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Amos Baneres HeyAmos Baneres Hey
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₩26,311

Hey! 2023

Amós Bañeres

Delicious Orange Xarel-lo

Sassara - Pinot Griso
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₩23,139

Pinot Griso Ramato 2024

Sassara

Ideal low-acid Orange Pinot Grigio

Marada Sauvignon
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₩31,883 ₩36,612

Sauvignon Orange 2022

Marada

Tangy, tropical, aromatic!

Nigori 2021 | Natural Wine by Strekov 1075.
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₩49,845

Nigori 2021 (ONE PER ORDER)

Strekov 1075

Petrol. Cream. Preserved Lemons. AWESOME!

Krasna hora here gewurzKrasna Hora Herr Gewurtz
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₩25,468

Herr Gewurtz 2023

Krásná Hora

Tangy and Fun Czech Gewürztraminer

Non Grata | Natural Wine by Dluhe Grefty.
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₩37,985

Non Grata 2024

Dluhe Grefty

Spearmint. Orange Blossom. Hay. Apricot.

Mtsvane Amber 2021 | Natural Wine by Doremi.
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₩28,202

Mtsvane Amber 2021

Doremi

Quince. Green Apples. Dried Apricots

Tramini Hummel
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₩31,041

Tramini 2024

Hummel

Honeyed Hungarian Gewürz. YUM!

Gewurztraminer Orange 2017 | Natural Wine by Marada.
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₩31,121 ₩34,934

Gewürztraminer Orange

Marada

AMAZING! A herbal dream!

O.... 2019 (500ml) ONE PER ORDER is a natural wine crafted by Radikon, in the Friuli region in Italy.O.... 2019 (500ml) ONE PER ORDER | Natural Wine by Radikon.
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₩69,563

O.... 2020 (500ml) ONE PER ORDER

Radikon

Orange Chardonnay + Sauvignon Blanc

Alba Rosales | Natural Wine by Dluhe Grefty.
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₩27,867

Alba Rosales 2024

Dluhe Grefty

WOW! You gotta try this Orange Gewürztraminer!!!

Vinos Ambiz - ALBA Tinaja 2021Alba Tinaja | Natural Wine by Vinos Ambiz.
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₩32,077

ALBA Tinaja 2021

Vinos Ambiz

This vintage with higher V.A

 Iberieli chkhaveri wine
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₩33,002

Chkhaveri 2020

Iberieli

Lighter Georgian Expression

Lammidia - BiancoLammidia Bianco
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₩27,015

Bianco 2023

Lammidia

Trebbiano Orange with a Mandarin Kick

Quinto Quarto Sivi 2022 | Natural Wine by Franco Terpin.
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₩27,152

Quinto Quarto Sivi 2023

Franco Terpin

Macerated Pinot Grigio. YUMMY!

Nikolas Juretic - Grande Waldo 2022 (one per order)
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Vinessens - Tragolargo
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₩21,118

Tragolargo Blanco 2024

Vinessens

Aromatic, herbal budget orange

What is the actual production process of orange wine?

It starts the same way as white wine. White grapes get picked and crushed. Then everything changes. Instead of pressing the juice off the skins straight away, the winemaker leaves the juice sitting on the skins, seeds and sometimes the stems. This is maceration, which just means soaking. The longer the soak, the more the wine pulls out of the skins.


Time is the big lever. Some producers macerate for a few days, others for a few weeks, and the serious ones go for months. The International Organisation of Vine and Wine sets the official minimum at one month for a wine to count as macerated in this style. A four day soak gives you a wine with a gentle copper tint and soft grip. Six months gives you something deep amber, chewy and properly tannic.


Skin thickness matters just as much as time. Thicker skinned grapes hold more tannin, more colour and more phenolic compounds, which are the chemicals that give structure and that bitter, savoury edge. That is why grapes like Ribolla Gialla, Malvasia and Pinot Grigio are favourites. They can handle a long soak without falling apart. Thin skinned grapes get overwhelmed.


The vessel plays a part too. Clay amphorae breathe and let in tiny amounts of oxygen. Steel and old oak give a different result again. Change the time, the grape or the vessel and you change the wine completely.

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Different styles of orange wine across the world

Orange wine is not one thing. Where it is made, and how, changes it enormously.


