Crockpot Rosé Mulled Wine
This crockpot rosé mulled wine is light, fruity, and gently spiced. Rosé warms with strawberries, citrus, and soft spices in your slow cooker, so you get a warm drink that still tastes fresh and bright — with very little hands-on work.

🧡 Why You’ll Love It
- Lighter and fruitier than classic red mulled wine
- Step-by-step, beginner-friendly method
- Uses affordable rosé — no need for anything fancy
- Easy to customize with different fruit, spices, or liqueurs
- Hands-off once everything is in the slow cooker
- Perfect for brunches, showers, Valentine’s Day, or any gathering
🧂 Ingredients (What You Actually Need)
Serves 6–8
Base Ingredients
- 1 (750 ml) bottle dry rosé wine
Choose a dry, crisp rosé. Avoid very sweet styles. - 1 cup apple juice or white grape juice
- ¼–⅓ cup honey or granulated sugar
Start with ¼ cup; you can add more after tasting. - 1 medium orange, sliced into rounds (peel on)
- 1 cup fresh or frozen strawberries, hulled and halved
- 2 cinnamon sticks
- 4–5 cardamom pods, lightly crushed
- 3–4 whole cloves
- 1 star anise pod (optional, for aroma and garnish)
- 1-inch piece fresh ginger, sliced into thin coins
Optional Flavor Boosts (Use 1–2)
- ¼ cup elderflower liqueur (soft, floral note)
- ¼ cup orange liqueur (Cointreau, Grand Marnier, or triple sec)
- ½ tsp vanilla extract (rounds and softens the flavor)
- ½ cup pomegranate juice (for extra tartness and deeper color)
- A few sprigs fresh mint (add at the very end, not while cooking)
Helpful Gear (Makes It Easier)
- Programmable slow cooker (4–6 quart)
- Reusable spice bags for cloves, cardamom, and star anise
- Citrus zester/peeler for orange peel curls
- Heatproof glass mugs to show off the pink color
- Stainless steel soup ladle for serving from the crock
- Fine-mesh strainer for straining leftovers
🍳 Steps (Do This)
We’ll go in very clear stages: set up, prep, build, heat, adjust, serve. Each step includes simple checkpoints so you know if you’re on track.
1. Set Up the Slow Cooker
- Place your 4–6 quart slow cooker on a heat-safe surface.
- Make sure the crock is clean and neutral-smelling (no lingering garlic or chili smells).
- Set the cooker to LOW, but leave it empty and uncovered for now.
Checkpoint: Crock is clean, cooker is on LOW, and you have space around it for mugs and ladle later.
2. Prep the Fruit
- Prep the orange:
- Rinse and dry the orange.
- Slice into ¼-inch rounds. Don’t peel it — the peel adds flavor.
- Set aside 2–3 of the nicest slices for garnish later if you like.
- Prep the strawberries:
- If using fresh, rinse, hull (remove green tops), and halve them.
- If using frozen, measure out 1 cup. No need to thaw.
Checkpoint: You have a small plate with orange rounds and a cup of halved strawberries ready to go.
3. Prep the Spices
- Crush the cardamom pods:
- Place pods on a cutting board.
- Press down gently with the side of a knife or the bottom of a mug until they crack.
- You’re not grinding them, just opening them so flavor releases.
- Slice the ginger:
- Rinse the ginger.
- No need to peel if it’s clean.
- Slice into thin coins about ⅛-inch thick.
- Gather the remaining spices:
- 2 cinnamon sticks
- 3–4 whole cloves
- 1 star anise pod (if using)
- Optional: Place cloves, cardamom pods, ginger coins, and star anise into a reusable spice bag. Leave cinnamon sticks loose in the crock so they look nice.
Checkpoint: Spices are measured and either grouped together on a small plate or inside a spice bag.
4. Build the Liquid Base
- Add the rosé wine:
- Open the bottle and pour the full 750 ml into the slow cooker.
- Use a dry, crisp rosé (if the label says “dry” or lists low residual sugar, that’s good).
- Add the juice:
- Pour in 1 cup of apple or white grape juice.
- This adds gentle sweetness and fruitiness without overpowering the rosé.
- Add the sweetener:
- Stir in ¼ cup honey or sugar.
- Use a spoon to stir until it is mostly dissolved. It doesn’t have to be perfect yet — it will fully dissolve as the drink heats.
Checkpoint: The slow cooker now has rosé + juice + a bit of sweetener and is still on LOW.
5. Add Fruit and Spices to the Crock
- Add the fruit:
- Place the orange slices into the liquid.
- Add the strawberries.
- Use a spoon to gently push them so they are mostly submerged.
- Add the spices:
- Add the cinnamon sticks directly to the crock.
- Add the crushed cardamom pods, ginger coins, cloves, and optional star anise (either loose or in your spice bag).
Checkpoint: You should see a mix of pink rosé, floating fruit, and visible whole spices. It will look a bit crowded — that’s good for flavor.
6. Warm Gently (Most Important Step)
- Place the lid on the slow cooker.
- Keep the setting on LOW.
- Let it heat for 45–75 minutes.
During this time, check a couple of things:
- After 30 minutes: Peek under the lid.
- You should see steam on the underside of the lid and maybe the very beginnings of tiny bubbles at the edges.
- If you see active bubbling, switch to “Keep Warm” right away.
- Goal temperature: Hot and steaming, but not boiling. Boiling:
- Cook off alcohol.
- Can pull bitterness from citrus peel and spices.
Checkpoint: After about an hour, the drink should be hot enough to sip carefully, with a fragrant, fruity smell when you lift the lid.
