Itay Lahat’s New Rosé: Above All, It’s a Wine – Pink Comes Second 

By David Amzallag

The global rosé revolution, unfolding slowly yet thoroughly, is reaching us  too. For the first time, we are encountering a serious rosé wine – a product we have never really known here – a new type of wine with  structure, complexity, depth, and softness. Itay Lahat’s new rosé offers an exceptional drinking experience and marks an important milestone in Israel’s wine journey. 

I’ve always loved rosé wines, and only in recent years have I better understood why.  I think it’s mainly because of the transformation it is undergoing. Gradually, rosé is shifting globally from one type of wine to another – from a simple, trendy  product to a refined wine category with  terroir character and worthy of ageing. These are two very different kinds of wines, each with its own audience and purpose, and both are valid forms of rosé  made through entirely different processes. 

On one side is the basic rosé, the one most of us know well: grapes harvested at optimal ripeness, gently pressed to avoid  extracting color, fermented at cold temperatures in tanks, and bottled early to provide the freshest, brightest wine with aromas and flavors of red berries and  grapefruit. A wine that barely gets to “see” the winery before being bottled and shipped shortly after harvest. It’s delicious, highly popular (rosé accounts for about 10% of total global wine consumption, and most of it is this style), usually pale, light, and often lacking in character. It is a drink associated with fun, summer, and  Instagram – especially due to Provence style marketing dominance that prioritised color over complexity, often resulting in  rosés with little depth, structure, or  individuality. This is the one category of rosé wines. 

The other side of the current revolution is rosé wines made with entirely different goals and production processes. Winemakers now produce rosés through deliberate stylistic decisions – skin contact, barrel fermentation, ageing on lees, and even amphora maturation – to build wines with texture, complexity, and ageing  potential. Darker rosés, once dismissed, are being reappraised. The Tavel region in  the Rhône Valley, adjacent to Châteauneuf du-Pape, has always been known for its rosés (I still remember Château d’Aqueria Tavel) and is now flourishing again thanks to its bold, innovative wines. This is another category of rosé. These wines are no longer fashionable trends but  expressions of terroir with deep cultural and regional roots. Increasingly, producers in France (Provence, Tavel, Languedoc Roussillon), the US, Australia, Lebanon, Romania, and the Balkans are making serious rosé wines with the same precision  and intention as their reds and whites – wines that decouple our tasting perception from color alone. 

In between, a mixed category has  emerged: well-made rosés with precise  planning and effort, but intentionally kept  without significant complexity or depth. It  is a fascinating process that will lead to a  far better wine world overall. This post is  mainly about us – about the rosé  revolution happening here, in Israel, and  about Itay Lahat’s new rosé, a wine with structure, complexity, depth, and softness.  It is the first truly serious rosé made in  Israel.

Here too, we already see early signs of  rosé’s journey towards a richer and more  dignified future. “Garage de Papa” by Ido  Lewinson (Caladoc, 12.5% alcohol,  stainless steel fermentation with four  months in oak) and Raziel’s rosé by Eithan  Ben-Zaken (Mourvèdre, Grenache, Syrah;  hand-harvested, six months in oak, 13%  alcohol) are two prominent examples from  the mixed category. Both are high-quality,  highly enjoyable rosés with distinct  characters and excellent presentation (pale  pink color, delicately designed labels, and  bottle shapes that demand attention).  Both were made through carefully planned  processes – from variety selection,  vineyard work, harvest timing,  fermentation policies, barrel choices, to  criteria for bottling. They could have been  made differently to fit the second category  and serve as serious main-course wines,  but were intentionally kept lighter, aligning  with what Israeli consumers know and  expect. It is a wise approach, matching  product identity to winery strategy and  clientele. 

Now we have Garrigue, Itay Lahat’s new  rosé. A serious wine, fit to accompany the main course at Friday dinners and destined  to improve with age. This is precisely a second-category rosé, and its release marks a milestone in our local wine journey. For the first time, we are moving  from the pleasant lightness of rosé to a true wine – a product we have never  known here: a rosé with structure, complexity, depth, and softness. 

