
Mendoza: Malbec, Andes views, and lunches that last until the sun does

Mendoza: Malbec, Andes views, and lunches that last until the sun does
Mendoza is Argentina’s wine capital, and it knows it. The best version of a Mendoza trip isn’t a tasting marathon — it’s a sequence. Iconic Malbec estates in Luján de Cuyo. High-altitude producers in the Uco Valley where the wines taste cooler and more precise. A day in the city, a long lunch at 1884, and a mountain excursion that reminds you there’s more here than what’s in the glass. Four to six days is the minimum that does it justice.
Luján de Cuyo + Maipú
2–3 days
This is where Mendoza’s wine reputation was built. Luján de Cuyo sits south of the city at elevations that produce Malbec with structure and depth — Catena Zapata, Achaval Ferrer, and Zuccardi are the benchmark names, and private access at any one of them is worth the planning effort. Maipú, to the east, is more relaxed: olive groves, cycling between producers, and tastings that don’t take themselves too seriously. The two subregions complement each other well — pair them in the first half of the trip when the palate is fresh.
Best for:
Wine-focused travelers who want both prestige estates and a slower, more relaxed tasting day
Planner’s edge:
We sequence Luján and Maipú by style — structured estate visits first, cycling-and-grazing second — so the days have contrast and the palate has a story arc, not just a volume arc.

Luján de Cuyo + Maipú
2–3 days
This is where Mendoza’s wine reputation was built. Luján de Cuyo sits south of the city at elevations that produce Malbec with structure and depth — Catena Zapata, Achaval Ferrer, and Zuccardi are the benchmark names, and private access at any one of them is worth the planning effort. Maipú, to the east, is more relaxed: olive groves, cycling between producers, and tastings that don’t take themselves too seriously. The two subregions complement each other well — pair them in the first half of the trip when the palate is fresh.
Best for:
Wine-focused travelers who want both prestige estates and a slower, more relaxed tasting day
Planner’s edge:
We sequence Luján and Maipú by style — structured estate visits first, cycling-and-grazing second — so the days have contrast and the palate has a story arc, not just a volume arc.

Uco Valley
1–2 days
An hour south of the city, the valley floor sits above 1,000 meters. The altitude changes everything — cooler temperatures, slower ripening, wines with more precision and less weight. The wineries here are also newer and more architecturally ambitious: Zuccardi Valle de Uco and The Vines Resort are worth the drive for the buildings alone. This is Mendoza’s emerging prestige region, and the gap between what it costs and what it delivers is still significant. That won’t last.
Best for:
Travelers who’ve done classic Malbec before and want to understand what altitude actually does to a wine
Planner’s edge:
Most visitors skip the Uco Valley or treat it as an afterthought. We build it in as a dedicated day with a private tasting, not a rushed detour.

Uco Valley
1–2 days
An hour south of the city, the valley floor sits above 1,000 meters. The altitude changes everything — cooler temperatures, slower ripening, wines with more precision and less weight. The wineries here are also newer and more architecturally ambitious: Zuccardi Valle de Uco and The Vines Resort are worth the drive for the buildings alone. This is Mendoza’s emerging prestige region, and the gap between what it costs and what it delivers is still significant. That won’t last.
Best for:
Travelers who’ve done classic Malbec before and want to understand what altitude actually does to a wine
Planner’s edge:
Most visitors skip the Uco Valley or treat it as an afterthought. We build it in as a dedicated day with a private tasting, not a rushed detour.

Mendoza City + The Mountain Day
1–2 days
The city is the base, not the point — but it earns its time. Wide, shaded boulevards, Plaza Independencia, and a restaurant scene anchored by Azafrán and 1884 Restaurante, Francis Mallmann’s wood-fire table in a historic bodega. Book 1884 before you book your flights. The mountain day — Aconcagua views, rafting on the Mendoza River, or horseback through the foothills — isn’t optional for trips longer than four days. It breaks the tasting rhythm in the best way, and the Andes at close range are a different experience from the vineyard backdrop.
Best for:
Travelers who want the full picture — wine as the spine of the trip, with food and landscape filling the rest
Planner’s edge:
1884 books out weeks in advance and isn’t walkable from most properties — we handle the reservation and logistics as part of the itinerary, not as an afterthought.

Mendoza City + The Mountain Day
1–2 days
The city is the base, not the point — but it earns its time. Wide, shaded boulevards, Plaza Independencia, and a restaurant scene anchored by Azafrán and 1884 Restaurante, Francis Mallmann’s wood-fire table in a historic bodega. Book 1884 before you book your flights. The mountain day — Aconcagua views, rafting on the Mendoza River, or horseback through the foothills — isn’t optional for trips longer than four days. It breaks the tasting rhythm in the best way, and the Andes at close range are a different experience from the vineyard backdrop.
Best for:
Travelers who want the full picture — wine as the spine of the trip, with food and landscape filling the rest
Planner’s edge:
1884 books out weeks in advance and isn’t walkable from most properties — we handle the reservation and logistics as part of the itinerary, not as an afterthought.

Journey Map


Ready to begin your journey?
Every journey begins with a conversation.
Schedule your consultation

Ready to begin your journey?
Every journey begins with a conversation.
Schedule your consultation