Before we dive in, let's clear up the most common confusion: orange wine is NOT made from oranges. It's not a wine spritzer with orange juice, it's not Fanta for adults, and it's certainly not some trendy cocktail. Orange wine is actually white wine made like red wine—white grapes with extended skin contact that produces a glorious amber hue. Think of it as white wine's wild, rebellious sibling who backpacked through Georgia and came back absolutely transformed.
Right, let's talk about what you're actually getting in the glass, shall we? Orange wine is not for the faint of heart or those who prefer their wines polite and predictable. This is wine with personality—the kind of date who orders adventurous food and has strong opinions about natural fermentation.
The texture is what really sets orange wine apart from its conventional white wine cousins. Thanks to all that extended skin contact, you get tannins—those mouth-drying compounds typically found in red wines and over-steeped tea. Combined with often lower acidity due to oxidative winemaking, orange wine has a full, almost chewy body that demands your attention. It's not background music; it's a full orchestral performance.
Here's where it gets properly fascinating, my dears. While we're all treating orange wine like it's the latest natural wine trend discovered by a Brooklyn sommelier with impressive facial hair, the Georgians have been making this stuff since approximately 6,000 BC. Yes, that's eight thousand years ago—before the wheel, before writing, before anyone had the good sense to invent corkage fees.
The traditional Georgian method uses qvevri (pronounced "keh-vree")—massive egg-shaped clay vessels that are buried underground up to their necks. The whole grape bunches—skins, seeds, stems, and all—are tossed in together and left to ferment for anywhere from several months to an entire year. The underground temperature stays brilliantly constant, and the egg shape creates natural convection currents that keep the wine moving without any intervention. It's essentially the world's first hands-off, minimal-intervention winemaking, and it's absolutely genius.
This UNESCO-protected Georgian tradition continued uninterrupted for millennia while the rest of the wine world was busy perfecting other techniques. Then in the 1990s, a handful of forward-thinking Italian winemakers in Friuli—particularly the legendary Joško Gravner and Stanko Radikon—travelled to Georgia, had their minds completely blown, and brought the techniques back home. What was old became new again, and the modern orange wine movement was born.
Now let's get into the nitty-gritty of how orange wine is actually made, because understanding the process really helps you appreciate what's in the glass.
Traditional white wine production: You press white grapes immediately after harvest, separating the juice from the skins, seeds, and stems. The clear juice ferments on its own, producing a wine that's typically fresh, fruity, and light in color.
Orange wine production: You crush white grapes and leave everything together—juice, skins, seeds, sometimes even stems—for an extended maceration period. This can range from a few days to several months (or even a year in those Georgian qvevri). During this time, the juice extracts color, tannins, and flavor compounds from the skins, just like red wine production.
The extended skin contact is what gives orange wine its distinctive amber-to-deep-orange color (hence the name), plus all those tannins and complex flavors. Many producers also use wild, native yeasts rather than commercial strains, ferment in neutral vessels like concrete, clay, or old oak, and avoid filtration or fining. The result? Wine with texture, complexity, and a certain funky unpredictability that natural wine lovers absolutely adore.
Technically, you can make orange wine from any white grape variety, but some varieties absolutely shine with this treatment. Here are the absolute superstars:
While Georgia is the spiritual homeland, brilliant orange wines are now being made worldwide. Here's where to focus your attention:
The region that sparked the modern orange wine revolution. Producers like Gravner, Radikon, and La Castellada are absolute legends. The wines tend to be structured, profound, and age-worthy—think more intellectual than immediately charming.
Just across the border from Friuli, the Slovenians have their own vibrant orange wine scene. Slightly more approachable than their Italian neighbors, with gorgeous fruit purity alongside the skin-contact character.
The OG orange wine region. Qvevri wines from producers like Pheasant's Tears, Iago's Wine, and Niki Antadze offer a direct line to ancient winemaking traditions. These wines can be powerfully oxidative and funky—absolutely brilliant with Georgian cuisine.
Austrian winemakers have embraced orange wine with typical precision. Look for Meinklang, Claus Preisinger, and Gut Oggau for beautifully balanced examples that maintain freshness alongside skin-contact character.
The natural wine movement in California has produced some cracking orange wines. Scholium Project, Donkey & Goat, and Martha Stoumen are making exciting, experimental skin-contact wines that push boundaries.
Orange wine and natural wine are not synonyms, but they're definitely dating. Most orange wine producers embrace a low-intervention, natural winemaking philosophy that aligns perfectly with extended skin-contact techniques.
