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[Lifestyle] Is orange wine the future?


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Fans of skin-contact wine praise its non-interventionist approach and funky, farmyard notes; critics compare it to bad cider. But one thing’s for sure: it’s here to stay

 

Orange wine has been produced in Georgia for 2,000 years

 

It's easy to be snippy about orange wine, especially given a recent trends report by Sainsbury’s which suggests that almost a third of 25- to 34-year-olds would buy the stuff simply because it would look good on their Instagram feeds. Coupled with the fact that some orange wines taste unconscionably like cider, and at three or four times the price, you might well wonder what all the fuss is about.

Well, for a start, orange wine is no flash in the pan - in Georgia, they’ve been making it for all of 2,000 years, in terracotta amphorae called qvevri. And no, it's not made from oranges, either, but from white grapes: the freshly crushed juice is left in contact with the skins to pick up color, in much the same way as reds and rosés are, and the longer the contact, the deeper the color will be - some orange wines have a particularly beautiful, amber hue.

 

Sainsbury’s is not the first supermarket to show an interest in them, either. Marks & Spencer has been selling an amphora-fermented Georgian wine for some time now, while last year Asda launched a Romanian orange wine. Sainsbury's has recently taken on one from the South African producer Bosman, who already have a track record with the style: they've given this one 21 days' skin contact, which makes it a pale-ish orange and which, combined with a relatively low level of alcohol, has an appealingly soft, peachy flavor that should develop over the coming months. Of course, a single wine isn’t exactly a ringing endorsement of the trend Sainsbury’s has identified, but baby steps and all that.

A couple of other things you need to know about orange, or amber wines, as they’re also known, are that you should serve them warmer than a standard white - about 12-14C - and that they take well to being decanted. They also have the structure and tannin to stand up to red meat, especially lamb, in a way that white wines tend not to. And they’re particularly good with Middle Eastern food.

If you’re daunted by the price and unsure whether orange wine is going to be your thing, your best option is to try them by the glass in one of the many natural wine bars that have sprung up in in the past few years. “We recently had three orange wines in our top 10 sellers,” says Doug Wregg of natural wine specialist Les Caves de Pyrène. "Normally, there are none in our top 30. People wanted a psychological lift during lockdown, and there’s something about orange wine that gives one that." To coin a phrase, perhaps the future is orange, after all.

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