New World & Mediterranean·Established·red

Carignane (Carignan)

The southern French + Spanish workhorse grape transformed by old-vine production. Field-blend partner in California Zinfandel territory. Priorat’s second great grape.

Color
Red
Family
New World & Mediterranean
Synonyms
4
Primary regions
4
Significance
Established
Cross-references
3

About Carignane

Carignane (Carignan in France, Carignán in Spain, Carignano in Italy) is a Mediterranean workhorse grape that achieves serious editorial significance only through old-vine production. The grape’s defining viticultural challenge is its very high yield potential — in young plots and fertile sites, Carignane produces bulk wine of unremarkable character. Old, low-yielding vines (60+ years) in lean soils produce dramatically different wine: concentrated, acid-driven, with the variety’s distinctive garrigue (Mediterranean herb scrub) aromatic and tart red-fruit character. Priorat in Catalonia uses Carignane (Carignán) as a major component alongside Grenache (Garnatxa), producing some of Spain’s most serious wines from old-vine schist-soil plots. In California, Carignane is part of the historic field-blend tradition alongside Zinfandel, Petite Sirah, and Mourvèdre — Ridge Lytton Springs and Bedrock Heritage bottlings include significant Carignane percentages. The variety’s very high acid retention makes it editorially valuable as a blending partner.

Variety profile

Parentage
Spanish native (Carignán); spread to southern France and globally
Primary regions
Languedoc-RoussillonPriorat (Spain)California (old-vine field blends)Sardinia (as Carignano del Sulcis)
Flavor profile
Tart red and black fruit, herbal/garrigue notes, high acid; medium-to-high tannin, medium body when from old vines
Structural notes
High yield potential (problematic for quality); old, low-yielding vines produce serious wine; very high acid retained even at ripeness.
Vinification notes
Old-vine plots are the editorial center. Often carbonically macerated for everyday styles; serious production uses traditional fermentation.

Also known as

Regional names & synonyms
Carignan (France)Carignán (Spain)Mazuelo (Rioja)Carignano (Italy)

Editorial notes

Practical guidance

Old-vine Carignane is editorially distinct from young-vine bulk Carignane. The grape’s 60+ year vine age requirement for serious wine limits the category’s scale.

Cross-references

Related producers

Related appellations

Related styles