Chapter 1 of 4

The comparison

The headline difference, in one line

Malbec is plush, fruity and immediately joyful. Cabernet Sauvignon is structured, savory and built to age. If Malbec is the heart of Argentine wine, Cabernet Sauvignon is the spine.

Side by side

MalbecCabernet Sauvignon
OriginFrance (Cahors); now Argentina's signatureFrance (Bordeaux); planted worldwide
In ArgentinaMost planted red, ~40,000+ ha3rd most planted, ~13,000–15,000 ha
StylePlush, fruit-forward, accessibleStructured, full-bodied, age-worthy
ColourDeep purple, almost inkyDeep ruby with darker edges
FruitBlack plum, blackberry, cherryBlackcurrant (cassis), blackberry, plum
Other notesViolet, sweet spice, cocoaCedar, tobacco, graphite, herbs
TanninsMedium, soft and ripeFirm, grippy, mouth-coating
AcidityMediumMedium-high
OakOften new oak, soft and integratedNew oak common, more assertive
Best at16–18°C, big glass16–18°C, decanted young
AgeingMany drink well young; top ones ageBuilt for ageing; rewards patience

Where Argentina grows them

Both thrive in Mendoza — Argentina's vast, high-altitude wine heartland — but in slightly different roles.

Malbec is planted everywhere from the classic foothills of Luján de Cuyo to the high reaches of the Uco Valley. At lower altitudes it is plush and generous; at altitude it gains a perfumed, more structured, age-worthy character. It is the country's flagship and grows almost wherever vines grow.

Cabernet Sauvignon likes warmer, well-drained sites and is concentrated in Luján de Cuyo (especially Agrelo, Vistalba, Las Compuertas) and the warmer pockets of Maipú. It needs sun and time on the vine to lose its herbal edge, and Argentina's high-desert climate delivers both. A small but useful tip: a Cabernet from cooler, higher sites tastes more savory and herbal; one from warmer, lower vineyards is plusher and rounder. The same logic applies to Malbec.

What they taste like, in plain language

Malbec smells like: ripe plum, blackberry, blueberry, violets, sweet baking spice, sometimes mocha or vanilla from oak. Malbec feels like: generous, juicy, soft, smooth — a wine that gives you a hug.

Cabernet Sauvignon smells like: blackcurrant and cassis, blackberry, cedar, tobacco, sometimes a savory note of green herb, often a stony or graphite minerality. Cabernet feels like: firmer, longer, more serious — a wine you sit up a little straighter for.

If you imagine the two grapes as people: Malbec is the friend who is always smiling and easy to be around. Cabernet is the friend with the better library who doesn't say much.

The comparison
Up next, Chapter 2 of 4 If you want a wine that gives you pleasure immediately Malbec. Read Chapter 2: Grape differences →