Aroma
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Tequila Aroma Kit
Develop your palate with the canonical reference for pepper and related notes.

Don Pilar Añejo Tequila
Don Pilar
Don Pilar's Añejo delivers genuine agave character that has been shaped, not masked, by eighteen months in oak. This is añejo the way it should be done — the wood serves the spirit, not the other way around. At its price point, it competes well above its weight class, offering depth and balance that many pricier añejos struggle to achieve.

Arette Artesanal Suave Reposado
Arette
Arette's Artesanal Suave line represents their elevated expression, using a tahona-and-roller mill process that captures more agave complexity. This reposado finds the sweet spot between agave purity and oak influence. At its price, it outperforms bottles costing twice as much.

Fuenteseca Cosecha 2019 Blanco
Fuenteseca
Fuenteseca's vintage blancos are exercises in terroir expression, and the 2019 Cosecha is a study in mineral-fruit tension. It drinks more like a serious mezcal than a commercial tequila, rewarding patient sipping. For those who believe blanco tequila can be a contemplative spirit, this is your proof.

Terralta Blanco 80 Proof
Terralta
Terralta's standard-proof blanco is often overshadowed by its high-proof sibling, but this 80-proof expression is a study in highland elegance. Felipe Camarena's work at the family distillery in the highlands of Jalisco produces tequila with remarkable mineral clarity. At this accessible price, it's one of the best entry points into serious craft tequila.

Siembra Valles Añejo
Siembra Valles
Siembra Valles operates in the shadow of flashier brands, but this añejo is a masterclass in balance. Two years in barrel have softened the spirit without burying its agave identity. The lack of additives means what you taste is authentic — wood and agave in honest conversation. A tequila for people who care about what's actually in the bottle.

Cascahuin Añejo Tequila
Cascahuin
Cascahuin operates a small family-run distillery that has been producing tequila since 1904, and their añejo reflects that generational patience. The oak aging complements rather than masks the agave, which is exactly what separates craft añejos from their overworked competitors. Exceptional value for the quality.

Tequila Ocho Reposado 2021
Tequila Ocho
The 2021 vintage from Tequila Ocho demonstrates why this brand's single-estate, vintage-dated approach matters. The oak influence is deliberate and restrained — just enough to add structure without masking the agave. This is reposado as punctuation, not transformation. One of the most honest expressions of rested tequila available.

Lote Maestro Blanco
Lote Maestro
Lote Maestro's blanco is an exercise in agave transparency. The Rubio family distillery uses traditional brick ovens and a slow fermentation that allows the raw material to speak. This is a straightforward, additive-free blanco that does exactly what it should — put the agave first.

El Tesoro Blanco
El Tesoro
El Tesoro Blanco is a textbook expression of traditional highland tequila production. The tahona-crushed agave and copper pot distillation create a blanco with unusual depth and texture — the kind of bottle that converts skeptics.

Don Pilar Extra Añejo Tequila
Don Pilar
Don Pilar's extra añejo is unapologetically wood-forward, yet the agave heart never goes missing. Three years in American oak barrels develop a spirit that approaches brandy-like richness while retaining its tequila identity. For those who enjoy sipping tequila like a fine cognac, this delivers without pretension.

Lote Maestro Añejo
Lote Maestro
Lote Maestro quietly delivers an añejo that respects the agave rather than burying it under barrel char. The oak and spirit negotiate honestly — you taste the conversation between them. A strong pick for sipping neat when you want tequila that doesn't pretend to be whiskey.

Cascahuin Reposado Tequila
Cascahuin
Cascahuin has operated in El Arenal since 1904, and this reposado demonstrates their philosophy of minimal intervention. Four months is just enough oak to polish the spirit without burying the agave. It's a textbook example of letting the plant speak.

Siembra Valles Ancestral
Siembra Valles
An uncompromising traditionalist tequila that rewards attention and water in equal measure. Ancestral is less a sipping spirit than a study in agave terroir — for drinkers ready to listen.

El Tequileno Blanco Gran Reserva
El Tequileño
El Tequileño Blanco Gran Reserva is a textbook example of what traditional Tequila valley production yields — rounder, more cooked-agave-forward, with none of the diffuser flatness that plagues the category's industrial end. At its price point, this is one of the best value blancos available, equally suited to sipping or mixing.

