Andreea Botezatu
The Wine Lab
A sciency podcast series about wine, chemistry, flavor, smell and everything in between hosted by wine and sensory scientist, book worm and food aficionado, Andreea Botezatu.
Author
Andreea Botezatu
Category
Podcast website
Latest episode
Jun 8, 2026
Where to listen?
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Episodes
Alsace: White Wine with History, Acidity, and Soul 08.06.2026 22:18
Send me your thoughts at ibotezatu5@gmail.com Alsace is one of France’s most distinctive wine regions: deeply French, shaped by Germanic influence, and known for aromatic white wines that can feel ripe and expressive while still staying fresh and focused. In this episode of The Wine Lab, we travel to northeastern France, between the Vosges Mountains and the Rhine, to explore why Alsace wines taste...
A River Runs Through It: The Wines of the Loire Valley 01.06.2026 30:52
Send me your thoughts at ibotezatu5@gmail.com In this episode of The Wine Lab , we travel through the Loire Valley, one of France’s most diverse and historically layered wine regions. Following the river from the Atlantic coast inland, we explore Muscadet, Chenin Blanc, Cabernet Franc, Sauvignon Blanc, Crémant de Loire, rosé, and lesser-known varieties such as Romorantin and Pineau d’Aunis. The ep...
Burgundy Explained: Pinot Noir, Chardonnay, and the Power of Place 25.05.2026 26:25
Send me your thoughts at ibotezatu5@gmail.com In this episode of The Wine Lab , we continue our series on the great wine regions of the world with Burgundy, or Bourgogne, one of France’s most influential and fascinating wine regions. Burgundy is famous for Pinot Noir and Chardonnay, but its true identity is built around place: villages, vineyards, slopes, soils, and precisely delimited parcels kno...
Bordeaux Wines Beyond the Château: Grapes, Climate, and Blending 18.05.2026 26:28
Send me your thoughts at ibotezatu5@gmail.com Bordeaux is one of the most influential wine regions in the world, but it can also feel intimidating. In this episode of The Wine Lab , Andreea explains Bordeaux through the features that define it: rivers, climate, soils, grape varieties, blending, classifications, aging, and wine style. The episode covers the differences between the Left Bank and Ri...
Grip, Weight, and Freshness: Understanding Wine Mouthfeel 04.05.2026 27:20
Send me your thoughts at ibotezatu5@gmail.com Wine is usually described through aroma and flavor, but some of its most important qualities are physical. This episode of The Wine Lab examines wine texture and mouthfeel: body, viscosity, acidity, tannin, astringency, alcohol warmth, residual sugar, carbon dioxide, lees aging, malolactic fermentation, serving temperature, and aeration. Andreea explai...
A Rosé by Any Other Name Would Taste as Sweet...or Dry 27.04.2026 10:27
Send me your thoughts at ibotezatu5@gmail.com A glass of rosé often feels effortless - light catching a pale pink hue, a hint of summer in the air - but its story runs deeper. In this episode, we trace how rosé is shaped, from fleeting skin contact to the saignée method and the precise art of blending in sparkling wines. Along the way, we place rosé within a longer human narrative, from early wine...
Wait, Wine Isn’t Always Vegan? 20.04.2026 15:24
Send me your thoughts at ibotezatu5@gmail.com Episode description Wine seems like one of the most plant-based products imaginable, so why are some wines not considered vegan? In this episode of The Wine Lab , we look at the cellar practices behind that question. From egg whites, milk proteins, gelatin, and isinglass to bentonite, PVPP, and plant-based alternatives, this is a closer look at fining,...
Ashes in the Glass: Smoke Taint and the New Reality of Wine 13.04.2026 13:00
Send me your thoughts at ibotezatu5@gmail.com What happens when wildfire smoke becomes part of the story of a wine? In this episode of The Wine Lab , Dr. Andreea Botezatu explores smoke taint through the eyes of the consumer. Why do wildfires in places like California and Australia matter so much for wine? How can smoke travel far from the flames and still affect grapes? And why can a wine seem pe...
Rotten Egg, Burnt Rubber, and Other Ways Wine Can Misbehave 06.04.2026 17:13
Send me your thoughts at ibotezatu5@gmail.com What does it mean when a wine smells like rotten egg, burnt rubber, cabbage, garlic, or canned corn? In this episode of The Wine Lab , Dr. Andreea Botezatu explores sulfur and reductive faults in wine, explaining what wine professionals mean by “reduction,” why these aromas appear, and how they can evolve over time. Along the way, she looks at hydrogen...
Women and Wine: From Ritual to Research 30.03.2026 16:20
Send me your thoughts at ibotezatu5@gmail.com This episode of The Wine Lab explores the long and layered history of women in wine. We move through ancient cultures, literature, religious life, art, Champagne history, and modern wine science to look at the many ways women have influenced how wine is made, understood, and experienced. Some of these stories are well known, others are easier to miss,...
Of Mice and Wine: The Curious Case of Delayed Dissapointment 22.03.2026 12:53
Send me your thoughts at ibotezatu5@gmail.com Mousiness is one of the most elusive and unsettling faults in wine. Unlike many defects, it doesn’t appear in the aroma. Instead, it emerges after the sip, lingering on the finish in a way that can surprise even experienced tasters. In this episode of The Wine Lab , Dr. Andreea Botezatu explores the chemistry, microbiology, and sensory science behind m...
Stable… or From the Stable? Understanding Brettanomyces in Wine 16.03.2026 13:05
Send me your thoughts at ibotezatu5@gmail.com Sometimes a glass of wine smells like dark fruit and spice. Other times, something unexpected appears — leather, earth, even a hint of barnyard. For some wine lovers, those aromas add intrigue. For others, they signal a flaw. In this episode of The Wine Lab , Dr. Andreea Botezatu explores one of the most debated microorganisms in wine: Brettanomyces ....