This means wild fermentations (using ambient yeasts from the vineyard rather than commercial strains), minimal or no sulfur additions, no fining or filtration, and a general hands-off approach that lets the wine express itself authentically. The result can be unpredictable—bottle variation is common, and some wines develop funky, cider-like qualities that you either adore or absolutely loathe.
The traditional Georgian method is inherently natural—those qvevri have been buried in cellars for thousands of years without temperature control, cultured yeasts, or any modern interventions. It's winemaking in its purest, most elemental form, and it produces wines that taste like absolutely nothing else on earth.
This is where orange wine proves it's not just a trendy curiosity—it's genuinely one of the most food-friendly wine styles you can find. Those tannins and oxidative notes make it incredibly versatile at the table.
Well, obviously! Khachapuri (cheese bread), khinkali (dumplings), and pkhali (walnut-based vegetable dishes) are absolutely made for orange wine. The richness of Georgian food needs the tannin and texture that only skin-contact wine can provide. It's a pairing that's been perfected over eight millennia—I'd say they've got it sorted.
Think Moroccan tagines, Lebanese mezze, Israeli shakshuka, Turkish köfte—the robust spices, dried fruits, nuts, and olive oil-based dishes are absolutely spectacular with orange wine. The tannins can handle the richness while the oxidative notes complement the warm spice profiles beautifully. Za'atar-roasted vegetables? Magnifique.
Orange wine's funky, oxidative character makes it a natural match for fermented foods. Kimchi, sauerkraut, miso-based dishes, aged cheeses (think washed-rind beauties or nutty alpine styles), and charcuterie all work brilliantly. The shared fermentation funk creates a beautiful harmony on the palate.
Other smashing pairings: Root vegetable dishes, mushroom risotto, roasted poultry, pork belly, oily fish like mackerel or sardines, and pretty much anything involving tahini or nuts. The key is matching the wine's weight and intensity—don't pair it with delicate seafood or light salads; give it something with backbone.
Right, enough theory—let's talk about actual bottles you should be hunting down. Here are producers making absolutely brilliant orange wines across different styles and price points:
Here's a crucial tip that will massively improve your orange wine experience: serve it warmer than you would conventional white wine. We're talking 12-14°C (54-57°F)—basically light red wine temperature, or "cellar cool."
Why? Those tannins and complex aromatics need a bit of warmth to express themselves properly. Serve orange wine ice-cold like you would Pinot Grigio and you'll mute all those gorgeous nutty, oxidative notes. Let it warm up a bit, and suddenly everything clicks into place. If it comes out of the fridge, give it 20-30 minutes to come up to temperature.
Let's be honest: orange wine is divisive. Some people take one sip and have a genuine revelation—suddenly wine becomes more interesting, more complex, more alive. Others taste it and think someone's served them cider that's gone off. Both reactions are completely valid!
Orange wine challenges our expectations of what white wine should taste like. If you expect crisp, fruity, refreshing Sauvignon Blanc and get a tannic, oxidative, funky Ribolla Gialla instead, your brain might reject it entirely. But if you approach it with an open mind, ready to experience something genuinely different, orange wine can be absolutely transformative.
My advice? Start with something relatively approachable—perhaps an Austrian orange wine or a California skin-contact Chenin Blanc—rather than diving straight into a year-long qvevri fermentation. Build up to the funky, oxidative, challenging stuff once you've got your bearings. And always, always serve it with food—orange wine is a team player that shines at the table.
Orange wine represents something genuinely special in the wine world: a style that's simultaneously ancient and cutting-edge, traditional and rebellious, carefully crafted and wildly unpredictable. It's a direct link to how wine was made for thousands of years before modern technology intervened, yet it feels utterly contemporary in the natural wine bars of Brooklyn and London.
Whether you're a natural wine devotee, a curious wine geek looking to expand your horizons, or someone who just wants something interesting to pair with that Georgian feast you're planning, orange wine deserves your attention. It might not become your everyday drinking wine (though for some people it absolutely does), but it will certainly expand your understanding of what wine can be.
So grab a bottle, let it warm up to proper temperature, pair it with something robustly flavored, and prepare to have your preconceptions thoroughly challenged. Wine made like they did 8,000 years ago? In 2025, that's positively revolutionary.
Right then, get yourself to the natural wine shop and embrace the funk!
Santé, my adventurous darlings! 🍊🍷
Sophie, The Wine Insider
Oenology-trained in France, cheeky by nature