
The highest, coolest Malbec from “the finest producer in Argentina”

- 95 pts James Suckling95 pts JS
- 94 pts Wine Advocate94 pts RPWA
- 94 pts Decanter94 pts Decanter
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2021 Zuccardi Poligonos Malbec San Pablo Mendoza 750 ml
Retail: $39 | ||
| $28 | 28% off | 1-7 bottles |
| $24 | 38% off | 8+ bottles |
- Curated by unrivaled experts
- Choose your delivery date
- Temperature controlled shipping options
- Get credited back if a wine fails to impress
Pure Malbec, No Interference
There is a map on the wall of Sebastián Zuccardi’s winery that shows the Uco Valley divided into shapes—triangles, trapezoids, irregular polygons—each one tracing the outline of a different village sub-region. He called the project Polígonos: one wine per shape, one wine per place, each a precise, unembellished portrait of the soil and altitude it came from.
San Pablo is one of those shapes. It sits in Tunuyán, at the foot of the Andes, on soils of alluvial origin—sandy loam over medium gravels blanketed in calcium carbonate, the limestone crust that gives the wine its chalky backbone. At 4,593 feet, the nights are cold enough to slow everything down. San Pablo is always the last Malbec Zuccardi picks—the one that takes the longest to ripen, carrying the most fragile, most elevated expression of the grape.
In 2021, a cool, slow-ripening season brought the reds in with exceptional freshness and acidity—conditions that suit this high-altitude site better than most.
Sebastián is not in the business of embellishment. The fruit is macerated for 20 days in concrete vats with indigenous yeast, then aged entirely in concrete. No oak, no additions—nothing between the wine and the place it came from. He landed on full destemming for San Pablo after many trials, finding it the surest way to preserve freshness without green notes. The vineyards are worked organically, without herbicides or systemic treatments, though not yet formally certified.
The winery itself is a statement of intent—constructed from stones excavated while planting these same Uco Valley vineyards, and named the World’s Best Vineyard three consecutive years. His philosophy: not to make perfect wines, but wines that express the place.
In the glass, expect dried violets, black plum, and fresh cherry threaded with mountain herb and spice. The palate is fleshy but not heavy—lively acidity carries cassis and strawberry through a finish anchored by chalky minerality. Wine Advocate called it “floral and elegant, perfumed and ethereal.” James Suckling found it “so pure, racy and characterful—intense and broad, but medium-bodied and not hefty.” Decanter praised its “juicy, free-flowing” character and “long, fragrant finish.”
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