Torrontés: Argentina's great white surprise
A field guide to the grape that smells like a dessert and drinks bone-dry — Argentina's own aromatic white, born on this soil and at its dazzling best in the high north.
Pour a glass of Torrontés for someone who doesn't know it, and watch their face. The nose promises something sweet and tropical — jasmine, orange blossom, rose petal, ripe peach — so they brace for a sticky, sugary mouthful. Then the wine lands dry, fresh and clean, with a little grapefruit-pith bite on the finish. That gap between what it smells like and what it tastes like is the whole charm of Torrontés, and it's why the grape wins people over in a single sip.
If Malbec is Argentina's red ambassador, Torrontés is its white one — the country's signature aromatic white, and one of the few grapes the wine world agrees is genuinely, originally Argentine.
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01What is Torrontés
Most Argentine grapes are European immigrants Malbec came from France, Cabernet from Bordeaux.
Leer el capítulo 1 →The aromatic profile
Here's a detail that trips up even seasoned drinkers.
Leer el capítulo 2 →The high-altitude style
Torrontés grows across Argentina La Rioja, Mendoza, San Juan but it reaches its peak in the high-altitude north, above all around…
Leer el capítulo 3 →Food pairings
Three rules, and Torrontés rewards all of them: Serve it cold.
Leer el capítulo 4 →Productores to try
Want to taste it where it's born?
Leer el capítulo 5 →Respuestas rápidas
Is Torrontés sweet or dry?
Almost always dry — that's the famous surprise. It smells intensely floral and sweet (thanks to its Muscat parentage), but a well-made Torrontés finishes dry, fresh and clean.
What does Torrontés taste like?
Aromas of jasmine, rose, orange blossom and ripe peach lead into a dry, medium-bodied wine with citrus freshness and a faint, pleasant bitterness on the finish.
Where does the best Torrontés come from?
The high-altitude north of Argentina, especially Cafayate in Salta's Calchaquí Valley, where altitude keeps the wine fresh while intensifying its perfume. La Rioja, San Juan and Mendoza also grow it.
Is Argentine Torrontés the same as Spanish Torrontés?
No. The Galician (Spanish) grape called Torrontés is unrelated to the Argentine one despite the shared name.
What food goes with Torrontés?
Serve it cold with empanadas, goat cheese, ceviche, or fragrant, lightly spicy Asian food — anything where its perfume and freshness can play off salt and spice.