Why a milestone? Because from now on, we can think of rosé differently. From now on, rosé can be both serious and  immensely enjoyable. From now on, we can talk about ageing rosé. And from now on, Israel joins the small list of regions participating in this evolutionary and innovative rosé transformation. 

Garrigue 2024 is, above all, a wine – pink comes second. A blend of almost equal  parts Mourvèdre, Syrah, and Grenache, with 10% Roussanne adding a beautiful oily, brioche-like finish. It underwent ten months of meticulous barrel ageing (both  each variety separately and later the assembled blend), aimed at enhancing complexity and stabilising its color, aroma,  and flavor – the kind of extended winemaking usually reserved for deep, culinary wines. 

It has a gorgeous dark salmon color, a rich  flavor palette, delicate herbal aromas, perfect acidity, and excellent ageing potential. A brilliant wine. 

Unlike other rosés, it should be served at  around 16°C. So if, like me, you store it in  your kitchen fridge (4°C), open it and let it  rest and sweat for about half an hour  before serving – trust me, you’ll experience  it fully then. 

And why Garrigue? Because that’s what the French call the low wild vegetation growing among vineyards in the Southern Rhône – lavender, thyme, rosemary, sage, and more – which imparts a natural, almost wild herbal touch to local wines. Similar vegetation grows in the vineyards  of Elkosh and Peki’in in Upper Galilee, and this wine beautifully captures those aromas. 

Where to get it? Directly from Itay Lahat and at many wine stores and chains  (official launch: July 22, 2025). 

Price Range: 1 (up to NIS 100), 2 (NIS 100– 150), 3 (NIS 150–200), 4 (NIS 200–300), 5 (above NIS 300). 

Itay Lahat is a vine agronomist, oenologist, and winemaker with thirty years of experience. I first met him years ago when he left his role as head winemaker at Barkan Winery to establish his own  premium private brand, producing wines that reflect his personal philosophy and aesthetics while teaching and consulting for numerous wineries nationwide. 

Itay is a quiet man, a lover of the Hebrew  language (his logo font was intentionally  designed in Hebrew), deeply committed to  his professional path. His wines are sometimes easy to understand and  sometimes require more reflection and  time. His first white, Lahat White (Roussanne, Viognier, with a touch of Marsanne), was made in 2012, followed by Lahat Red (mainly Syrah with some Cabernet Sauvignon) in 2014. Since then, he has added Leichter (Roussanne, Grenache Blanc, Marsanne) and Leibo (his blend of Grenache, Syrah, Mourvèdre), as well as Roussanne (amphora-aged) and Syrah, creating two trilogies – white and  red – each telling a precise, complete story of Mediterranean Rhône varieties grown in Upper Galilee. Now, after years of thought and planning, the rosé joins them as a natural bridge between the two trilogies. 

I have been drinking all of Itay’s wines, both whites and reds, for years and enjoy them immensely. And because this is my  personal post, I will add that my favorites so far have been his Syrah 2022 and Roussanne 2024. 

From the outset, Itay’s winemaking strategy has been built on two goals: to express the Western Upper Galilee region clearly, and to express his personal wine philosophy. His reds have medium-full bodies, balanced yet lean, or they are “big  band” wines, where the ensemble is far greater than any individual component. And now, the rosé. He calls this a personal  terroir.

Lahat does not yet have his own active winery; he produces his wines at Kishor Winery in Misgav Region. The fruit comes  from Upper and Western Galilee, mainly  from Joel Ben-Ayon’s Elkosh vineyard. Recently, Tempo Group and Barkan-Segal Winery became partners with Itay, acquiring part of his operation to build the future Lahat Winery. This will enable him to make more excellent wines, pursue  further innovation, and finally host customers at a dedicated visitor center – something impossible until now. 