7. Taste and Fine-Tune
- Use a ladle to scoop a small amount into a mug.
- Let it cool for 10–20 seconds so you don’t burn your mouth.
- Ask yourself:
- Sweetness: Is it too tart?
- If yes, add 1–2 tablespoons more honey or sugar at a time, stir, and taste again.
- Tartness/brightness: Is it too flat or sweet?
- Add a small splash of rosé or a squeeze of fresh orange or lemon juice.
- Spice level: Is the spice too strong or too weak?
- If it’s too strong or starting to taste “sharp,” remove the spice bag or fish out the cloves and star anise. Leave cinnamon sticks in for gentle background warmth.
- If it’s too mild, leave spices in another 15–20 minutes, then taste again.
- Sweetness: Is it too tart?
- If you’re using elderflower liqueur, orange liqueur, or vanilla extract, stir them in now. Taste again to make sure the flavors are balanced.
Checkpoint: At this point, it should taste like warm, lightly spiced, fruity rosé — still recognizable as rosé, just cozier and more aromatic.
8. Switch to Keep Warm and Serve
- Change the slow cooker setting from LOW to “Keep Warm”.
- Give the mixture a gentle stir.
- Set out heatproof glass mugs and a stainless steel soup ladle.
- Ladle mulled rosé into each mug, trying to:
- Include a few pieces of fruit for presentation.
- Avoid scooping too many cloves or cardamom pods into mugs (this is where a spice bag helps).
- Garnish each mug with:
- 1 strawberry half (fresh, if you have it)
- 1 orange slice or peel curl (made with the citrus zester/peeler)
- 1 small cinnamon stick (optional but nice)
- 1 mint sprig (add right before serving so it stays green)
Checkpoint: In the mug, you should see a pretty pink drink with visible fruit and a subtle aroma of spice — not a heavy, dark mulled wine.
💡 Helpful Tips & Substitutions
Choosing the Right Rosé
- Look for:
- “Dry” or “crisp” on the label.
- Rosés from Provence-style regions or similar, which are often refreshing and not too sweet.
- Avoid:
- Very sweet rosés (they turn syrupy once heated with juice and sweetener).
- Heavily flavored or “rosé with added flavor” bottles.
- If your rosé is very pale and you want a deeper color, add ¼–½ cup pomegranate juice.
Adjusting Sweetness (Without Ruining It)
- Always sweeten in stages:
- Start with ¼ cup.
- Taste after heating.
- Add 1–2 tablespoons at a time if needed.
- If it ends up too sweet:
- Add more rosé if you have it, or
- Add a small splash of pomegranate or lemon juice to bring back some acidity.
Fruit Swaps
- Strawberries: Default choice, match rosé well.
- Raspberries: Use in place of or alongside strawberries for more tartness.
- Peach slices: Make it more like a warm, gentle sangria — ease up slightly on cinnamon so it stays delicate.
Spice Control
- Use a reusable spice bag if you hate fishing out spices later.
- For very mild spice:
- Use only 1 cinnamon stick.
- Use 2–3 cloves instead of 4.
- Skip the star anise.
- For more spice:
- Add an extra cinnamon stick.
- Add a second star anise pod (but remove them after an hour to avoid overpowering the drink).
Non-Alcoholic Version
To make a “rosé-style” mulled punch without alcohol:
- Use 2 cups white grape juice, 1 cup apple juice, and 1 cup pomegranate or cranberry juice.
- Follow all the same steps for fruit and spices.
- Use half the sweetener to start; juice is already sweet.
- Heat until steaming, then keep on “Keep Warm”.
🎁 Serving Ideas
- Garnish station:
- Small bowl of sliced strawberries
- Plate of orange slices and peel curls
- Cinnamon sticks
- Mint sprigs
- Food pairings:
- Soft cheeses: brie, goat cheese, camembert
- Light bites: crostini, charcuterie boards, prosciutto-wrapped fruit
- Desserts: shortbread, lemon bars, almond cookies, simple vanilla cake
- Presentation tip: Use heatproof glass mugs so the pink color and fruit pieces are visible.

🕒 Make-Ahead & Storage
Make-Ahead Prep (Up to 24 Hours Ahead)
- Slice the orange and prep strawberries. Store in separate airtight containers in the fridge.
- Measure cardamom, cloves, star anise, and ginger and place them in a reusable spice bag or small container.
- On serving day, add wine, juice, sweetener, fruit, and spices to the crock and follow the heating steps.
Keeping It Warm for a Party
- Once it reaches the right flavor and temperature, keep the slow cooker on “Keep Warm”.
- Stir gently every 30–45 minutes so fruit and spices don’t just sit at the top.
- If it starts tasting stronger or more concentrated:
- Add a small splash of rosé or juice to thin it out.
Storing & Reheating Leftovers
- Turn off the slow cooker and let the mulled rosé cool to room temperature.
- Set a fine-mesh strainer over a jar or bottle.
- Pour the liquid through to remove fruit and spices.
- Seal and refrigerate for up to 2 days.
- To reheat:
- Warm gently in a saucepan over LOW heat until hot but not boiling, or
- Return to the slow cooker on LOW until warmed, then switch to “Keep Warm.”
Wrap-Up
This crockpot rosé mulled wine walks you through every step so you don’t have to guess — from picking the right rosé to adjusting sweetness and spice. Once you’ve made it once, you’ll know exactly how to tweak it to your taste and bring out a reliable, light, and fruity warm drink whenever you want something a little different from classic mulled red wine.