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Best rosé wines beyond Provence

Rosé wines are often divided between pale and not pale, loosely translated as Provence-style or other. The reality is not quite so binary. Elizabeth Gabay MW picks out her top 20 from around the world.

With so much rosé around the world trying to emulate the Provence-style, by which most producers mean a pale pink dry wine, it can be difficult to evaluate what makes a rosé ‘not from Provence’ a good wine.

Should they be given a pat on the back for achieving a wine which is identical to those of Provence? Or should praise be given to rosés which achieve a sense of individual terroir and varietal identity?

The vast majority of rosés are made in much the same way: harvested a little earlier than the red wines, chilled, gently pressed and steel tank-fermented.

Cooler fermentation temperatures and a particular choice of yeasts determine a fruitier character, while more complexity can arise from warmer fermentation temperatures (18°C and over).

Bottling is often immediate, but a few months on the lees with varying amounts of batonnage will impart a soft roundness to the wine.


Scroll down to see 20 top rosés from around the world



Elizabeth Gabay MW’s 20 top rosés from around the world:


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