"Corbières Rosé Racine, Château Ollieux Romanis 2025" is due back in soon

View original product description

This is a carousel with zoom. Use the thumbnails to navigate, or jump to a slide. Use the zoom button to zoom into a image.

Due in

Corbières Rosé Racine, Château Ollieux Romanis 2025

Rose Wine from France - Languedoc
5.000000000 star rating 2 Reviews
This is a lovely, balanced southern French rosé, pale, mouthwateringly fresh yet full-flavoured with a touch of wild herbs and delicate fruit. Think well-flavoured seafood stews, gamier fish like red mullet or grilled Med veg, grills or just on its own. We are delighted to name Ollieux-Romanis as one of our Wine Society Pioneers for their efforts in sustainable production. Cover crops like radish, vetch, oats, and clover boost nitrogen and aid soil health, organic compost is used rather than weedkiller, and they are rainwater collection tanks makes them self-sufficient for their needs and proud that the only water used on the property from outside the estate is the bottled spring water enjoyed by customers in the restaurant! They’re trialling pergola training of the vines to help airflow, soil temperatures and, consequently, water retention, and they harvest white grapes in the cool night so that no sulphur is needed pre-fermentation. Naturally, no enzymes are used to boost the process. It naturally follows that this organic certified estate only uses natural yeasts to ferment the wine. in the fermentation.
Price: £11.95 Bottle (£15.93/litre)
Price: £71.50 Case of 6 (£15.89/litre)
Due in on 12/06/26
Code: FC51001

Wine characteristics

  • Rose Wine
  • 2 - Dry
  • Grenache/Garnacha
  • 75cl
  • Now to 2027
  • 12% Alcohol
  • no oak influence
  • Cork, diam
  • 410 g (Empty bottle weight)
  • Vegetarian
  • Vegan
  • Organic

Bestselling wines

Château Ollieux Romanis

The Bories family have been making wine in Corbières for generations, since they built their own winery and cellar in 1896 using original stones from the estate’s quarry. In the 1980s, Jacqueline and François Bories completely rejuvenated the family property, buying up parcels of vines and restructuring the vineyards, wisely refusing to pull up the older vines as so many other producers were doing. Now Ollieux Romanis owns some of the oldest vines in the region.

Jacqueline and François laid excellent foundations for their son, Pierre Bories, who began working with them in 2001 and has maintained the Chateau’s excellent reputation ever since.

The domaine is located at the heart of Boutenac, one of the 11 sub-zones of Corbières and historically better known for olive groves and grazing sheep. In 2005 it became the only Corbières sub-region with its own ‘cru’ status, so it is deemed by most to be the best of the bunch. The domaine’s 150 hectares of vineyards are particularly well positioned in a south-south-easterly aspect which gives shelter from the north wind and is a beautiful sun-trap.

Impressively, more than a third of their vines are carignan aged between 50 and over 100 years old, but they also grow syrah, grenache noir, mourvèdre, roussanne and marsanne, among other varieties. Soil types vary greatly too – from hard clay with rolled pebbles, to red mediterranean soil – but all are excellent at keeping vines hydrated in the scorching summer heat.

The family practises...
The Bories family have been making wine in Corbières for generations, since they built their own winery and cellar in 1896 using original stones from the estate’s quarry. In the 1980s, Jacqueline and François Bories completely rejuvenated the family property, buying up parcels of vines and restructuring the vineyards, wisely refusing to pull up the older vines as so many other producers were doing. Now Ollieux Romanis owns some of the oldest vines in the region.

Jacqueline and François laid excellent foundations for their son, Pierre Bories, who began working with them in 2001 and has maintained the Chateau’s excellent reputation ever since.

The domaine is located at the heart of Boutenac, one of the 11 sub-zones of Corbières and historically better known for olive groves and grazing sheep. In 2005 it became the only Corbières sub-region with its own ‘cru’ status, so it is deemed by most to be the best of the bunch. The domaine’s 150 hectares of vineyards are particularly well positioned in a south-south-easterly aspect which gives shelter from the north wind and is a beautiful sun-trap.

Impressively, more than a third of their vines are carignan aged between 50 and over 100 years old, but they also grow syrah, grenache noir, mourvèdre, roussanne and marsanne, among other varieties. Soil types vary greatly too – from hard clay with rolled pebbles, to red mediterranean soil – but all are excellent at keeping vines hydrated in the scorching summer heat.

The family practises sustainable viticulture, although they haven’t yet achieved formal certification. Weed-killer was discontinued several years ago, and chemical fertilisers have been replaced by compost made almost entirely on the vineyard.

The harvest takes place in September, with different parcels of grapes being picked together according to their quality. A small team of pickers harvests about 80% of the grapes by hand, as their ancestors did, carrying the grapes in baskets on their back. They are then transported to the winery by tractor in small boxes, where they are sorted and then most of the grapes undergo carbonic maceration.

Although the family pay careful attention to their long-held traditions, they are also dedicated to improving their wines by using the best modern technology: for instance, they use a pneumatic press which is gentler to the grapes and extracts better-quality juice.
Read more

Decanter

A vivid herbal lining gives this rosé character and definition outlining the red apple, wild strawberry and pomegranate juicy fruit. A zesty flow of blood orange and pink grapefruit builds a fluid and...
A vivid herbal lining gives this rosé character and definition outlining the red apple, wild strawberry and pomegranate juicy fruit. A zesty flow of blood orange and pink grapefruit builds a fluid and lively backbone.
Read more

Ines Salpico

JancisRobinson.com

Golden pink colour. Smells like ripe papaya. Very, very dry – more salinethan fruity. Just a hint of crunchy peach. Spine of stone. This could rehydratea parched traveller. JancisRobinson.com

Tamlyn Currin

2025 vintage reviews
2024 vintage reviews
2023 vintage reviews
Back to top