Tavel
Tavel is a protected wine appellation within Rhône Valley, anchored in the Rhône Valley, where northern granitic slopes and warmer southern stone-strewn plateaus create sharply different AOC identities. The designation belongs in the appellations layer because it defines the legal name that may appear on labels, while the existing regions row remains the broader geographic and cultural context. Soil, elevation, exposure, climate, and local tradition shape the way the name reads to drinkers, but the legal designation is the object modeled here.
Permitted or characteristic grapes for the designation include Grenache, Cinsault, Syrah, Mourvèdre, Clairette, Bourboulenc, Picpoul, Carignan. Tavel often shows strawberry, raspberry, blood orange, spice, herbs, and a fuller body than many pale Provence-style rosés, with enough structure for substantial food. The list should be read as a practical reference for common wines under the name, not as a claim that every bottle uses every grape or follows one fixed recipe. Producer choice, vintage conditions, subzone, and cellar work still create meaningful variation inside the protected origin.
Rosé wines only. Tavel is one of France's most famous rosé-only appellations and is governed by rules specific to structured dry rosé production. Wines using the name must satisfy the relevant French AOC cahier des charges, including origin rules and any style, labeling, grape, or production requirements that apply to the designation. This entry intentionally summarizes the consumer-facing identity of the appellation rather than reproducing the entire legal specification.
The classification tier in this database is an editorial navigation aid, not a score or promise of bottle quality. Farming, harvest timing, yield decisions, release category, and producer intent remain decisive. The appellation is essential because it proves that rosé can be a protected specialty rather than only a byproduct of red-wine regions. This keeps the EncyclopediaOfWine distinction clear: regions describe wine places, while appellations describe protected legal names.
Permitted Grapes
Grenache, Cinsault, Syrah, Mourvèdre, Clairette, Bourboulenc, Picpoul, Carignan.
Notable Rules
Rosé wines only. Tavel is one of France's most famous rosé-only appellations and is governed by rules specific to structured dry rosé production.
Also Known As
Appellation Tavel Contrôlée, Tavel AOC
Sources & References
- INAO / Tavel cahier des charges
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REFERENCE NOTE
This entry is written as an educational overview and may synthesize public regulatory, historical, and editorial sources. It is not an official regulatory record.