Francesca Fiasco Lapazio IGT Paestum Bianco 2022

2022
White Blend
Francesca Fiasco

More Wines from Francesca Fiasco

Expected Spring 2024

 

Our tasting impressions

Lapazio 2022 is a classic, Southern Italian white. It is bright, lively and utterly food-friendly. It is lighter bodied than the 2021 - softer and rounder, but with all the same flavor profiles (maybe a little brinier). In fact, the fruit is more front-and-center and it is more intensively mineral. The nose is more open - you can really taste the clay soil. For drinking presently, the 2022 would be my choice. Kudos to Francesca for making such a terroir-driven white that is so much more than an addition to her red wines.


About this wine

The blend is 40% Fiano, 40% Falanghina, 10% Coda di Volpe and 10% other native varieties. They grow in fine-grained clay embedded in rock at 450 meters.

Grapes were manually harvested starting on October 6th, with strict selection of the best fruit. A cold maceration is done with the skins for 48 hours. Fermentation, at 16-18° C, occurs for 70% in tonneaux and 30% in stainless steel tanks. It ages in the same vessels on the lees for 5 months before blending into bottles. Release is 2 months later, at the earliest. 2,500 bottles produced in 2022.


About the grape blend

Fiano is one of Southern Italy's most noble white grapes. It is a low-yielding grape whose character is highly dependent on terroir. Resulting wines can range from angular and mineral-driven to nutty and rich. The best wines are capable of long and productive aging. Falanghina, which may have been the most famous wine grape of Ancient Rome, provides acidity and mineral and floral flavors. Coda di Volpe (tail of the fox) is based on the resemblance of its long, hanging grape bunches to a fox tail. It contributes fruit, spice and structure. The rest of the grapes are unclassified, and even Francesca doesn't know the names of some of them.


Francesca's thoughts on the vintage 

The winter was rainy, particularly in February and March. Spring was dry and flowering and fruit occurred as expected. At the end of June there was a spike of heat which slowed down the development of the vines. Lower temperatures in July got them back on track. Another heat wave in the first two weeks of August accelerated ripening. It was a year in which very careful and diligent vine management was critical to the ultimate favorable result.


On your table

The 2022 is great with fried clams or oysters. Grilled catfish could be nice as well.

Francesca Fiasco

 

Francesca Fiasco is young, passionate and driven. Since 2015, she has relentlessly worked the land and cellar her grandparents started many decades ago in the beautiful Cilento National Park (a preserve that prohibits any industrial activity).  Everything she knows about farming and wine she learned from her Nonno. More than 90 years old, Luigi still tends the vines.

 

From the 6.5 hectare farm (comprised of various small vineyards), Francesca produces less than 20,000 bottles per year from a mixture of traditional local grapes, some typical of other regions of Italy and one conspicuous interloper from France - Cabernet Sauvignon. Production of her 4 wines is unconventional - it's Nonno's way - but the results are remarkable. The expectation from a farm like this, in an area like this, is that the wines will be rustic, simple and honest. Instead, we find sophistication and complexity without compromising a clear expression of the place they come from.

 

To say that this is manual labor is an understatement. It starts with the grapes for each wine being harvested separately and concludes with Francesca writing notes on each case of wine leaving her cellar. Her devotion and determination are undeniable. The wines from Paestum may not be well-known or highly regarded but don't tell her that - nor does anyone who has tasted her wines much care. Wow, what a discovery! Only the great story of this family and Francesca's project can outshine her wines.