Argentine Wines Find Their Natural Partners

A reflection on changing light in Paris, harvest beginning in Argentina, and why wine always follows the rhythm of seasons.

A Report From Wine Explorer Diego Samper

March 6, 2026
Paris, France

A few mornings ago, I noticed something small but unmistakable:

The light had changed.

Not summer yet. Not warmth exactly. Just a little more brightness on the buildings across the street. A little more daylight at the edges of the day.

Around this time of year, the northern hemisphere slowly stretches itself back out. A few extra minutes of sun each day.

You feel it before you name it.

Spring is on its way.

And if you work in wine, you notice another shift happening at the same time.

While we move toward spring here in Paris, Argentina is moving toward harvest.

That is one of the quiet pleasures of following wine closely: the seasons answering each other from opposite sides of the world.

Here, the vines are waking up. There, the fruit is coming in.

Harvest in Argentina

At Pucarilla, we are still waiting. The grapes are not quite ready yet.

But in the lower parts of the valley, harvest has already begun. Friends at Arca Yaco have started bringing fruit into the winery, which is always a good sign.

Harvest remains one of the most intense moments in the life of a winery.

Months of work come down to a narrow window.

Yes, there is science involved:

  • Sugar levels are measured

  • Brix numbers are tracked daily

But numbers never tell the full story.

So winemakers walk the vineyards.

They taste berries.
They examine skins and seeds.
They watch how ripening progresses.
They judge balance directly in the fruit.

In the end, harvest is both measured and felt.

A Region Receiving More Attention

I have also heard that Tim Atkin has been visiting producers in the north again, which is always interesting to watch.

When someone like him travels through a region, it often brings more attention to winemakers who have been doing serious work quietly for years.

Your Argentina Collection

Many of you have just started receiving your Argentine collection.

This remains one of my favorite shipments of the year because it brings together winemakers we have been working alongside for a long time:

  • Paco Puga

  • Agustín Lanús

  • Raúl Dávalos

  • Marcial Sánchez

When you open one of these bottles, you are tasting more than a vintage.

You are tasting projects that have grown alongside this partnership.

Some of these wineries were very small when we first began working together:

  • A few barrels

  • Young vineyards

  • Producers still finding their voice

Over time:

  • The vineyards mature

  • The wines gain confidence

  • The projects become stronger

And much of that growth happens because of you.

What Members Make Possible

Members do more than buy wine.

You help sustain producers we believe in.

You help them:

  • Keep farming

  • Keep experimenting

  • Keep refining their wines year after year

Quietly, bottle by bottle, you become part of that story too.

A Video From Julien

This week you will also find a video from Julien, which I think you will enjoy.

He explains some of the thinking behind the collection and introduces some of the people behind the wines.

Looking Ahead to April

Many of you have already started asking about the April collection, so I want to mention it early.

As temperatures rise, we prefer to move wines before summer heat becomes a risk.

Heat is no friend to wine in transit.

  • Trucks warm up

  • Warehouses warm up

  • Good wine deserves better than that

So this year we are getting ahead of the heat.

April Shipment Adjustment

Instead of six bottles in April, we will send twelve bottles.

Think of it as stocking the cellar before summer.

This allows wines to travel while temperatures remain mild and gives you extra bottles ready for the longer evenings ahead.

And yes, the collection will earn its place.

What April Will Bring

For April, we are looking toward France.

There are a few bottles I am especially looking forward to bringing back, along with wines many of you continue returning to:

  • Quiet best sellers

  • Bottles that disappear faster than expected

  • A few familiar names

  • A few surprises

More on that very soon.

Wines for Longer Evenings

For now, Argentine wines are beginning to find their natural partners again:

  • Longer evenings

  • Open windows

  • Something cooking over fire

  • A steak on the grill

  • Friends staying later than planned

A good Argentine red belongs naturally at that kind of table.

A Small Detail That Stayed With Me

This week I opened a bottle from the south of France called Altura.

In Spanish, altura simply means altitude.

The vineyard sat at around 350 meters above sea level — not particularly high by Argentine standards, but high enough for the producer to highlight it.

It reminded me of something I notice everywhere:

Winemakers are always trying to explain where their wines come from.

Sometimes they talk about:

  • Soil

  • Climate

  • Elevation

Every region searches for language that captures what makes its place distinct.

That search never really ends.

And perhaps that is why wine stays interesting.

It is never just the bottle.

It is:

  • The season

  • The place

  • The people

  • The timing

So wherever you are, enjoy the longer days.

Open something good.

And raise a glass to another harvest beginning somewhere in the world.

Salud,

Diego Samper
The Wine Explorer

 

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