Feudi Di San Gregorio Falanghina 2022

90 Points, James Suckling

One of Italy’s most famous wineries of the past few decades, Feudi di San Gregorio has achieved it all. Several hundred 90+ scores, a few dozen Tre Bicchieri awards from Gambero Rosso, several ‘Winery/Wines of the Year’ nods. Our newest addition from them is their 2022 Falanghina – a gorgeous expression of the grape native to Campagnia. Suckling called it “Textbook. Falanghina 101.”

It boasts a straw yellow color, along with notes of white blossoms, green apple and pear. It’s a vibrant, and crisp wine with nice minerality and hints of spice and a slight nuttiness on the finish. It’s a harmonious wine with mouthwatering acidity and beautiful balance. A gorgeous wine to enjoy all year round with anything from salads to seafood. 

Original price was: $28.00.Current price is: $18.95.

Availability: In stock


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90 Points, James Suckling
Textbook. Falanghina 101. Bitter lemon, tonic, strewn fennel seed, pistachio and a pithy stone fruit pucker at the seams. Dutifully fresh, impeccably poised, far from profound, but dangerously easy to drink. Drink now.

One of my favorite trends in wine these days is how the Italians have all started investing heavily in land and are reclaiming native varieties on native soils. This is a good thing for wine. No offense to the Pinot Grigio lovers, but we don’t need more PG – we need more interesting, “geeky”, delicious wines and those Italy has by the hundred.

No one has embraced this new/old spirit more than Feudi di San Gregorio and the revolution they’ve sparked in Campania – what has now become one of the inspirations of the international sommelier set.

When a devastating earthquake rocked the region in late 1980, killing thousands and leaving 300,000 homeless, it could have spelled the end to much of the region’s 3,000 year history of wine making.

But for Enzo Ercolino, who had escaped the backwater years before for Rome – it was the exact opposite. He and his brothers decided to start Feudi di San Gregorio from amongst the ruins and vacated vineyards.

As they did, they brought in world-class consultants – like the late Denis Dubourdieu and the Italian superstar enologist, Riccardo Cotarella. What the consultants discovered was that the terroir at San Gregorio was completely unique to the wine world – high altitude wines, kissed by sea breezes in volcanic soils and in some cases pre-phylloxera vineyards over 150 years old. Game changing news.

They separated their vineyards into over 700 micro-plots and crafted a plan for each to drive maximum expression and purity of the historic grapes that grew in each tiny region. It was a mountain of work but after a few years, the accolades started to roll in.

As the wine world finally caught on to the tiny backwater revolution they had begun, the trickle of accolades developed into a deluge. Several hundred 90+ scores, a few dozen Tre Bicchieri awards from Gambero Rosso, several ‘Winery/Wines of the Year’ nods.

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