Altos Malbec 750ml

Altos Malbec 750ml

Regular price $11.99 USD /bottle
Regular price Sale price $11.99 USD
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Crack open a bottle of Altos Malbec from Mendoza and you’re greeted by an immediate rush of ripe blackberry and plum lifted with violet and a whisper of toasted spice; it smells like sun-warmed fruit and good conversation. Take a sip and you’ll find a plush, rounded palate—juicy dark fruits threaded with cocoa and a touch of black pepper—balanced by lively acidity that keeps the wine bright instead of heavy. The tannins are polished, giving the wine a satisfying structure without drying your mouth, and the finish slides into savory notes of leather and espresso that invite another bite or another glass. It’s an approachable yet confident Argentine Malbec: rustic enough to stand up to a smoky BBQ but refined enough to complement a roasted chicken or a seared steak, and it always feels like the kind of bottle you bring to the table when you want everyone to linger a little longer.

Perfect Pairings: Grilled steak, smoky barbecue ribs, or a simply roasted chicken with herbs.

Tasting Notes
- Nose: Ripe blackberry, violet, subtle toasted spice
- Palate: Juicy dark fruit, cocoa, soft polished tannins
- Finish: Savory leather and espresso with bright acidity

  • Varietal Red Wine
  • Closure type Red Wine
  • Brand Altos
  • Country Argentina
  • SKU 5222519
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Varietal

Red Wine

Country-Argentina

Argentina

Big mountains, bigger flavor. Argentina stretches from sun-baked desert to icy Patagonia, and that range shows up in the glass—juicy Malbec, high-altitude whites with snap, cool-climate Pinots, and a lively aperitivo scene (yes, fernet and cola). If you want ripe fruit with freshness and real value, this is your lane.

What makes it special

  • The Andes effect: Snowmelt irrigation, intense sun, and cool nights = ripe grapes with bright acidity.
  • Serious altitude: Vineyards soar from 2,000 to 10,000+ feet, especially in Salta and the Uco Valley.
  • Clear regional personalities that make shopping easy—Mendoza power, Uco precision, Patagonia elegance.

Grapes and styles to know

  • Malbec (Mendoza, Luján de Cuyo, Uco Valley): Blackberry, plum, violet, cocoa; from plush and velvety to mineral and taut at higher altitudes.
  • Cabernet Sauvignon & Cabernet Franc: Cassis, mint, graphite; Franc brings floral lift and spice.
  • Bonarda (Douce Noir): Juicy black cherry, soft tannin—awesome slightly chilled.
  • Syrah: Peppery and dark in the north; riper and rounder in warmer zones.
  • Pinot Noir (Patagonia—Río Negro, Neuquén, Chubut): Red cherry, rose, silky texture.
  • Torrontés (Salta/Cafayate): Jasmine, citrus, stone fruit; aromatic but usually dry.
  • Chardonnay (Uco & Patagonia): Citrus, white peach, chalk; oak used with a light hand.
  • Sparkling: Traditional-method bottles with green apple, lemon, and brioche.

Regions at a glance

  • Mendoza: Argentina’s engine—Malbec from plush (Luján de Cuyo) to mineral (Uco).
  • Uco Valley (Paraje Altamira, Gualtallary, La Consulta): Altitude = precision, florals, and stony structure.
  • Salta/Cafayate: Sky-high vineyards; Torrontés with perfume and snap, concentrated reds with spice.
  • Patagonia (Río Negro, Neuquén, Chubut): Cool-climate Pinot, Chardonnay, and crisp, lower-alcohol styles.
  • La Rioja/San Juan: Sunny value lanes for generous, fruit-forward wines.

Beyond wine

  • Fernet con Coca: The national highball—bittersweet, herbal, and strangely perfect with ice.
  • Vermouth culture: Citrusy, herb-led pours over ice with an orange slice.
  • Beer: Easy lagers and a growing craft scene from Bariloche to Buenos Aires.
  • Gin/Whisky (niche): Patagonian botanicals in gin; malt-led whiskies emerging.

Flavor snapshot

Blackberry, plum, violet, cocoa, and a dusting of Andean spice in reds; lime, peach, jasmine, and chalky minerality in whites. Sparkling brings green apple and fine mousse. Aperitivos lean citrus-herbal and refreshing.

Pairing playbook (veg-forward)

  • Malbec/Cabernet: Mushroom asado, chimichurri potatoes, roasted peppers, aged cheeses.
  • Cabernet Franc/Patagonia Pinot: Herb-roasted mushrooms, beet salad, tomato pasta.
  • Torrontés/Chardonnay: Empanadas de humita (corn), grilled zucchini, ceviche-style veg.
  • Sparkling: Fries, provoleta-style cheese, salty snacks.
  • Fernet/Vermouth: Olives, nuts, orange-fennel salad.

Buying tips

  • Want plush fruit? Luján de Cuyo Malbec.
  • Crave lift and minerality? Uco Valley (look for Paraje Altamira or Gualtallary).
  • Aromatic but dry? Torrontés from Salta/Cafayate.
  • Cool-climate elegance? Patagonia Pinot/Chardonnay.
  • Value red for pizza night? Bonarda—pop it with a light chill.
  • Label cues: Reserva/Gran Reserva often means extra selection and barrel time.

Serving notes

  • Whites/Sparkling 45–50°F
  • Pinot/Bonarda (light chill) 55–60°F
  • Malbec/Cabernet/Syrah 60–65°F; brief decant helps
  • Vermouth/Fernet highballs well-chilled over ice with citrus

Bottom line

Argentina delivers sun-ripened flavor with mountain poise. From mineral Uco Valley Malbec to jasmine-bright Torrontés and elegant Patagonian Pinot, you get clarity, value, and bottles that make weeknight dinners feel special.

FAQs

1) Is all Malbec heavy and oaky?
No. High-altitude Malbec (Uco Valley) can be fresh, floral, and mineral. If you prefer plush, aim for Luján de Cuyo; if you want tension, pick Uco subzones.

2) Is Torrontés sweet?
It smells floral, but most styles are dry. Expect jasmine and citrus with a crisp, clean finish.

3) Where should I start if I’m new to Argentina?
Grab a Uco Valley Malbec for structure, a Salta Torrontés for aromatic white, and a Patagonia Pinot Noir for a cool-climate red. You’ll taste the range fast.

Region

Mendoza

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