New World & Mediterranean·Foundational·red

Malbec

France’s Cahors origin grape, transformed by Argentine high-altitude viticulture. Mendoza Malbec is the foundational premium Argentine wine category.

Color
Red
Family
New World & Mediterranean
Synonyms
2
Primary regions
3
Significance
Foundational
Cross-references
3

About Malbec

Malbec’s editorial story is one of geographic transformation. The grape originated in Cahors in southwest France, where it produces (historically) the dramatically tannic and dark-colored “Black Wine of Cahors” — a style that fell out of international fashion through most of the 20th century. The grape’s modern significance owes almost entirely to Argentine high-altitude viticulture. Mendoza’s Uco Valley sub-zones (1,000-1,500m+ elevation) produce Malbec with characteristics very different from Cahors: plusher fruit, more accessible tannins, dark-fruit profile (blackberry, plum) paired with floral lift and acid balance. Catena Zapata’s pioneering work in elevated Mendoza viticulture from the 1990s onward transformed Malbec from a regional curiosity into a major international category. High-altitude Mendoza Malbec from serious producers (Catena Zapata, Achaval-Ferrer, Cheval des Andes) ages 10-20+ years from strong vintages. Argentine producers have recently begun exploring single-vineyard expressions (Catena’s Adrianna Vineyard Mundus Bacillus Terrae Malbec) that have been compared to Burgundy Grand Crus for site-specificity.

Variety profile

Parentage
French native (originated in Cahors, southwest France)
Primary regions
Mendoza (Argentina)Cahors (France — historic origin)Bordeaux (minor blending)
Flavor profile
Dark plum, blackberry, violet, mocha, leather (with age); medium-to-high tannin, balanced acid, full body
Structural notes
Thick-skinned; deep color; in Cahors produces tannic, austere wines (the “Black Wine of Cahors”); in Mendoza’s high-altitude sites produces more accessible plush wines.
Vinification notes
Argentine Malbec routinely uses substantial oak (often French oak in premium tier). Cahors tradition has been austere and tannic; modern Cahors moves toward plusher styles.

Also known as

Regional names & synonyms
Côt (Cahors)Auxerrois (Cahors)

Editorial notes

Practical guidance

Cahors and Mendoza Malbec are dramatically different styles — the same grape expressed through different terroir + winemaking traditions. High-altitude Mendoza is the modern editorial center.

Cross-references

Related producers

Related appellations

Related styles

Related cities