Driscoll's rosé wine strawberries and raspberries are ripe for summer
The rosé berries don't actually contain wine
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These berries don’t fall far from the grapevine.
Rosé wine-flavored strawberries and raspberries are ripe for summer thanks to a produce maker combining the fruity sweetness with the taste of pink wine.
Driscoll’s is bringing back its rosé berries – blush-colored strawberries and raspberries meant to mimic the taste of rosé, sans alcohol. The rosé berries feature "peachy, bright flavor notes akin to consumers’ favorite summer wine," Driscoll’s described in a press release. And the berries are actually light-pink, resembling a glass of rosé.
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The rosé strawberries are described as having a "smooth, silky, creamy texture that delivers a sweet, peachy flavor paired with a soft floral finish." The rosé raspberries are a result of a crossbred combination of red and golden raspberries.
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The fruity hybrid of flavors has been in the works for nearly 20 years, according to Driscoll’s website.