Sign In

2013 Feudi di San Gregorio Patrimo, 6-bottle Lot, Wood Case

Not Currently In Auction

Latest Sale Price

July 30, 2023 - $320

Estimate

Have a 2013 Feudi di San Gregorio Patrimo, 6-bottle Lot, Wood Case to sell?
Get a Free Estimate
Front Item Photo

2013 Feudi di San Gregorio Patrimo

750ml

RATINGS

96The Wine Advocate

... The freshness and purity of the fruit is the wine's driving force. Dark cherry, raspberry and dark plum lead the charge. Wait a few years before popping this cork...

93James Suckling

A firm and silky red with berries, chocolate and hints of spices. Full to medium body, caressing tannins and a bright finish. Very polished...

92Wine Enthusiast

...elegantly structured wine has enticing aromas of cassis, purple flower, dark spice and Mediterranean scrub. The firm palate offers wild cherry, blackberry and licorice alongside polished tannins and bright acidity.

92Jeb Dunnuck

...ripe, chocolatey, sexy style with loads of currants, truffle, toasty oak, and earthy aromatics...Medium to full-bodied richness, a light, elegant texture and fine tannin...nicely balanced and certainly an outstanding wine.

91Wine Spectator

An elegant, medium- to full-bodied red, with fine integration of the sculpted tannins, a deep note of tarry mineral, and flavors of pureed black cherry, star anise, dried marjoram and fragrant leather. Lingering finish.

PRODUCER

Feudi di San Gregorio

Feudi di San Gregorio was founded in 1986 by two families from the region of Campania, in southern Italy just east of Naples. The Capaldo and Ercolino families built a modern, large facility and have had notable success producing wines from indigenous southern Italian grapes, such as Aglianico. The estate is in the Avellino appellation, and it produces both red and white wines. Feudi di San Gregorio has 625 acres under cultivation and produces numerous wines including the whites Falanghina and the poetically named Lacryma Christi, or “Tears of Christ.” Reds include Primitivo, Aglianico and Merlot. Robert M. Parker Jr. has written that “quality is especially remarkable given the large number of bottles produced.”

REGION

Italy, Campania

Campania is on the southeastern coast of Italy, and the city of Naples is its commercial and cultural capital. Wine has always been produced in this hard-scrabble region, though the quality of those wines has traditionally not matched the wine quality elsewhere in Italy. Rich volcanic soils mean that the region easily grows everything from citrus and artichokes to nuts, and growing wine grapes has not been a priority historically. However in the last couple of decades forward-thinking producers and vineyard owners have focused on improving both their wines and Campania’s winemaking reputation, and the results are noteworthy. Campania was awarded its first DOCG appellation in 1991. It is the Taurasi DOCG, which grows primarily Aglianico, a native grape that can produce big, concentrated, complex red wines with layers of earthy flavors. There are 101,000 acres of vineyards in Campania, making it Italy’s ninth largest wine producing region, though only 2.8% of those vineyards are in DOC appellations. Nevertheless several excellent large producers and numerous boutique producers are now crafting well-reviewed red and white wines, all mostly from indigenous grapes. Besides Aglianico, the other most frequently planted red wine grapes are Coda de Volpe and Pedirosso. White grapes planted are Falanghina, Fiano and Greco. There are 18 DOCs in Campania.