Tags Posts tagged with "tequila"

tequila

Pixabay photo

By Bob Lipinski

“One tequila, two tequila, three tequila, floor.” — Comedian George Carlin, 1937-2008

Bob Lipinski

Tequila is a distilled spirit produced from the juice of the blue agave, a plant native to Mexico. The agave has stiff, blue-tinted leaves and needle-like thorns, resembling cactus. Tequila is produced within the state of Jalisco, where the town of Tequila is located, as well as in the states of Guanajuato, Michoacán, Nayarit, and Tamaulipas.

In 1795, King Carlos IV of Spain granted Jose Maria Guadalupe Cuervo y Montana the first license to produce and distribute tequila in Mexico, then under Spanish rule. In 1873, Don Cenobio Sauza became the first to export tequila to the United States, crossing the border at El Paso del Norte (now Juárez) with three casks and six jugs of mezcal-tequila.

Tequila comes in two main types, based on the agave content used during fermentation: “100% Agave Tequila” and “Mixto Tequila.” Tequila labeled “100 percent Agave” or “100 percent Blue Agave” is made entirely from agave. If the label doesn’t say 100 percent agave, it isn’t. Mixto Tequila consists of at least 51 percent blue agave and other sugars. It is simply labeled “tequila” without indicating it as mixto.

Tequila must be distilled at least twice by law, though some producers opt for a third distillation. It is bottled at a minimum of 80-proof unless flavored.

Tequila can be grouped into four distinctive categories — Blanco (gold or oro, a subgroup, often referred to as mixto), Reposado, Añejo, and Extra Añejo. Cristalino Tequila (crystalline) is an unofficial category (introduced in 2008) of aged tequilas (reposado, añejo, extra-añejo) that are filtered to remove the color (from barrel aging) while retaining the taste and aroma from the barrel.

Blanco (also known as silver tequila), is unaged. It has characteristics such as black pepper, citrus, dill, earthy, green olive, lemongrass, pine, tobacco, and vegetal notes.

Gold (oro) mixto is typically unaged but often treated with caramel coloring or oak extracts to simulate wood aging.

Reposado is aged 2 months to 1 year in wood. It has notes of black pepper, caramel, cinnamon, dried grass, figs, ginger, mint, smoke, tobacco, and vegetal.

Añejo is aged 1 to 3 years in wood. It has characteristics such as baked apple, butterscotch, dark chocolate, clove, ginger, honey, oak, orange, and smoke.

Extra Añejo is aged at least 3 years in wood, comparable to brandy in quality and drinkability.

Blanco and Gold tequilas are ideal for cocktails, while other types are good for sipping, like brandy.

Bob Lipinski is the author of 10 books, including “101: Everything You Need To Know About Whiskey” and “Italian Wine & Cheese Made Simple” (available on Amazon.com). He consults and conducts training seminars on Wine, Spirits, and Food and is available for speaking engagements. He can be reached at www.boblipinski.com OR [email protected].

Photo from Pixabay

By Bob Lipinski

Bob Lipinski

Over the years there have been many myths and misconceptions about alcoholic beverages that have been carried from one generation to the next. Some are based on fiction, or false or mistaken beliefs that have never been debunked. 

Some popular myths are:

Myth: Prohibition (1920-1933) “prohibited” drinking alcoholic beverages.

Fact: Prohibition forbid the manufacture, sale, transportation, importation, and exportation of alcoholic beverages. It did not prohibit drinking alcoholic beverages.

————————————————-

Myth: “London Dry Gin” is a dry gin made in London, England.

Fact: It is a generic name for gin lacking sweetness first made in the early 1830s. London dry gins, originally produced only in or near London, are now produced all over the world with the term having little meaning.

————————————————

Myth: Tequila is made from cactus.

Fact: Tequila is made from agave, a plant having stiff, often-spiny leaves, and prickly, needle-like thorns, resembling cactus.

————————————————

Myth: Tequila has a worm in the bottle.

Fact: The worm is not found in bottles of tequila, only in some bottles of mezcal; a marketing gimmick dating to the 1940s.

————————————————

Myth: All the whiskey in a bottle of 12-year-old Scotch whisky is 12 years old.

Fact: The age stated on the label of a bottle of Scotch whisky identifies the age of the youngest Scotch in the blend.

————————————————

Myth: The longer a whiskey ages in a bottle, the better or smoother it becomes.

Fact: Aging only takes place in wooden barrels; when removed, the product ceases to age or improve. A bottle of 15-year-old Scotch whisky purchased 10 years ago, is still 15 years old.

————————————————

Myth: The quality of whiskey can be determined by its color. The darker the color, the richer tasting the spirit.

Fact: Some whiskies are light amber or brown colored, while others have a rich mahogany color because of aging or by adding caramel coloring.

————————————————

Myth: Sour mash is a type of whiskey from Tennessee.

Fact: It is a distillers’ term for a fermentation process used to make Bourbon and Tennessee Whiskey and not a type of whiskey. Whiskies made by this process are not sour.

————————————————

Myth: Bourbon whiskey can only be made in Kentucky.

Fact: Bourbon can be made anywhere in the United States and its territories.

————————————————

Myth: Martinis should be stirred, not shaken, which will bruise the vodka.

Fact: Vodka is a very stable distilled spirit and shaking it will not “bruise” it.

Bob Lipinski is the author of 10 books, including “101: Everything You Need To Know About Whiskey” and “Italian Wine & Cheese Made Simple” (available on Amazon.com). He conducts training seminars on Wine, Spirits, and Food and is available for speaking engagements. He can be reached at www.boblipinski.com OR [email protected].