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8 Great Affordable Rosé Wines
These pinks are easy going down—and easy on the wallet
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As the weather warms up, wine-shop shelves get increasingly rosier, with rows of bottles in hues from the palest blush to vibrant salmon. When it comes to warm-weather drinking, pink is definitely the new white. In 2015 alone, the volume of rosé sales was up more than 44 percent year over year.
If 2015 was the year that rosé was embraced by all ages and genders, 2016 was when these wines became just a little less affordable. By 2016, you needed to be prepared to pay more than $20 for a bar-setting pink (in some cases, a lot more).
Count me as a fan of those beautiful, nuanced rosés. But the times that call for rosé—a seafood barbecue, a charcuterie picnic, a sunset over the water—often aren’t about thoughtful wine drinking. Focusing on whether the cherry flavors lean toward Rainier or Bing can get in the way of a good novel on the beach. On the other hand, a flabby, funky rosé would ruin that novel.
Happily, some winemakers are making it possible to find a middle ground. Sonoma County’s Martin Ray Vineyards and Winery, for example, just launched a lovely new rosé under its Angeline label—for $13. The winemaker, Bill Batchelor, believes that at that price point, the consumer still has the right to expect “clean, crisp summer-fruit flavors—a wine that’s refreshing and not too sweet.”