How It’s Made: Rosé Wine
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From direct pressing and short macerations to the Saignée method and blending, this guide explores how rosé is produced around the globe.
Made all over the world, from a vast array of grape varieties, and with several varied techniques, the colors, aromas, textures, and flavors of rosé wines can differ significantly from one producer, region, or grape to the next.
Winemakers commonly use four different methods to produce rosé wine:
Direct Pressing
Grapes typically used to make red wine are crushed and thenRosé winemaking pressed; the juice is immediately drained off of the skins (and therefore the color saturation, which comes from the skins, is kept to a minimum) and vinification follows the same steps as white wine production.
Yields elegant, pale-colored rosés, also known as “vin gris.”
Popular for light red varieties—Pinot Noir is commonly used in California and Oregon, while Grenache and Cinsault are often used in France, particularly in Provence.
Drawing Off (a.k.a. Short Maceration)
Process begins identically to red winemaking, but 6 to 48 hours after fermentation begins, the juice is removed from the skins (to halt color extraction) and continues to ferment at a cool temperature to retain freshness.
A common method, nicely exemplified by wines from Tavel and Languedoc-Roussillon in southern France, where rosé wine is valued as highly as red or white.
Saignée (“bleeding”)
Nearly identical to drawing off, but only some of the juice is separated for rosé production, while the rest continues fermenting with the skins to produce red wine.
In these cases, rosé is merely a by-product of red wine production, and allows the winemaker to produce a more highly concentrated red wine.
Generally considered inferior to dedicated rosé production—where grapes are specifically grown to make rosé—because the grapes are harvested at optimum ripeness for red wine. This means the resulting rosé has less acidity and delicacy.
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Widely practiced in regions where fine red wine is made, like Napa and Sonoma.
Blending
Oak, while rarely used in rosé winemaking, is not unheard of. It should be noted, however, that it is significantly more likely to see neutral oak used to add texture than new oak that would mask the bright, fresh fruit flavors of rosé.
Most commercially made rosés fall somewhere between bone dry and lightly sweet. Popular rosé-producing regions typically have a signature style:
France
Italy
Spain
California
While rosé is often thought of as easygoing and playful, the category has much more range than most consumers give it credit for. To learn more about the process of winemaking and the many varied styles of wine produced around the world, enroll in a WSET course today.