Welcome to our store
Welcome to our store
Sipsy
Recipient Details
⚠️ Someone 21+ must be available to accept the order at time of delivery. .
Local delivery: A 21+ adult must be present to accept the order and have their ID scanned. If we can't reach the recipient or the ID scan fails, a $8.99 re-delivery fee applies.
Shipping: A 21+ adult must be present to sign. After 3 failed attempts or failed age verification, the order is returned and refunded minus original shipping, return shipping, and a $8.99 restocking fee.

When Life Gives You Oranges is produced by Les Producteurs Réunis in the Languedoc-Roussillon region of southern France, a vast and climatically diverse appellation stretching from the Rhône delta to the foothills of the Pyrenees. The region is defined by its Mediterranean influence — long, dry summers, low annual rainfall, and soils ranging from limestone and schist to clay and garrigue-covered hillsides. These conditions favor phenolic ripeness and concentrated aromatics in the grapes, while the region's tradition of cooperative and natural winemaking has increasingly embraced skin-contact and oxidative techniques that draw from both ancient and contemporary practice.
This is an orange wine, meaning it is produced from white grapes vinified with extended skin contact, a method that extracts tannin, color, and textural compounds from the grape skins in a manner more commonly associated with red wine production. The maceration period determines the depth of color, phenolic grip, and aromatic complexity, pulling the wine toward a profile that sits outside conventional white wine categories. Fermentation proceeds with minimal intervention, allowing the native yeasts of the Languedoc terroir to drive the conversion and contribute to the wine's wild, expressive character.
The palate reflects the skin-contact process — dried citrus peel, stone fruit, and a savory, oxidative quality that gives the wine its structural weight. The tannins are present but fine-grained, providing texture without harshness. The finish is dry and lingering, with a bitter orange note and a mineral thread that ties back to the limestone and schist soils of the Languedoc. The overall profile rewards patience in the glass as it opens and shifts with air.