The rosé revolution (which I will dedicate a  separate post to soon) actually began when a group of producers in France (mainly in Tavel and Bandol), California, Australia, and Spain got fed up with the industrial, characterless rosé coming out of Provence and sought a higher-quality way  to make rosé. Some of them (for example, Château Simone in the small Palette wine region near Aix-en-Provence or Domaines Ott in Provence, who in my opinion were among the first) began making rosé wines from Mourvèdre, Grenache, Syrah, and Cinsault with intentional, unapologetic skin contact, lees ageing, and barrel  maturation. The resulting wine was completely different – with structure,  complexity, and ageing potential. But what now? The wine was excellent, with depth and softness, but anyone seeing its pale  pink color expected something entirely different. We are talking about around  2010–2015, and the world (certainly  Southern France) was used to and very fond of “that other” rosé, and people  simply did not associate pink-colored wine with quality, complexity, and depth in the same way they did with red and white  wines. Then, around 2018, Elizabeth Gabay became involved, and the revolution took a turn, gaining clear vision and, most importantly, growing  acceptance. Elizabeth is a Master of Wine who serves as an authority and leading voice in the world of rosé. She is an active contributor to Decanter and the most important wine magazines globally, and is a sought-after judge at today’s leading wine competitions (including Decanter’s Annual World Wine Awards). 

As with any innovation-driven transformation, Elizabeth faced – almost  singlehandedly – many prejudices, worldviews, and winemakers and wine regions worldwide to describe, change, and build a better wine world; a world where rosé is first and foremost a wine,  only then pink. A world where there is no conceptual distinction between serious red, white, or rosé wines. 

Her two books – “Rosé: Understanding the Pink Wine Revolution” (written in 2018 as  a thorough, in-depth exploration of the  history, regions, and production processes of rosé wines) and “Rosés of Southern  France” (written in 2021 with Ben Bernheim about the serious-category rosé  producers in Southern France) – are foundational texts shaping the future of  rosé. 

Thanks to her, the wine world will be better and of higher quality. And now, so will our wine world here.

For more reflections by David Amzallag,  see www.winethoughts.blog

This post was originally published on July 3rd, 2025 on the Israeli wine blog Wine Thoughts. This was  the first post in Hebrew on Serious Rosé and it comes as an intro for the Israeli wine audience. The post also present Itay Lahat’s new Rosé (that will be launched officially on 22.07.2025 in Tel-Aviv), the first serious rosé in Israel. This document is a one-to-one translation of the post to English. The original post can be viewed (in Hebrew) at https://www.winethoughts.blog/post/garrigue-by-itay-lahat

About the Blog 

Wine Thoughts (www.winethoughts.blog) is a weekly wine blog, but it rarely behaves like one. It offers  personal reflections on wine, people, books, and the hidden strategies that shape the global wine  industry — strategies often invisible to drinkers, yet central to what ends up in their glass. With a  distinctly unorthodox voice, Wine Thoughts drifts across borders and disciplines, pairing Syrah-Viognier  from Australia with thoughts on field blends in Israel, the business model behind Vivino with the poetry  of wine-focused literature, or the entrepreneurial spirit of Napa with quiet revolutions in Galilee. 

Both local and global in scope, this is a blog unconcerned with trends or reach — and yet, it has quietly  become a widely read platform among winemakers, industry professionals, and curious wine lovers  across the Hebrew-speaking world. Remarkably, it has done so without the use of social media. An  English-version is expected soon, but at its core, Wine Thoughts remains a place for readers who want  to understand more, not just know more. 

About David Amzallag 

David Amzallag is the writer behind Wine Thoughts — a multidisciplinary tech entrepreneur whose  career has spanned Deep-Tech, Telecom, Healthcare, Fintech, and Energy, often at the helm of large scale worldwide technological transformations in both startups and global corporations. He holds a  Ph.D. in Computer Science and has long but devoted love for wine.