Why Wine Sometimes Smells Like Vinegar: The Science of Volatile Acidity 09.03.2026 12:23
Send me your thoughts at ibotezatu5@gmail.com Why does a wine sometimes smell like vinegar, or even nail polish remover? In this episode of The Wine Lab , Andreea explores the science behind volatile acidity , one of the most confusing aspects of wine aroma. While small amounts can add brightness and complexity, higher levels can shift a wine’s character dramatically. You’ll learn how volatile aci...
Fault or Style? Understanding Oxidation in Wine 23.02.2026 12:43
Send me your thoughts at ibotezatu5@gmail.com Is that wine flawed… or just different? In this episode of The Wine Lab , Andreea explores the difference between wine faults and flaws before turning to one of the most powerful forces in wine chemistry: oxidation. What causes the bruised apple aroma in oxidized wine? What role does sulfur dioxide play in protection? Why did certain white Burgundies s...
When Wine Labels Play Mind Games 16.02.2026 9:13
Send me your thoughts at ibotezatu5@gmail.com Have you ever stood in the wine aisle holding a bottle and thought, “Am I overthinking this?” In this episode of The Wine Lab , Andreea unpacks why wine labels can feel so confusing, even to people who work in wine. Why do some bottles list the grape, while others only name a place? What does Burgundy actually mean? Why does Bordeaux rarely tell you t...
Second Round Wine: Piquette, Then and Now 09.02.2026 11:41
Send me your thoughts at ibotezatu5@gmail.com Piquette is one of wine’s oldest ideas and one of its newest obsessions. Made by fermenting grape pomace with water, this light, often sparkling wine has roots in ancient Roman practices, European vineyard culture, and everyday resourcefulness. Once known as a drink for workers and families - sometimes simply called “second round wine” - piquette has r...
Between Valpolicella and Amarone: The Science of Ripasso 02.02.2026 8:31
Send me your thoughts at ibotezatu5@gmail.com Ripasso wines are made by giving a finished Valpolicella wine a second pass through fermentation, pouring it over the grape skins left behind from Amarone or Recioto and allowing renewed microbial activity and extraction to take place. In this episode of The Wine Lab , we walk through what that second pass actually does: how refermentation can restart,...
Appassimento and the Art of Waiting 26.01.2026 10:28
Send me your thoughts at ibotezatu5@gmail.com What happens when grapes are asked to wait? In this episode of The Wine Lab , we explore appassimento , the traditional practice of drying grapes before fermentation, and how it reshapes wine long before yeast ever gets involved. From ancient Roman preservation methods to modern Amarone and passito wines, we look at how dehydration concentrates sugars,...
Clay, Skins, and Time: Orange Wine in Georgia 05.01.2026 10:20
Send me your thoughts at ibotezatu5@gmail.com Orange wine often feels contemporary, even radical, yet its roots stretch back thousands of years. In this episode of The Wine Lab , we travel to Georgia, widely considered one of the birthplaces of wine, to explore qvevri winemaking, extended skin contact, and the historical foundations of what we now call orange wine. Along the way, we unpack how thi...
Marsala And The Reputation It Did Not Choose 29.12.2025 8:42
Send me your thoughts at ibotezatu5@gmail.com Welcome back to The Wine Lab . In this episode, we take a closer look at Marsala, one of the most misunderstood fortified wines in the world. Often dismissed as a cooking ingredient, Marsala has a long history as a serious wine shaped by fortification, oxidative aging, and deliberate patience. We explore how Marsala is made, the grape varieties that de...
Vermouth and the Logic of Botanicals 22.12.2025 9:29
Send me your thoughts at ibotezatu5@gmail.com 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, bi...
Madeira - From Ocean Voyages to Attic Barrels 15.12.2025 11:17
Send me your thoughts at ibotezatu5@gmail.com Madeira is one of the most resilient wines ever produced. Fortified during fermentation, intentionally heated, and slowly oxidized, it defies many of the rules that govern wine aging and thrives because of it. In this episode of The Wine Lab , we explore how Madeira’s unique production methods developed through long ocean voyages, how fortification wit...
Fortified by the Douro: The Story of Port Wine 08.12.2025 11:26
Send me your thoughts at ibotezatu5@gmail.com Step into the steep, sunlit terraces of Portugal’s Douro Valley and explore how landscape, law, chemistry, and culture shaped one of the world’s most distinctive wines. In this episode of The Wine Lab , host Dr. Andreea Botezatu traces the story of Port from the Douro’s historic demarcation in 1756 to the precise moment fermentation is stopped with gr...
Under the Flor: The Science and Soul of Sherry 01.12.2025 11:52
Send me your thoughts at ibotezatu5@gmail.com In this episode of The Wine Lab , host Dr. Andreea Botezatu explores the scientific brilliance and cultural heritage of Sherry . From Andalucía’s luminous albariza soils to the flor yeasts that sculpt its aromatic identity, Sherry emerges as a wine shaped by geology, microbiology, and centuries of human expertise. We examine how fortification , perfor...
Winter in a Glass: The Story and Science of Icewine 24.11.2025 13:49
Send me your thoughts at ibotezatu5@gmail.com Icewine is one of the most challenging and extraordinary wines ever produced,a liquid born from winter itself. In this episode of The Wine Lab , Dr. Andreea Botezatu explores how a frozen accident in 1794 became one of the modern wine world’s most coveted styles. We travel from Germany to Canada’s Niagara Peninsula, through vineyards picked at –10°C, a...
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