Terralta Añejo
Terralta
Felipe Camarena's Terralta Añejo is aged tequila done with discipline. Two years in barrel adds complexity without turning the spirit into a wood-bomb. The agave speaks clearly throughout — a sign that the distiller's hand was steady from field to bottle.

Tierra Noble Reposado Tequila
Tierra Noble
Tierra Noble's estate-grown agave and gravity-flow production create a reposado that respects its raw material. The six months in oak add just enough warmth without burying the bright agave character. This is terroir-driven tequila at a fair price.

Fortaleza Still Strength Blanco
Fortaleza
Fortaleza Still Strength takes an already excellent blanco and dials the volume to reveal what the agave has been saying all along. The additional proof isn't about heat — it's about clarity. Every element is sharper, more defined, more honest. A tequila that rewards attention.

Calle 23 Criollo Blanco Tequila
Calle 23
French-born master distiller Sophie Decobecq brings scientific rigor to this expression, using a proprietary criollo agave varietal she cultivated herself. The result is a blanco that's both technically fascinating and genuinely delicious — herbaceous, complex, and utterly distinctive. This is terroir-driven tequila at its most compelling.

Calle 23 Añejo Tequila
Calle 23
Calle 23 Añejo is the work of a French biochemist who approached tequila as a science and ended up making art. The oak integration is textbook — present but never dominant — and the agave character stays intact. This is añejo done with discipline.

Don Fulano Blanco Tequila
Don Fulano
Don Fulano's blanco is a study in discipline. Nothing shouts, nothing hides. The agave is allowed to speak clearly, supported by a clean distillation that lets varietal character shine. An exceptional mixing tequila that's equally compelling neat.

Calle 23 Reposado Tequila
Calle 23
French biochemist Sophie Decobecq's scientific precision shows in every sip. Calle 23 Reposado manages to honor both the raw power of lowland agave and the mellowing effect of French oak aging, creating a reposado where neither wood nor spirit dominates. The result is tequila as dialogue.

ArteNOM Selección de 1123 Blanco
ArteNOM
ArteNOM's concept is simple and brilliant: showcase different NOM distilleries through their blanco expressions. The 1123 bottling comes from Cascahuin, a family-run distillery in the valley of El Arenal. This is tequila stripped to its essentials — no barrel influence, no additives, just agave and terroir in vivid focus.

Ocho Añejo Tequila
Tequila Ocho
Ocho Añejo demonstrates that a single year in barrel, when executed with care, can enhance agave rather than obscure it. The vintage and single-estate approach means each release carries a sense of place. This is añejo for people who actually like tequila.

Tapatio Blanco Tequila
Tapatio
Tapatio Blanco is a masterclass in what highland tequila should taste like when nothing interferes with the agave. Carlos Camarena uses traditional tahona and roller mill extraction, brick ovens, and no additives. This is benchmark blanco tequila at a price that should embarrass the competition.

ArteNOM Selección de 1146 Añejo
ArteNOM
ArteNOM's 1146 Añejo is what happens when barrel aging complements rather than conceals the agave. Eighteen months in American oak gives structure and depth, but the highland terroir of Jesús María — bright, mineral, vegetal — stays audible throughout. This is añejo done with restraint and intelligence.

Arette Artesanal Suave Blanco
Arette
The Arette Artesanal Suave line represents the distillery's old-school approach at an approachable price. The Suave Blanco balances fruit, spice, and earth with an effortless poise that puts many bottles twice its price to shame. A terroir-driven tequila for daily enjoyment.

Cascahuin Plata Tequila
Cascahuin
Cascahuin's Plata is an object lesson in what unaged tequila can be when the raw materials and process are right. At this price, it outperforms bottles costing three times as much. The mineral backbone gives it a serious, contemplative quality that rewards sipping neat, though it's also one of the finest cocktail bases you'll find.

Don Fulano Reposado
Don Fulano
Don Fulano's reposado demonstrates the power of restraint. Six months in French Limousin oak is just enough to round the edges without burying the agave. The Fonseca family's fifth-generation commitment to estate-grown agave shows in the purity of flavor. This is a reposado for people who want oak as a supporting actor, not a lead.

