Temperature
Temperature: the single biggest mistake
If you fix one thing, fix this. Most people serve red wine too warm and white wine too cold — and both rob the wine of its best self.
The rule of thumb: reds are usually served too warm, whites too cold. “Room temperature” is a myth from an era of cold European houses; a modern warm room makes red wine taste flat and alcoholic. A simple cheat: take your red out of the rack and put it in the fridge for 20–30 minutes before serving; take your white out of the fridge 15–20 minutes before. Both should feel cool to the touch.
Here is where Argentina's main styles land:
- Malbec and other full-bodied reds (Cabernet Sauvignon, Bonarda, Syrah): around 16–18°C / 61–64°F — cool, not warm. Too warm and the alcohol dominates; lightly chilled, the fruit and freshness sing.
- Lighter reds (Pinot Noir, fresh Cabernet Franc): a touch cooler, around 14–16°C / 57–61°F. Pinot Noir is lovely served lightly chilled.
- Torrontés, Chardonnay and white wines: around 8–11°C / 46–52°F — cold, but not ice-cold. Too cold and you mute Torrontés's gorgeous floral aromatics; let the glass warm slightly and the perfume opens up.
- Criolla and rosé: well-chilled, around 8–10°C / 46–50°F.
- Sparkling: coldest of all, 6–8°C / 43–46°F.
A tip worth its weight: a wine warms up in the glass as you drink, so it is always better to start a little too cold than too warm.
A few extra niceties
- Never use ice cubes in the wine itself — they dilute it and dull the aromas. To chill fast, use an ice-and-water bucket (water chills faster than ice alone) or a chiller sleeve.
- Pour modestly: fill a glass only about a third full. That leaves room to swirl and concentrate the aromas — and looks generous, not stingy.
- Once open: most wines are at their best the day they're opened, but a re-corked bottle in the fridge will be fine the next day. Stand reds back up to room-cool before serving again.
Get these basics right and your everyday bottle will taste like a better one — and your good bottles will taste extraordinary. Now pour something, and enjoy it the way Argentina intended.