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Nieto

Nieto Patrimonial Bonarda, DOC Luján de Cuyo

Nieto Patrimonial Bonarda, DOC Luján de Cuyo

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The Nieto Patrimonial Bonarda, DOC Luján de Cuyo is drawn from the venerable vineyards of Luján de Cuyo (~950 m above sea level) in Mendoza, where old-vine Malbec thrives in alluvial soils shaped by Andean torrents.

Hand-harvested fruit is aged for 12 months in French oak barrels before a further year in bottle, resulting in a deep-violet wine whose aromas evoke violet petals, ripe red-berries and plum, layered with subtle tobacco and vanilla from barrel ageing.

On the palate it presents plush, sweet-tannin texture and a long, smooth finish that marries intensity with elegant balance

Don’t forget your corkscrew 🍷

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Tasting Notes

Black Cherry, Blackberry, Violet and Spice

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Nieto

Style: Winery

Country: Argentina

Region: Mendoza

Argentina became globally famous for Malbec partly because producers like Nieto Senetiner spent decades proving the country could make rich, polished reds without losing elegance completely along the way.

Founded in Mendoza in the late 1800s, the winery sits at the foothills of the Andes where altitude does a huge amount of the work. Warm sunshine gives ripeness and concentration naturally, while cool mountain nights preserve acidity and freshness underneath. The result is wines with proper generosity but usually more balance than older blockbuster Argentine styles.

Malbec remains the centrepiece. Dark plum, blackberry, violet and cocoa notes dominate, often with smooth tannins and fairly restrained oak compared to some international versions. Cabernet Sauvignon and Bonarda also feature heavily throughout the range, alongside fresher whites built around Torrontés and Chardonnay.

What works particularly well with Nieto is consistency. These are polished wines without feeling soulless or overly engineered. There’s enough structure and regional character underneath the ripe fruit to keep things interesting beyond the first glass.

Mendoza itself obviously deserves enormous credit too. Dry climate, high-altitude vineyards and irrigation from Andean snowmelt create one of the world’s most reliable wine-growing environments. Malbec more or less found its spiritual home there.