Garnacha, Grenache and Sangiovese: rosé wine cases from independent growers

A rosé wine case is a single grower's six-bottle selection, built around one colour and shipped directly from the cellar. Compare cases by producer, region and style — from pale, bone-dry Provence to richer, fruit-forward Spanish rosé.

Selections from growers across Provence, Rioja, Tuscany and the Rhône Valley

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Rosé

All rosé cases

Rosé covers more ground than its reputation suggests. A Provençal estate might compose a case around Grenache Gris and Cinsault — pale, saline, built for the table — while a Rioja grower reaches for Garnacha to make something rounder and riper. The grower who made the wines selects the six bottles in every case on Free Grape Society, choosing bottles that read together as one cellar's work. Wines tasted before listing.

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Rosé wine cases

Choosing between rosé cases means choosing between producers and regions before it means choosing between flavours. A Grenache-led case from the southern Rhône Valley will carry different weight and structure than one built on Sangiovese from coastal Tuscany — same colour, different soils, different hands. Skin contact time is the lever: a few hours gives a pale, copper-tinted wine with low tannin; longer contact adds colour, texture, and grip.

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Rosé wine producers

Independent wine experts on Free Grape Society review the wines they have personally tasted — and several have reviewed bottles featured in these cases. Their notes appear on the wine pages alongside producer information, so you can read both before deciding. Browse individual rosé wines by region or grape if you prefer to build your own selection: [rosé wines from France](/SE/en/wines/color/rose/france), [rosé wines from Italy](/SE/en/wines/color/rose/italy), or [rosé wines from Spain](/SE/en/wines/color/rose/spain).

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Wine experts

Free Grape Society is a society of producers, independent experts and wine lovers, not a shop. Every rosé case ships Ex Works directly from the producer's own cellar, with no importer, agent or warehouse between the grower and your door. The producer sets the price, composes the case, and packs it themselves — what arrives is exactly what they chose to send.

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Frequently asked questions

How do I order a rosé wine case?

Choose a case from the grid, add it to your basket, and pay securely by card or Klarna. The producer ships the six bottles directly from their cellar to your address. Delivery takes between four and fourteen days depending on where the producer is based. Shipping is free, and you will receive tracking information once the case has been dispatched.

What happens if a bottle arrives broken or doesn't taste right?

Send a photo to Free Grape Society customer support within 7 days of delivery. We will arrange a replacement or a refund. Because producers ship directly, quality issues are handled with the producer's direct involvement. Shared responsibility is built into how FGS works.

What is included in a rosé wine case?

Each case contains six bottles selected by the producer — always from their own range, always one colour. The producer composes the case as their own recommendation, so the bottles read together as a coherent set rather than a random mix. The case page shows which wines are included and carries any available tasting notes from independent wine experts.

How long does delivery take?

Average delivery is 8 to 9 days from order to door. The full range is 4 to 14 days depending on the producer's location and your delivery address. Wines ship directly from the producer's cellar, not from a central warehouse.

How do I choose between different rosé cases?

Start with the producer and the region. A case from Provence is almost always pale and dry, built on Grenache or Cinsault; one from Rioja leans on Garnacha and tends to be rounder. Within a region, read the producer's own description — it will tell you whether the case skews lighter and mineral or richer and more textured. Expert reviews on the individual wine pages give further context.

How does a rosé case differ from buying individual bottles?

A case is one producer's curated six-bottle selection: you get a coherent set from a single cellar at a single price, shipped in one delivery. Buying individual bottles gives you more control to mix grapes and regions. If you want to explore a specific producer's range in depth, a case is the more direct route; if you want to compare three or four producers side by side, individual bottles give you that flexibility.

Which rosé wine expert can recommend something for me?

Several independent wine experts on Free Grape Society have reviewed rosé wines personally and can answer questions about style, grape, region and food pairing. Fill in the form on any expert's profile page — it takes less than a minute. Ask a wine expert and you will hear back directly from someone who has tasted the wines, not a chatbot or a call centre.

Who decides what goes in a rosé wine case?

The grower does. Every case on Free Grape Society is a single producer's six-bottle selection, composed by the producer as their own recommendation from their own range. The case is not assembled by an algorithm, a buyer, or a warehouse — it is what the grower chose to put together and ship directly from their cellar. Free Grape Society does not alter or substitute the contents.

Can I find rosé cases from the same producers I see in wine shops?

Unlikely, by design. The producers on Free Grape Society sell directly through the platform, which means most do not distribute through conventional retail or importers. These are independent estates — family-run wineries and small cooperatives — whose wines rarely reach supermarket shelves. A rosé case from Free Grape Society is almost always something you would not find at your local wine merchant.