Siete Leguas Blanco
Siete Leguas
Siete Leguas Blanco is a benchmark unaged tequila. The traditional tahona and roller mill combination extracts maximum character from highland agave, and the result is a spirit that's both pristine and deeply flavored. Essential for any serious tequila shelf.

Pasote Blanco Tequila
Pasote
Pasote Blanco demonstrates that great blanco tequila doesn't need to shout. Felipe Camarena's tahona-and-roller-mill hybrid approach produces a spirit that's layered but never overwrought. It works brilliantly in a Paloma or Margarita, but sipping it neat reveals the precision behind every choice.

Siembra Valles Reposado
Siembra Spirits
Siembra Valles Reposado sits at the intersection of tradition and transparency. The brand's commitment to terroir-driven tequila is evident here — the valley-grown agave delivers a rounder, sweeter profile than highland expressions. It is a tequila that educates as it entertains.

Fuenteseca Cosecha 2018 Blanco
Fuenteseca
Fuenteseca's Cosecha series emphasizes vintage-dated agave, and the 2018 harvest delivers a blanco that tastes like terroir in a glass. This is a tequila for sipping — unhurried and unapologetic about its complexity. Not a mixer, not a party pour. A conversation piece.

G4 Añejo Tequila
G4
Felipe Camarena's G4 line is built on traditional tahona and roller mill production at high elevation, and this añejo shows what happens when first-rate agave meets disciplined barrel management. The oak complements rather than masks, making this one of the more agave-forward añejos on the market. Outstanding value in its range.

Terralta Reposado
Terralta
Terralta's Reposado demonstrates restraint — six months in barrel is just enough to sand the edges without burying the highland agave character underneath. Made by the legendary Don Felipe Camarena, this bottling prioritizes balance. It is a tequila that respects the ratio between fruit, earth, and wood.

G4 Blanco Tequila
G4
Felipe Camarena's G4 Blanco is a testament to traditional tahona and roller-mill production yielding a spirit of uncommon clarity and depth. This is terroir-driven tequila — you taste the highlands clay in every sip. Essential drinking for anyone serious about agave.

Siembra Azul Blanco
Siembra Azul
Siembra Azul Blanco is a transparency project in liquid form — co-founded by tequila educator David Suro specifically to showcase terroir and traditional production. It delivers highland agave character without distraction, making it an essential reference blanco.

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.

Siete Leguas Añejo
Siete Leguas
Siete Leguas is one of the last major producers still using traditional copper alembic pot stills alongside their tahona, and the result is an añejo that never loses sight of the agave. Two years in oak adds depth without domination. This is traditional Jalisco tequila-making at its most confident.

Tapatío 110 Blanco
Tequila Tapatío (Camarena family, La Alteña Distillery)
Tapatío 110 is the still-strength expression of the Camarena family's Tapatío Blanco — bottled without any water cut at the 55% ABV it reaches in the still. Verified additive-free by Tequila Matchmaker.

Terralta Blanco Extra Strength 110 Proof
Tequila Terralta (Felipe Camarena)
Terralta 110 is what happens when you remove the single most common intervention in tequila production — water — and let the distillate speak for itself. Felipe Camarena’s catalyst was the refusal to dilute, and the result is a blanco that carries the full weight of highland agave, volcanic mineral water, and an eighty-year-old yeast strain in every sip. The proof sounds aggressive on paper, but the execution is anything but: the texture is silky, the flavors are amplified rather than burned, and the finish is cleaner than most 80-proof tequilas. At under sixty dollars, this is a masterclass in what blanco tequila can be when a maker trusts his raw materials completely.

ArteNOM Seleccion de 1579 Blanco
ArteNOM (Grover Sanschagrin)
ArteNOM 1579 Blanco is a masterclass in tequila terroir. Felipe Camarena's highland agave, grown in volcanic red clay at elevation, produces a spirit with a mineral depth and citrus brightness that lowland blancos simply cannot match. This is not a tequila designed to disappear into a margarita — though it makes an extraordinary one — it's designed to be sipped and studied. The volcanic soil writes itself into the glass as clearly as limestone writes itself into bourbon. At its price point, it's one of the finest expressions of place in the entire tequila category. Cocktail — "The Highland Paloma": Combine 2 oz ArteNOM 1579 Blanco, 1 oz fresh grapefruit juice, 0.5 oz fresh lime juice, and 0.25 oz agave nectar. Shake with ice and strain into a salt-rimmed Collins glass over fresh ice. Top with 2 oz Topo Chico mineral water. The mineral character of both the tequila and the sparkling water creates a Paloma of uncommon depth.

