Join Us & Get Wine 101 Course 75% Off

What Is Rosé: Quick Guide To Pink Wine

Written by Madeline Puckette

Pink wine happily spans the colorspace between red and white wine, in a way, rosé is more like a state of mind.

Rosé happens when the skins of red grapes touch wine for only a short time. Where some red wines ferment for weeks at a time on red grape skins, rosé wines are stained red for just a few hours.

The winemaker has complete control over the color of the wine, and removes the red grape skins (the source of the red pigment) when the wine reaches the perfect color.

As you can imagine, nearly any red wine grape (from Cabernet Sauvignon to Syrah) can be used to make rosé wine, however there are several common styles and grapes that are preferred for rosé.

The taste of Rosé wine

Tasting Rosé Wine

The primary flavors of rosé wine are red fruit, flowers, citrus, and melon, with a pleasant crunchy green flavor on the finish similar to celery or rhubarb. Of course, depending on the type of grape the rosé wine is made with will greatly vary the flavor.

For example, a deeply-colored Italian Aglianico rosé–rosé is called “Rosato” in Italy,– will offer up cherry and orange zest flavors, and a pale-colored Grenache rosé from Provence in France will taste of honeydew melon, lemon and celery.

How is Rosé Wine Made

There are 3 primary ways to make rosé wine and the most common way is illustrated in the graphic below.
How is Rosé Wine Made


rosé-making-technique-maceration

Maceration Method

The maceration method is when red wine grapes are let to rest, or macerate, in the juice for a period of time and afterward the entire batch of juice is finished into a rosé wine. This produces darker colored wine with richer flavor.

The maceration method is the probably the most common type of rosé we see available and is used in regions like Provence and Languedoc-Roussillon, France where rosé is as important as red or white wine.

TIP: Rosé wines touch red grape skins for around 2–20 hours.


rosé-making-technique-saignée

Saignée or “Bled” Method

The Saignée (“San-yay”) method is when during the first few hours of making a red wine, some of the juice is bled off and put into a new vat to make rosé. The purpose of bleeding off the juice not only produces a lovely rosé but it also concentrates the red wines’ intensity.

Saignée wines are pretty rare, due to the production method and often will make up only about 10% or less, of a winery’s production. This method is very common in wine regions that make fine red wines such as Napa and Sonoma.


rosé-making-technique-blending

Blending Method

Producing a wide range of light to heavier wines, the blending method is when a little bit of red wine is added to a vat of white wine to make rosé. It doesn’t take much red wine to dye a white wine pink, so usually these wines will have up to 5% or so, of a red wine added.

This method is very uncommon with still rosé wines but happens much more in sparkling wine regions such as Champagne.

An example of a very fine wine made with this technique is Ruinart’s rosé Champagne, which is primarily Chardonnay with a smidgen of red Pinot Noir blended in.


Wine Folly: Magnum Edition: The Master Guide (book) - Front-side view

The Biggest and Best Guide on Wine

Since the first edition, we rebuilt Wine Folly from the ground up – with over 2x the content. This is your quick reference guide to wine, whether you’re just getting started or an industry professional.

See Book

Written byMadeline Puckette

James Beard Award-winning author and Wine Communicator of the Year. I co-founded Wine Folly to help people learn about wine. @WineFolly


Join Our Newsletter

Jumpstart your wine education and subscribe to the Wine Folly newsletter right now. Always awesome. Always free.

sign up free