Orange (skin-contact) wine
White wine made with extended skin contact (like red wine). Color from amber to orange. Ancient Georgian qvevri tradition revived by modern Friulian producers (Gravner, Radikon).
About Orange wine
Orange wine (also called skin-contact white wine or amber wine) is editorially the most distinctive recent addition to the global fine-wine vocabulary — a category that’s ancient in origin (Republic of Georgia’s qvevri tradition has continuous practice since approximately 6000 BC, making it the world’s oldest documented winemaking method) but has only recently entered international wine consciousness through the work of Friulian Italian producers Joško Gravner and Stanko Radikon from the 1990s onward. The production reverses the standard white wine approach: white grapes are fermented WITH their skins for extended periods (weeks to months) — adopting red-wine skin-contact methodology for white grapes. The result is wine with amber-to-orange color (depending on skin contact duration), substantial tannin (white wine grapes do have some tannin in their skins; extended contact extracts it), and aromatic characteristics that combine white wine’s structural lightness with red wine’s phenolic complexity. The category remains controversial editorially — some critics consider orange wine fashionable but inferior; others consider it the most exciting development in fine wine since the late 20th century. Production has expanded to California, Oregon, France, Spain, and beyond.
Production process
Principal producers
- Gravner (Friuli)
- Radikon (Friuli)
- Pheasant’s Tears (Georgia)
- Movia (Slovenia)
Editorial notes
Orange wine is editorially polarizing — the aesthetic differences from conventional white wine (color, tannin, oxidative aromatic character) are real and the category requires acclimation. The Georgian qvevri tradition is ancient; the modern Friulian revival is recent (1990s onward).