and marinades, and its ABV (roughly 15–18%) is close to rice wine. It deglazes beautifully and evaporates cleanly during cooking.
Use at a 1:1 ratio. Best suited for lighter dishes — vegetable stir-fries, steamed seafood, quick sauces — where its herbal notes complement rather than compete.

Daichi Takemoto
If you cook Asian food regularly, just keep a bottle of dry sherry and a bottle of cooking sake in the pantry. Together, they cover almost every recipe that calls for rice wine — Chinese or Japanese. Both last for months after opening if stored in a cool, dark place. It is a far better solution than scrambling for substitutes every time.
Non-Alcoholic Substitutes
Not everyone cooks with alcohol — whether for dietary, religious, or personal reasons. The good news is that several non-alcoholic options can replicate the key functions of rice wine in cooking. They will not match the exact flavor, but they cover the practical roles: tenderizing, odor removal, and flavor carrying.
| Substitute | Best For | Ratio (per 1 tbsp rice wine) | Flavor Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rice wine vinegar (diluted) | Marinades, dressings, quick stir-fries | 1/2 tbsp vinegar + 1/2 tbsp water | Tart and clean; needs dilution |
| White grape juice | Sweet sauces, glazes, lighter braises | 1 tbsp (reduce sugar slightly) | Fruity sweetness; no acidity |
| Chicken or vegetable broth | Braises, soups, deglazing | 1 tbsp | Adds body and umami; no alcohol function |
| Apple juice | Marinades, pork or poultry dishes | 1 tbsp (reduce sugar slightly) | Mild fruity sweetness; works in marinades |
Here is what you need to know about each option.
Rice Wine Vinegar (Diluted)
Rice wine vinegar is made from fermented rice wine, so it shares some of the same base flavors — but it is acidic and contains no alcohol. Straight rice wine vinegar is too sharp to substitute 1:1. Dilute it with equal parts water to soften the acidity.
This works best in quick-cooking applications — stir-fries, cold marinades, dipping sauces — where the alcohol in rice wine would evaporate anyway. It does not tenderize meat the way alcohol does, so for long marinades you may want to add a squeeze of citrus juice alongside it.
White Grape Juice
White grape juice replicates the gentle sweetness of rice wine without the acidity of vinegar. It works well in glazes, sweet-savory sauces, and lighter braises. The fruit flavor is slightly different from rice wine’s grain-based sweetness, but in cooked dishes the difference fades.
Use at a 1:1 ratio and reduce any added sugar in the recipe. Not ideal for dishes where you need rice wine’s savory depth — it leans sweet, not umami.
Chicken or Vegetable Broth
Broth does not replicate rice wine’s flavor, but it fills the liquid volume and adds body to braises, soups, and deglazing. It is the safest non-alcoholic substitute when you simply need a cooking liquid and the rice wine’s role is functional rather than flavor-forward.
Use at a 1:1 ratio. For extra depth, add a tiny splash of rice wine vinegar (about a quarter teaspoon) to the broth.
Apple Juice
Apple juice works as a non-alcoholic stand-in for rice wine in marinades — especially for pork, chicken, and duck. The natural sugars help with browning, and the mild fruitiness complements meat dishes. It is not suitable for savory-only applications like broths or heavily seasoned stir-fries.
Use at a 1:1 ratio and cut back on any additional sweetener in the recipe.
Substitutes to Avoid
Some commonly suggested rice wine substitutes do more harm than good. Here is what to skip and why.
| Avoid This | Why It Fails |
|---|---|
| Rice vinegar (undiluted) | Far too acidic at full strength; will make sauces sour and sharp instead of balanced |
| Balsamic vinegar | Overwhelmingly strong flavor and dark color; completely changes the dish’s profile |
| Red wine | Tannins and dark pigments alter color and add bitterness incompatible with most Asian dishes |
| Beer | Carbonation and hop bitterness create off-flavors; too different in flavor chemistry |
| Distilled spirits (vodka, whisky) | High ABV (40%+) does not cook off as evenly; harsh flavor with no sweetness or complexity |
The common thread is that these options introduce flavors, acidity levels, or alcohol concentrations that rice wine never had. A good substitute should be close in ABV, sweetness, and subtlety. Anything that dominates the dish’s flavor is the wrong choice.
