Prometheus18 wrote:
... Rosé wine is an adolescents' wine, as far as I can see...
Then you should look farther.
A good rosé is "dry", not sweet. It should be fresh and acidic, without extra sugar to bury its unique flavors and aromas. It was super-sweet white zinfandel and its mass-produced brethren that gave rosé a bad name to begin with.
And because the best rosés are 3 to 5 years old, they rarely contain the heavy tannins of the reds, and thus lack the leathery, musty aftertaste of the older varietals.
A white or a red is worthless (except to winos and wine snobs) if no one enjoys it. Serving a good rosé as an aperitif is never a bad idea.