Skip to main content

    Bar in Copenhagen, Denmark

    p2 by Malbeck

    100pts

    Secondary-Label Wine Drinking

    p2 by Malbeck, Bar in Copenhagen

    About p2 by Malbeck

    p2 by Malbeck occupies a quiet address on Birkegade in Copenhagen's Nørrebro district, operating as the kind of low-profile wine bar that the neighbourhood does well: serious about what's in the glass, relaxed about everything else. The name signals a South American wine sensibility in a city that has increasingly made room for alternative wine programs alongside its Scandinavian fine-dining credentials.

    Nørrebro's Approach to the Wine Bar Format

    Copenhagen's wine bar scene has split along a familiar axis over the past decade. One tier chases the natural-wine orthodoxy that spread outward from Paris and Copenhagen's own Vesterbro, all cloudy pours and pét-nat on chalkboards. The other holds to a more structured approach: curated lists with a legible editorial point of view, where the bottle selection functions as an argument rather than a mood board. p2 by Malbeck, on Birkegade in Nørrebro, positions itself within the latter register. The address alone signals something about the intended pace: Birkegade sits at the residential edge of Nørrebro's bar corridor, far enough from the Jægersborggade cluster to attract a crowd that has made a deliberate choice rather than stumbled in from the street.

    The name carries its own information. Malbeck — spelled here without the conventional 'c' — points directly toward a South American, and specifically Argentine, wine orientation. In Copenhagen, where the default fine-wine conversation defaults quickly to Burgundy and Champagne, a bar that flags Malbec as its organising principle is staking out a different position. That's not a minor distinction. Argentine wine has spent much of the past two decades fighting its way out of a mass-market image problem, with a serious tier of high-altitude Mendoza and Salta producers now making cases that compete on technical quality with European benchmarks. A Copenhagen wine bar that grounds its identity in that tradition is making an editorial bet.

    The Rhythm of an Evening Here

    Wine bars in Nørrebro tend to operate on an informal time signature: arrive when you want, stay as long as the glass warrants it, and eat if the kitchen obliges. The dining ritual at a bar built around a specific wine tradition works differently from a restaurant with a set progression. The pacing here is glass-led rather than course-led. A good South American wine list invites a certain kind of lateral movement , between regions, between grapes, between Old World-trained producers and a younger generation working with indigenous varietals. The conversation between pours matters as much as any individual bottle.

    This format rewards a particular kind of attention from the guest. Coming in with a predetermined order and a fixed departure time is the wrong mode. The bars in Copenhagen that operate this way , and Nørrebro has several, as does the broader city, from the recognised cocktail programs at Ruby and Charlie's Bar to the more informal pour-and-stay model at Bird , all share a common logic: the space is built for duration, not throughput. p2 by Malbeck, given its address and its wine identity, belongs to that tradition of deliberate slowness.

    Where p2 Sits in the Copenhagen Wine Conversation

    Copenhagen has developed a serious wine culture over the past fifteen years, with much of the early infrastructure built around Scandinavian sommeliers returning from French and Italian training and opening rooms that could carry serious lists. The city's Michelin-dense fine-dining tier has naturally driven a high floor for wine literacy among professional buyers and engaged drinkers. What followed, as it does in most cities with a maturing restaurant culture, was a secondary tier of wine-focused bars where that expertise filtered through into more accessible formats , fewer tasting menus, more standing room, the same quality of thinking in the glass.

    Within Denmark, the wine bar format has diversified by geography and specialisation. Elsewhere in the country, bars like Jysk Vin Vinbar in Aarhus, Visselulles Vinbar in Sønderborg, Hugos No. 19 in Køge, and No 43 in Hørsholm each represent a localised version of what the format can be: a specific editorial point of view about wine, expressed in a room designed for conversation. Oasis Vinbar in København K holds a similar space in the city centre. p2 by Malbeck adds a South American axis to that distributed network , a relatively underrepresented orientation in a city whose wine conversation has traditionally leaned European.

    Internationally, the comparison case for bars that build identity around a single wine tradition , as opposed to a broad list , would include places like Jewel of the South in New Orleans, which grounds its program in a specific historical tradition, or Bar Leather Apron in Honolulu, where the editorial discipline is applied to spirits rather than wine. The principle is the same: specificity as a quality signal.

    Planning a Visit

    Birkegade 2 is a residential-scale address in northern Nørrebro, reachable from central Copenhagen by a short metro or cycling connection. The neighbourhood's bar density means that p2 by Malbeck functions naturally as part of an evening that might start or end elsewhere in the district. For visitors building a broader Copenhagen itinerary, the full Copenhagen restaurants and bars guide maps the city's dining and drinking character across neighbourhoods, with notes on timing and booking. Specific hours, booking method, and current pricing for p2 by Malbeck are not confirmed in our database at time of publication; direct contact via the address or a walk-in approach during evening hours is the most reliable route. Wine bars in this format and neighbourhood typically operate from late afternoon into the night, without the hard-seat structure of a restaurant booking, though weekend demand in Nørrebro's more recognised venues has trended toward earlier arrival times.

    What the Name Promises

    The 'p2' element of the name adds a layer of ambiguity , a second expression of something, a second floor, a secondary label in the winemaking sense. Secondary labels in fine wine tend to offer access to a producer's approach at a different price point, and there's an argument that this is what the bar format itself represents relative to formal wine dining: the same seriousness, fewer rituals around it. That reading fits the Nørrebro address and the Argentine wine identity. Malbec, for all its commercial familiarity at the mass-market level, produces some of the most interesting high-altitude red wine being made in the Southern Hemisphere at its upper tier. A bar that takes that seriously is operating with a specific conviction about where value and quality intersect , which is exactly the kind of editorial position that distinguishes a wine bar from a wine list.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What's the general vibe of p2 by Malbeck?
    p2 by Malbeck operates at the lower-key end of Copenhagen's wine bar spectrum. The Nørrebro address sets the tone: this is a neighbourhood-scale room rather than a destination venue built for out-of-towners, which means the atmosphere runs toward the local and unhurried. Copenhagen's wine bars in this tier tend to attract guests who are there for the glass rather than the experience architecture, and the South American wine orientation gives the room a more specific character than a general European list would.
    What's the signature drink at p2 by Malbeck?
    The bar's name is its clearest declaration: Malbec, and by extension Argentine wine, is the organising idea. Malbec-dominant Argentina has a range that runs from volume-production export wine to serious high-altitude single-vineyard bottles from Mendoza and Salta, and a bar that builds its identity around the grape presumably navigates that range with some care. Specific bottles and current pours are not confirmed in our database; the most accurate read on what's being served will come from the list in room.
    Is p2 by Malbeck focused exclusively on South American wines, or does it carry a broader selection?
    The bar's name foregrounds an Argentine wine identity, which positions it as having at least a strong South American emphasis within its list. Whether the program extends to other regions , Chilean, Uruguayan, or Old World references , is not confirmed in our current data. In Copenhagen's wine bar format, a thematic name typically signals a primary orientation rather than an absolute restriction, so guests should expect Malbec and Argentine wine to anchor the list while other options may appear alongside. Confirming the current range directly with the venue before visiting is the most reliable approach.
    Keep this place

    Save or rate p2 by Malbeck on Pearl

    Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.