Wine Explained
Natural wine, orange wine, and everything in between
Natural wine, orange wine, and everything in between
WHAT IS NATURAL WINE?
Natural wine is fermented grape juice, with as little intervention as possible.
There is no official certification. Natural wine is defined by a shared approach, not a label.
Grapes are grown without synthetic pesticides or herbicides.
Most producers farm organically or biodynamically and work by hand.
Fermentation happens with native yeasts.
No additives, no heavy corrections.
Wines are usually bottled without filtration or stabilisation.
About sulphur
Some producers add a very small amount of sulphur.
Others add none at all.
The result is wine that reflects a place, a season, and the person who made it — not a recipe.
WHAT IS ORANGE WINE?
Orange wine is white wine made like red wine.
White grapes, fermented with their skins.
Skins stay with the juice during fermentation.
This adds colour, texture, and tannins.
Grapes are usually fermented with native yeasts.
No shortcuts, no heavy manipulation.
More structure than white wine.
Aromas of dried fruit, herbs, tea, citrus peel.
Texture matters as much as flavour.
Often, yes — but not always.
Orange wine is a method, not a guarantee of farming or philosophy.
ORANGE WINE IS ABOUT TEXTURE, TIME, AND PATIENCE — NOT COLOR.
Natural wine doesn’t need special treatment — just a bit of attention.
Serve it like any good wine, but stay flexible.
Natural wine evolves fast in the glass — that’s part of the charm.
Sometimes yes. Sometimes no. It depends on the bottle.
Cooler than you think. Warmer than the fridge.
No. It’s normal.
Use it as a tool, not a rule.
Yes — but don’t overthink it.
There’s no fixed rule — taste is your best guide.
Wine is alive. Let your palate decide.
Nothing complicated.
Forget rules. Start with context.
Orange wine is made for food.