Coda di Volpe

Coda di Volpe is a white Italian wine grape variety that has been historically grown in the Campania region around the town of Naples. It is often confused with another white Italian wine grape, Emilia, that share many of the same synonyms as Coda di Volpe.[1]

Coda di Volpe painted for L'Ampélographie by Viala and Vermorel

Relationship to other grapes

For many years, the white Campanian variety Caprettone was thought to be a clone of Coda di Volpe but DNA analysis in the early 21st century showed that the two grapes were distinct varieties and not closely related. Likewise, Coda di Pecora was also discovered to be a distinct variety. Also, while it shares the synonym Pallagrello with the Campania varieties Pallagrello bianco and Pallagrello nero, there is no known genetic relationship between the three grape varieties.[2]

Synonyms

Various synonyms have been used to describe Coda di Volpe and its wines including Alopecis, Cianca rossa, Coada Vulpi, Coda di Pecora, Coda di Volpe bianca, Coda di Volpe de Maddaloni, Coda di Vulpe durante, Crapettone, Durante, Falerno, Guarnaccia bianca, Lisica opasca bjelaja, Lisitcha opachka biala, Pallagrello and Pallegrello bianco.

gollark: ```sqlCREATE TABLE links ( uid INTEGER PRIMARY KEY, from TEXT NOT NULL, to TEXT NOT NULL, linkText TEXT NOT NULL, context TEXT NOT NULL );```I won't* come to regret defining links this way!
gollark: *I* could take some time out of my busy minoteaur-making schedule to make macron, I suppose.
gollark: Interesting. Why?
gollark: ubq is going to make *both* to mock you.
gollark: ubq, *your* arbitrary input on this arbitrary and nigh-meaningless technical choice?

References

  1. J. Robinson Jancis Robinson's Guide to Wine Grapes pg 58 Oxford University Press 1996 ISBN 0-19-860098-4
  2. J. Robinson, J. Harding and J. Vouillamoz Wine Grapes - A complete guide to 1,368 vine varieties, including their origins and flavours pgs 185, 254, 761-762 Allen Lane 2012 ISBN 978-1-846-14446-2
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.