Campania
Campania is the region that forms the "shin" of the Italian boot, and whose largest city is Naples. Its name comes from Campania felix, a Latin phrase roughly meaning “happy land”. The success of Campania owes a lot to the varied climates and terroirs that support the vines. Viticulture is in its element thanks to abundant sunshine, hot, dry summers, mild winters, a long growing season and volcanic soil (the latter helped prevent phylloxera). Coastal Mediterranean breezes blow from the Tyrrhenian Sea and across the Apennine Mountains to temper the heat, encouraging crisp acidity in the fruit.
The sub-region: Greco di Tufo
Greco di Tufo is a wine-producing subregion of Campania in southern Italy. Its name is also that of the most prestigious white wine in the region, made mainly from the Greco grape variety. Greco di Tufo wines are distinguished by the unique characteristics of volcanic and clayey soils rich in sulfur and tuff (a soil made of ashes ejected during a volcanic eruption). The vines from which Greco di Tufo wines are made are grown at an altitude of 450 to 500 meters, where cooler temperatures allow the grapes to enjoy the lingering summer sun without overheating.