There’s a certain expectation when you pour something into a rocks glass. It should smell like something, taste like something, feel like it belongs there. That’s where a lot of non-alcoholic drinks fall short. Tilden is aiming squarely at that gap.
Their latest release comes as a duo: Tandem and Lacewing. Two bottles, two very different directions, both built to be more than just a backup option. These aren’t trying to imitate a gin and tonic or a whiskey neat. They’re their own thing, and that’s the point.

Tandem goes deep and a little smoky. Tart cherry and bitter orange hit first, followed by lapsang tea and a touch of American oak that gives it some backbone. Then comes the heat. Ginger and cayenne bring a slow warmth that builds as you sip, but never overwhelms. It’s bold without being heavy, savory enough to stand up to food, and complex enough to hold your attention. The kind of drink you can pour at the start of the night and still be thinking about an hour later.
Lacewing moves in the opposite direction, but keeps that same sense of structure. It’s brighter, greener, more aromatic. Cucumber and basil lead, with lychee adding a soft, rounded sweetness. Juniper berry keeps it grounded, giving it that familiar cocktail edge, while Szechuan pepper adds a gentle tingle that changes the texture as much as the flavor. There’s a hint of cayenne here, too, but it stays in the background. Overall, it’s refreshing without feeling thin.
Both drinks check the boxes people tend to look for now. Non-alcoholic, 25 to 35 calories per serving, no added sugars, no preservatives. Vegan and gluten-free, if that matters to you. But what stands out more is that they actually drink like cocktails. There’s a clear beginning, middle, and finish. You don’t just taste them, you move through them.
The brand comes from Vanessa Li and Mariah Althoff, who met at Harvard Business School after Vanessa decided to stop drinking and found the options lacking. Too sweet, too flat, too forgettable. Mariah, a lifelong non-drinker with a background in food and supply chain, was already thinking along similar lines. They started experimenting at home, building recipes in small batches, sharing them with friends, and refining from there.
Those early versions were made in a kitchen, but the idea was always bigger. Not just something to sip on, but something that fits into the rhythm of a night out or a dinner party. A drink you can pour, pass around, and come back to. Something that doesn’t need explaining.
That carries through in the final product. The 750 milliliter bottles feel intentional. They sit on the table like wine or spirits would, meant for sharing rather than single servings. It’s a small detail, but it changes how people interact with what’s in the glass.
Tilden is part of a growing wave of non-alcoholic brands, but Tandem and Lacewing make a strong case for where things are heading. Less about replacement, more about experience. Drinks that hold up on their own, no caveats needed.



