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Las Perdices sits in Luján de Cuyo's premium wine country, holding a Pearl 2 Star Prestige rating for 2025 — a mark that places it among a selective tier of Argentine wine and dining destinations. Set against the Andean foothills at Bajo las Cumbres, it draws visitors seeking the intersection of regional terroir and considered hospitality. For those building an itinerary around Mendoza's serious wine producers, it merits a place on the list.

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Las Perdices winery in Luján de Cuyo, Argentina
About

Where the Andes Frame Every Glass

Approach Luján de Cuyo from Mendoza city and the landscape shifts quickly. Vineyards replace suburbs, irrigation channels cut through red-clay soil, and the Andes appear as a fixed backdrop that somehow never becomes ordinary. Las Perdices sits within this geography at Bajo las Cumbres, an address that places it at the foothills end of the appellation, where altitude begins to press into the character of the wines. Before you pour anything, the setting has already done editorial work.

This is the physical reality of Luján de Cuyo's premium tier: properties are spaced out, views are long, and the distance from the city reinforces the idea that the visit requires intention. You do not pass Las Perdices on the way to somewhere else. You come here because you have chosen to, which means the audience tends to be engaged rather than incidental.

A 2 Star Prestige Property in a Competitive Appellation

Luján de Cuyo has long operated as Mendoza's most recognisable fine-wine zone, with a concentration of serious producers that includes Bodega Lagarde, Bodega Norton, Cheval des Andes, and Chakana Winery. Within that field, Las Perdices carries a Pearl 2 Star Prestige rating for 2025, a designation that positions it in the upper bracket of recognised operations in the appellation rather than among the entry-level visitor experiences that populate the region's more accessible end.

The Pearl 2 Star Prestige classification matters for comparative planning. In a region where the range runs from casual tasting rooms with walk-in access to appointment-only estates with formal food and wine programs, a 2 Star rating signals consistent delivery at the higher end of that scale. It places Las Perdices in a peer set that includes properties where the experience of visiting is considered alongside the quality of what is poured, not treated as a secondary concern.

Across the broader Mendoza wine geography, similar positioning is held by properties such as Bodega DiamAndes in Tunuyán and Bodega Colomé in Molinos further north, each operating in distinct sub-regions but sharing the approach of integrating visitor experience into the winery's identity rather than treating it as an afterthought. Las Perdices operates within that same logic in Luján de Cuyo's more accessible but no less competitive corridor.

Local Ingredients, Imported Frameworks

The most interesting development in Argentine winery gastronomy over the past decade is the growing tension between what the land produces and what European training has taught local teams to do with it. In Mendoza, this plays out in kitchens that work with altitude-grown herbs, Patagonian fish, Andean grains, and the province's own olive oils and charcuterie, but frame those ingredients through techniques absorbed from formal culinary traditions in Spain, France, and Italy.

The result is a cuisine that does not belong cleanly to any single tradition. Argentine hospitality at this tier tends to reject the idea that local food means rustic food. The same appellation that produces Malbec structured for international palates also produces kitchens structured for guests who arrive having eaten well across multiple continents. Las Perdices, positioned as it is at the prestige tier, sits within that conversation.

This intersection of indigenous products and imported method is not unique to Argentina, but Argentina's version of it is shaped by specific conditions: high-altitude growing zones that stress vines and concentrate flavours, a cattle culture that produces primary ingredients of genuine quality, and an immigrant culinary inheritance from Italian and Spanish settlers that runs deep enough to feel local rather than borrowed. The leading winery restaurants in the region do not choose between these influences — they allow all of them to operate simultaneously.

Comparable dynamics play out in other Argentine wine regions. Bodega El Esteco in Cafayate works with the high-altitude Calchaquí Valleys to similar effect, and Familia Schroeder in San Patricio del Chañar demonstrates how Patagonian terroir shapes a different but parallel version of the same equation. The through-line is a commitment to place-specific ingredients interpreted through structured hospitality.

Luján de Cuyo as a Wine Destination

Luján de Cuyo is not a town that sustains itself independently of its wine industry. The appellation's identity is inseparable from the vine, and visitors who spend time here tend to do so across multiple days, building itineraries around a core set of properties and filling in with smaller producers discovered through recommendation. A full guide to Luján de Cuyo restaurants and wine experiences gives useful orientation for planning those multi-property visits.

The appellation's position within the broader Mendoza region means it competes with and complements other designations. Properties like Durigutti Winemakers, also in Luján de Cuyo, represent the artisan-scale end of the same geographic zone, offering a point of contrast to the more formally structured visitor programs at prestige-rated estates. An itinerary that includes both gives a more complete picture of what the appellation can do.

Further afield, Rutini Wines in Tupungato and Escorihuela Gascón in Godoy Cruz represent the geographic spread of Mendoza's serious wine tourism offer, each with distinct terroir stories that complement what Luján de Cuyo delivers. Las Perdices, with its Andean-foothills address and prestige rating, sits logically within a multi-day Mendoza itinerary rather than as a standalone day trip from the city.

Planning the Visit

Luján de Cuyo sits roughly 20 kilometres south of Mendoza city, accessible by car or through the organised wine-tour operations that run from the city's main hotel district. For a property at the prestige tier, arriving with a pre-arranged booking is the standard approach — the visitor experience at this level is rarely structured for drop-in traffic, and the quality of the visit generally improves with prior coordination. Specific booking details for Las Perdices are leading confirmed directly given that contact information and hours can shift seasonally.

The optimal visiting period for Luján de Cuyo broadly runs from October through April, when harvest activity and outdoor dining conditions align. The vendimia harvest period in late February and March brings additional atmosphere to the region, though it also concentrates visitor numbers. Visitors who prefer more measured access to the properties tend to target November or the post-harvest weeks in late March and April, when the vines are still green and the crowds thinner.

For travellers building a serious wine and food itinerary across South America, Las Perdices connects logically to a sequence that might extend to Fratelli Branca Distillery in Buenos Aires for a complementary spirits perspective, or internationally to benchmark producers like Accendo Cellars in St. Helena and Aberlour for a fuller picture of how prestige-tier producers across different categories approach visitor experience.

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Cuisine and Awards Snapshot

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At a Glance
Vibe
  • Rustic
  • Scenic
Best For
  • Wine Education
  • Group Outing
  • Family
Experience
  • Vineyard Tour
  • Cave Tasting
Views
  • Vineyard
  • Mountain
Dress CodeSmart Casual
Noise LevelQuiet
CapacitySmall

Beautiful vineyard setting in the Andes foothills with well-maintained grounds, offering intimate and personalized guided tours and tastings praised for warm, knowledgeable staff and relaxed family atmosphere.

Additional Properties
AVALuján de Cuyo
VarietalsMalbec, Syrah, Viognier, Pinot Grigio, Ancellota
Wine Stylesstill_red, still_white, sparkling
Wine ClubNo
DTC ShippingYes