Siembra Valles Blanco
Siembra Spirits
Siembra Valles is the tequila that bartenders drink after their shift — the one they recommend when you ask for something real. David Suro-Piñera is not just a brand owner; he is a tequila scholar and advocate who founded the Tequila Interchange Project to promote transparency in the industry.

Espolòn Reposado
Campari Group
Espolòn is proof that applied heat, carefully controlled, separates good tequila from great tequila. Cirilo Oropeza's decision to quarter the piñas — doubling the surface area exposed to the autoclave's heat — extracts more sweetness and complexity from the agave than conventional methods.

Casa Dragones Joven
Casa Dragones
Casa Dragones Joven is among the purest expressions of tequila-as-blend on the market. Silver for freshness, extra añejo for depth.

Cascahuin Tahona Blanco
Destilería Cascahuin (Grupo Cascahuin)
Tahona production is brutally inefficient — the volcanic stone wheel extracts less juice, takes longer, and demands more labour than a mechanical shredder. Cascahuin does it anyway because the result is a blanco with a weight and mineral complexity that industrial methods cannot replicate. This is tequila at its most expressive — unaged, unfiltered, unapologetic. Drink it neat with a slice of orange and understand why the Rosales family has kept this process unchanged for generations.

Sassicaia 2019
Tenuta San Guido

Herradura Reposado
Brown-Forman (Casa Herradura, est. 1870)
Herradura didn't just make this Reposado — it invented the category (1974).

Siete Leguas Reposado
Casa Siete Leguas (est. 1952)
If El Tesoro is the tequila nerd’s tequila, Siete Leguas is the tequila maker’s tequila. This is the distillery where Don Julio González originally made his tequila before launching his own brand — yes, Don Julio tequila was born at Siete Leguas. The family has refused every shortcut the modern tequila industry has embraced: they still use brick ovens when autoclaves are faster, tahona stones when roller mills are cheaper, wooden fermentation tanks when stainless steel is easier to clean, and copper pot stills when column stills would be more efficient. The result is a tequila with a mineral complexity and savory depth that industrial methods simply cannot replicate. The Reposado’s eight months in American oak adds just enough vanilla and warmth without obscuring the agave and terroir. When tequila professionals talk about “the old way,” this is what they mean.

Tapatio Reposado
Tequila Tapatio S.A. de C.V. (Camarena family, 5th generation)
Tapatio is the tequila that tequila makers drink. The Camarena family — the same lineage that gave us El Tesoro and G4 — runs one of the most traditional operations in Jalisco. Carlos Camarena, the current master distiller, slow-roasts his highland agave for 48 hours in brick ovens, ferments with wild airborne yeasts and natural well water, and keeps production deliberately small. The reposado rests just four months — enough to round the edges without masking the agave. This is tequila for purists, and at around $45 it’s one of the best-kept secrets in the category.

Fortaleza Reposado
Destilería La Fortaleza (Guillermo Erickson Sauza)
Fortaleza is tequila made the way it was meant to be made. While most modern producers use autoclaves and diffusers for speed and efficiency, Guillermo Sauza — great-great-grandson of Don Cenobio Sauza, the “Father of Tequila” — insists on the tahona, the brick oven, and the wooden fermentation tanks. The volcanic spring water that feeds the distillery carries minerals from deep within the stratovolcano, and you can taste the terroir in every sip. The reposado rests just long enough to gain warmth and vanilla from the barrel without losing the agave’s voice.

G4 Reposado
El Pandillo (Felipe Camarena)
G4 is what happens when a family’s fourth generation refuses to cut corners. Felipe Camarena’s dedication to stone ovens, natural fermentation, and unhurried aging produces a reposado where the agave stays front and center. The six months in bourbon barrels add warmth and spice without covering up the plant. This is a tequila for people who want to taste where it came from — the stone oven method preserves complex agave sugars that modern autoclaves simply can’t replicate.