How to Choose the Right Substitute
The best rice wine replacement depends on your dish type, the role rice wine plays, and whether you need an alcoholic or non-alcoholic option. Use the table below to make a quick decision.
| Dish Type | Rice Wine’s Role | Best Alcoholic Substitute | Best Non-Alcoholic Substitute |
|---|---|---|---|
| Chinese stir-fry | Deglazing, flavor base | Dry sherry | Diluted rice wine vinegar |
| Japanese nimono (simmered dish) | Tenderizing, odor removal | Sake | Chicken broth + splash of vinegar |
| Teriyaki or glaze | Sweetness, gloss | Mirin | White grape juice |
| Meat marinade | Tenderizing, flavor penetration | Dry sherry or sake | Apple juice + rice wine vinegar |
| Seafood steaming | Odor removal, subtle flavor | Dry white wine or sake | Vegetable broth |
| Soup or broth | Depth, umami | Sake or dry sherry | Chicken broth |
| Dipping sauce or dressing | Acidity balance, flavor | Dry vermouth | Diluted rice wine vinegar |
When in doubt, ask yourself two questions. First, is the recipe Chinese or Japanese? For Chinese, lean toward dry sherry. For Japanese, lean toward sake. Second, does the recipe need sweetness? If yes, mirin or white grape juice. If no, dry sherry, sake, or broth.
For a deeper look at how sake is made and why it works so well in cooking, explore our guides on sake for cooking and cooking sake.

Daichi Takemoto
People overthink rice wine substitutes. In professional kitchens in Kobe, I have seen chefs use dry sherry in Chinese-inspired dishes and sake in Japanese ones without a second thought. The flavor difference in a finished, seasoned dish is minimal. What matters most is that you use something with mild flavor and moderate alcohol — or a sensible non-alcoholic swap. Do not leave the ingredient out entirely; it does real work in the recipe.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I use rice vinegar instead of rice wine?
Not directly. Rice vinegar is acidic and contains no alcohol, while rice wine is mildly sweet with a moderate ABV. If rice vinegar is your only option, dilute it with equal parts water to reduce the sharpness. This works for quick stir-fries and dressings but will not tenderize meat the way rice wine does. See our rice wine vinegar substitute guide for more detail.
What is the closest substitute for Shaoxing wine?
Dry sherry — specifically Fino or Amontillado — is the closest match. It shares the nutty, slightly oxidized flavor profile and works at a 1:1 ratio in virtually every recipe that calls for Shaoxing wine. This is the substitute recommended by most Chinese cooking authorities.
Is mirin the same as rice wine?
No. Mirin is a sweet rice wine with significantly higher sugar content than standard rice wine or sake. It is used specifically for its sweetness and gloss in Japanese cooking. You can use mirin as a rice wine substitute in sweet sauces and glazes, but you need to reduce other sugars in the recipe to compensate.
Can I just leave rice wine out of a recipe?
You can, but the dish will be noticeably different. Rice wine tenderizes proteins, removes unpleasant odors from meat and seafood, helps deglaze pans, and carries other flavors into the food. Omitting it entirely often results in a flatter, less complex dish — especially in marinades and braises. Using even a basic substitute like broth with a splash of vinegar is better than leaving it out.
How long does rice wine last after opening?
Shaoxing wine lasts 3–6 months after opening if stored in a cool, dark place with the cap tightly sealed. Japanese sake keeps for about 1–2 months in the fridge after opening for drinking quality, though it remains perfectly usable for cooking for several months beyond that. Cooking sake with added salt has an even longer shelf life.
The Bottom Line
Finding a good rice wine substitute is simpler than most cooking guides make it seem. For Chinese recipes, dry sherry is your best friend — it matches Shaoxing wine’s nutty depth almost perfectly. For Japanese recipes, sake is the natural choice, with mirin stepping in when sweetness is needed. If you avoid alcohol, diluted rice wine vinegar, white grape juice, and broth each cover specific use cases well. The only real mistake is reaching for something too strong, too acidic, or too far removed from rice wine’s gentle character — skip the balsamic vinegar, the red wine, and the whisky. Keep a bottle of dry sherry and a bottle of cooking sake on hand, and you will never be stuck when a recipe calls for rice wine again.