Georgia is the spiritual home of orange wine, known there as Amber wine. They have been doing this for around 8,000 years. Grapes go into a qvevri, a large clay vessel buried in the ground, often with skins, seeds and stems all together. The wine ferments and sits there for five or six months. That long contact gives Georgian orange wine its signature. High tannin, real grip, deep amber colour and a savoury, almost tea like character. These are the most structured orange wines you will find.


Friuli in northeast Italy and neighbouring Slovenia share a border and a tradition. This is the region that pushed orange wine back into the modern spotlight. The Collio and Goriška Brda hills straddle the two countries, and producers on both sides ferment whites on their skins, often in amphora. Ribolla Gialla is the star grape here.


Italy also has its own gentler version called Ramato, which means coppery. It is Pinot Grigio given a short skin soak, anything from eight hours to a couple of days. The result is pink to light copper, fresh and easy rather than heavily tannic.

Further north, Alsace and the Czech Republic lean on aromatic grapes. Gewürztraminer and Pinot Gris are the go to varieties in both. Skin contact amplifies their natural perfume, giving lychee, rose and spice with a tangy bite.

What is orange wine? (video)

<p>Learn the basics of what an orange wine is here in this easy video where we cover the simple aspects of how skin-contact / skin-macerated wines are made, and debunk any confusion to the name. </p>
<br>For more details, read the texts on this page

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Which natural wine producers are famous for orange wines?

Some producers built their whole reputation on orange wine. These are the names to know.


Radikon is the icon. Stanko Radikon, working in Friuli, dug out his grandfather's old method in 1995 and started fermenting Ribolla Gialla on its skins for a week. Since 2002 the wines have been made with no added sulphur and a minimum of three months on the skins. For many critics these are simply the best orange wines in the world. Denavolo, in Emilia Romagna, is the work of Giulio Armani. He macerates on the skins for around six months using wild yeasts. The wines are textural, complex and a benchmark for what Italian orange can be. In France, La Sorga is Antony Tortul. Energetic, expressive, no added sulphites, and one of the founders of the cult Brutal series of zero added wines. Tom Lubbe's Matassa, down in Roussillon, sits in the same world and contributes to that same Brutal family. So does Escoda Sanahuja in Catalonia, a genuine pioneer who helped found the natural wine producers' association. You do not have to spend big to drink good orange wine though. Plenty of producers make accessible versions, and Meinklang's Weisser Mulatschak is a brilliant entry point. Easy, juicy, properly orange in style and a fraction of the price of the cult bottles. It proves the style does not have to be rare or expensive to be good. It is one of our all time bestsellers for exactly that reason.

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FAQ about Orange Wines

What are the best grapes for orange wine

This is of course up for debate, but often floral and aromatic grape vareties make for the best experience with skin-contact wines. For example, Pinot Gris, Muscat, Malvasia and Gewürztraminer are often used. Whilst often used to make sweet wines in the conventional wine world, in the natural wine scene these are often made as dry orange wines.


What is the best value or cheapest orange wine?

In our humble opinion, there is no better orange wine on the market that can beat Meinklang's Weisser Mulatschak in quality. Its one of the most affordable natural wines there is too. You can find it here on the shop or with your local dealer


Is all orange wine classed as a natural wine?

No. And this is something to be wary of. If you spot a wine marketed as an orange wine in a commerical supermarket at a very low price, it might not actually be a natural wine. Commerical wineries and large retailers have recognised the trend for orange wines, and are trying to replicate it in ways which would suit their audience and have more stability. Just because a wine is orange, does not mean it is natural. However... your first instinct should be to rejoice that it most likely is, as a style not popular in the conventional wine world, yet.


Is orange wine made from oranges

No. The term orange wine is used to simplify the difference between white wines and skin-contact wines, which have an orange colour. But in places like Georgia, they are known as Amber wines. It is sadly ironic that often skin-contact wines can have a slightly orange fruit flavour to them, to add to the confusion. But they are always made from grapes, just like most wine.

Where can I learn more about Orange Wines?

Check out the book "Amber Revolution - How the World Came to Love Orange Wine" by Simon Woolf. This is THE definitive guide to orange wines, and perhaps the ONLY book solely on the topic. Part compelling social history, part orange wine primer, Amber Revolution weaves its tale of oppression, struggle and persistence across the shifting borders of Friuli and Slovenia, to the Caucasus, Georgia and beyond. It even includes a guide to over 220 recommended producers from 25 countries, plus tips for buying, food matching and enjoying orange wines.

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