Italy rosé Like France, rosés are made throughout Italy with the style and grape varieties used changing depending on the region and local climate. The long history of Italian rosés, particularly in the warm southern part of the country, stem from difficulties in the early days of winemaking to make dark, fully colored dry red wines without temperature controlled fermentation vessels. As the must macerated with the skins, the intense heat of the process would often kill the yeast resulting in a
stuck fermentation and
residual sugar in the remaining wine. Eventually Italian winemakers realized that if they pressed the wines early in the process, remaining the skins, they could complete the fermentation albeit with a lightly colored wine. The Italians have several terms for rosé style wines beginning with the term
rosato that is a permitted wine style in several
Denominazione di origine controllata. These wine tend to be very pale in color with slightly dark wines (but not dark enough to be considered a
rosso or red wine) being labeled as
Chiaretto.
Ramato, a specialty in the Veneto, are copper-colored rosés made from pink-skinned
Pinot grigio grape that are allowed a period of extended maceration. The term
Cerasuolo (meaning "cherry red") describes a vividly colored rosé and is seen frequently in the
Abruzzo region where rosé made in the
Montepulciano d'Abruzzo region from deeply pigmented
Montepulciano grape are given a special designation within the DOC.
Rotling refers to a rosé that is either made from multiple grape varieties that can either be all red wine varieties or a mixture of white and red grape varieties. This designation is required on all Tafelwein (table wine), Landwein ("country wine" similar to the French
vin de pays) and
Qualitätswein bestimmter Anbaugebiete (QbA) level but its presence on the label is optional for Prädikatswein (the highest classification of German wine). In the
Baden region,
Badisch Rotgold is a specialty rosé made from
Spätburgunder (Pinot noir) and
Ruländer (Pinot gris). Under
German wine law the wine must be made to at least QbA level (meaning the grapes must be
harvested with a
ripeness level of at least 51
°Oe to 72°Oe. In
Austria,
Styria is known for a particular type of rosé called
Schilcher that is made from the indigenous
Blauer Wildbacher grape that is rarely grown outside of western Styria. The wine is noted for it fruity flavor and high levels of acidity. In the
Alicante and
Jumilla DOs the winemakers made their red wines and rosados using a method that is almost the reverse of the
saignee method (where rosé juice is bled off the red wine). This method, known as the
doble pasta (meaning "double paste") takes the skins from the early pressed rosé wine and adds them to the red wine (similar to the Italian
ripasso method). The rosados are made like normal with a light, fruity style while the red wines made with the extra skins are darker in color and more deeply concentrated. Other
Spanish wine regions noted for their rosados include the
denominaciones de origen (DOs) of
Utiel-Requena,
Yecla,
Txakoli,
Cigales,
Tierra de Leon and
Ribera del Duero.
Portugal In 1942, a winemaker from
Vinho Verde,
Fernando Van Zeller Guedes, was inspired by the sales success that the lightly sparkling wine from his home region was having in Portugal and
Brazil. He decided to try making a more fully sparkling rosé that was sweetened to appeal to the mass European and North American markets. At the end of World War II, production of Guedes' wine,
Mateus, named after the
Mateus Palace in the
Vila Real Municipality, was in full operation with sales steadily climbing. By the 1980s, both the red and sparkling white versions of Mateus accounted for over 40% of the entire Portuguese wine industry, with worldwide sales of 3.25 million cases. However, sales of Mateus eventually started to decline, and though it still being produced, with Mateus introducing a
Tempranillo sparkling rosé in 2005, it is not quite the dominating force in the market that it once was. The history of
Lancers, the other, notable Portuguese sparkling rosé that rose up after World War II, is quite similar to Mateus. The winemaking family of
José Maria da Fonseca in the
Setúbal DOC, one of the oldest Portuguese wine producers, received word from a distributor in
New York City about American servicemen returning from Europe having a taste for many of the new wines they tried on their tours. In 1944, Fonseca released Lancers in a distinctive stone
crock. Today, the wine is fully sparkling, using the "
continuous method" of fermentation in large stainless steel tanks instead of individual
wine bottles. While its rival, Mateus, is mostly still found in Europe, Lancers has remained in the North American market. ==New World rosés==