Paolo Scavino Barolo 'Prapò' 2021

Product information

Paolo Scavino Barolo ‘Prapò’ 2021

Nebbiolo from Serralunga d'Alba, Piedmont, Italy, Barolo

$242

$232ea in any 3+
$222ea in any 6+
Closure: Cork

Description

The 2021 Barolo Prapò is fabulous. It offers up an exotic mix of dark fruit, lavender, graphite, plum and scorched earth, with firm, muscular Serralunga tannins to back it all up. Readers will have to be patient with the 2021. It’s a superb wine in the making, but very much a Serralunga Barolo that needs time to blossom. Drink 2028-2041

Antonio Galloni, Vinous 96 Points


Here is an intense Nebbiolo that shows all the depth and power of Serralunga d’Alba. The Paolo Scavino 2021 Barolo Prapò is a well-built wine with ample flavor parameters that extend both horizontally and vertically. That wide sweep includes dark fruit, plum, red rose and iron ore. The tannins are a little softer compared to many other expressions from this village, and the wine offers medium-plus richness to close. The Scavino family purchased this 0.7-hectare vineyard in 2008 and planted it in 2010. Nebbiolo vines with loose clusters, low yields and better ripening were chosen for a massal selection. Open clusters are helpful in combating mildew disease. The family noticed that Prapò develops a pretty sense of sweetness and aromatic complexity, and that’s why they decided to ferment it separately. However, Prapò is ultimately less extreme compared to some of the other sites in this village. Drink 2026-2045

Monica Larner, The Wine Advocate 95 Points

Check out all of the wines by Paolo Scavino

Why is this Wine so Yummy?

I often find myself frustrated tasting through hundreds of wines a week. Too boring, to ripe, to technical, just no fun. Speeding through a trade tasting of wines from around the world, I was about ready to walk out when I spied a few wines that made me pause. Paolo Scarvino’s Baroli. The afternoon turned into an epic success. In front of may lay a cluster of real wines. Cru, single vineyard, Baroli this beautiful are less common than you think! These were wines that inspired, poured by Riccardo who clearly knew what he was talking about, lived it, breathed it. It seems passion runs through the veins of the entire business!

Looking at Scavino’s website I found these words which sum up the Paolo Scavino wines:

“Through over 60 years of experience his focus has been to invest on important cru of Nebbiolo to show the uniqueness of each terroir.

Their work is inspired by the love and respect they have for their territory and they pursue purity of expression, complexity and elegance for their wines from the three local grapes Dolcetto, Barbera and Nebbiolo.”

The most important words: respect, purity of expression, complexity, and elegance.

Combine these with a winemaking approach that clearly demonstrates the wisdom that only time and experience can afford a winemaker, and, the results are individual wines of great personality and intrigue. These are the kind of wines that shift you from very good to great.

“He has an open, sunny face and looks at you with confidence because he knows he will never find the words to defend his world but that his wines can defend themselves… He seems an old-fashioned man but he chose to be a winegrower and knows how to observe progress without any conservative reactionary. For each wine produced, depending on the vintage, the right path is chosen without blindly following tradition and without passively following every innovation. He does not love excess” – Luigi Veronelli, I vignaioli storici, volume n.3, testi di Nichi Stefi, Mediolanum Editori Associati, 1988

With a clear transition underway to his daughters Enrica and Elisa it looks like Paolo Scavino will be in good hands for decades to come.

The 2021 Vintage at Paolo Scavino

Scavino fans will find a lot to get excited about in these new releases. The entry-level bottlings offer tons of immediacy, while the Barolos are among the finest in Piedmont. Perhaps just as importantly, even after all these years, Scavino remains a very relevant winery in Piedmont.

Antonio Galloni ,Vinous


I experienced some difficulty tasting samples from Paolo Scavino last year and the year before because the wines were quite closed. For that reason, these two wines—2021 Barolo Bric dël Fiasc and the 2021 Barolo Monvigliero—were not included in my last report. I waited to give them more time in bottle, and this helped immeasurably. I mistakenly suspected a hint of Brettanomyces but was proven wrong after I sent samples to a laboratory. So, what I thought was Brett was probably reduction. I also went back to the winery to retaste the wines in person. It is important that you give new releases from Paolo Scavino ample time in bottle to emerge from their awkward phase.

In other news, Elisa and Enrica Scavino will soon release a 2021 Barolo Bussia Vigna Fantini made from a site acquired in 2018.

Monica Larner, The Wine Advocate

Where in the World is Paolo Scavino

Founded in 1921 in Castiglione Falletto, Paolo Scavino under the guidance of Enrico, and, now his daughters, Enrica and Elisa have amassed a superb collection of Cru vineyards in Barolo, representing 20 of 29 hectares with parcels across each of the communes.

These are some of the best sites across Barolo. Click the map to link to an interactive page on Scavino’s website.

96 Points

The 2021 Barolo Prapò is fabulous. It offers up an exotic mix of dark fruit, lavender, graphite, plum and scorched earth, with firm, muscular Serralunga tannins to back it all up. Readers will have to be patient with the 2021. It's a superb wine in the making, but very much a Serralunga Barolo that needs time to blossom. Drink 2028-2041

Antonio Gallioni, Vinous

95 Points

Here is an intense Nebbiolo that shows all the depth and power of Serralunga d'Alba. The Paolo Scavino 2021 Barolo Prapò is a well-built wine with ample flavor parameters that extend both horizontally and vertically. That wide sweep includes dark fruit, plum, red rose and iron ore. The tannins are a little softer compared to many other expressions from this village, and the wine offers medium-plus richness to close. The Scavino family purchased this 0.7-hectare vineyard in 2008 and planted it in 2010. Nebbiolo vines with loose clusters, low yields and better ripening were chosen for a massal selection. Open clusters are helpful in combating mildew disease. The family noticed that Prapò develops a pretty sense of sweetness and aromatic complexity, and that's why they decided to ferment it separately. However, Prapò is ultimately less extreme compared to some of the other sites in this village. Drink 2026-2045

Monica Larner, The Wine Advocate

Where in the world does the magic happen?

Paolo Scavino

Barolo
Serralunga d'Alba
Piedmont
Italy