Aroma
Chocolate (Dark Chocolate, Cocoa)
7 bottles with this note
Train this aroma
Tequila Aroma Kit
Develop your palate with the canonical reference for chocolate (dark chocolate, cocoa) and related notes.

Cascahuin Extra Añejo
Cascahuin
Cascahuin is a family-owned distillery that has earned serious credibility among tequila purists, and this extra añejo demonstrates why. Three years in oak could easily overwhelm, but the agave identity survives beautifully. This is a contemplative pour that never loses its soul.

Pasote Añejo
Pasote
Pasote's añejo is made with 100% tahona-crushed agave and fermented with wild airborne yeast, resulting in a tequila with more microbial complexity than most in its class. The initial sip suggests a well-made but conventional añejo; the second and third reveal layers of herbal and mineral character that set it apart.

Rey Sol Extra Añejo
Rey Sol
Rey Sol is an extra añejo that respects its raw material. Where many over-aged tequilas become indistinguishable from brandy, this one retains a clear agave backbone even as the French oak contributes serious depth and that signature smoky toast. The Samuel Meléndrez-designed sun bottle is just a bonus.

El Tequileno Reposado Gran Reserva
Destiladora Tequileña (Salles Family)
El Tequileño Reposado Gran Reserva is the proving ground for single-estate, family-driven tequila production. In an industry where celebrity-branded bottles and corporate acquisitions dominate shelf space, the Salles family has spent sixty-five years proving that one distillery, one recipe, and three generations of accumulated wisdom can produce something no marketing budget can replicate. The Gran Reserva's secret is its blend of reposado and añejo, creating a complexity that belies its approachable price. This is tequila with a lineage you can taste. Cocktail — The Proving Paloma: 2 oz El Tequileño Reposado Gran Reserva, 1 oz fresh grapefruit juice, 0.5 oz fresh lime juice, 0.25 oz agave nectar, top with grapefruit soda. Build in a salt-rimmed Collins glass over ice. Garnish with a grapefruit wedge. The reposado's caramel and honey notes elevate the citrus.

Volcán De Mi Tierra Cristalino
Moët Hennessy (LVMH)
The cristalino category is itself an experiment — the proposition that you can age a tequila for years, develop all that barrel complexity, then strip away the amber color through charcoal filtration without losing what the barrels gave you. Volcán De Mi Tierra pushes the experiment further by blending two different aged expressions from two different barrel types before filtering. The result is a tequila that looks like a blanco but drinks like an añejo — an optical illusion in a glass, and a compelling argument that color tells you far less about a spirit than you think.

Gran Centenario Añejo
Casa Cuervo (Beckmann Family / Proximo Spirits)
Gran Centenario Añejo is a lesson in how thoughtful cask architecture transforms agave into something approaching luxury. The selección suave process — a solera-inspired blending method using French limousin oak and American white oak — creates a layered complexity that belies its approachable price point. The highland agave provides a clean, sweet foundation; the French oak adds refinement and tannic structure; the American oak contributes vanilla warmth. The result is a tequila with the kind of deliberate design you typically find at two or three times the price.

Casa Noble Anejo
Constellation Brands