The Still & The VineSchool of Wine & Spirits

School of Wine & Spirits

Tequila

42 reviews

El Tesoro Añejo
Tequila

El Tesoro Añejo

El Tesoro

El Tesoro's tahona-crushed, oven-roasted production methods are traditional to the bone, and the two-year rest in ex-bourbon barrels at altitude in Arandas lets the highland terroir breathe through. This is añejo tequila that respects the agave rather than burying it under oak.

80 proof
Tierra Noble Añejo
Tequila

Tierra Noble Añejo

Tierra Noble

Tierra Noble's añejo is a masterclass in restraint for the category. The 18-month aging in French oak imparts structure and spice without erasing the agave identity. It competes well above its price point, delivering nuance that rewards careful attention.

80 proof
Terralta Reposado
Tequila

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.

80 proof
G4 Blanco Tequila
Tequila

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.

80 proof
Cascahuin Extra Añejo
Tequila

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.

80 proof
Siembra Azul Blanco
Tequila

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.

80 proof
Tequila Ocho Añejo
Tequila

Tequila Ocho Añejo

Tequila Ocho

Ocho's single-estate philosophy treats tequila like wine — each vintage and field is documented. The Añejo expression proves that a year in barrel can add complexity without erasing origin. If you want to taste how terroir translates through oak, start here.

80 proof
Pasote Añejo
Tequila

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.

80 proof
Siete Leguas Añejo
Tequila

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.

80 proof
Rey Sol Extra Añejo
Tequila

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.

80 proof
Tapatio Añejo
Tequila

Tapatio Añejo

Tapatio

Tapatio Añejo is the work of Carlos Camarena, a fifth-generation distiller who refuses shortcuts. The tahona-crushed agave and slow fermentation produce an añejo that tastes like intention rather than decoration. At this price, it competes with bottles twice its cost.

80 proof
Tapatío 110 Blanco
Tequila

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.

$45110 (55% ABV, Still Strength — Bottled Undiluted) proof
Tequila Ocho Plata
Tequila

Tequila Ocho Plata

Tequila Los Alambiques (Camarena family)

Cooked agave leads, vibrant and sweet, followed by citrus blossom, white pepper, and a fresh herbaceous note of mint and wet stone. The single-estate agave brings a distinct mineral clarity.80 (40% ABV) proof
Terralta Blanco Extra Strength 110 Proof
Tequila

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.

$48110 proof (55% ABV) proof
ArteNOM Seleccion de 1579 Blanco
Tequila

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.

$4581.4 (40.7% ABV) proof
El Tequileno Reposado Gran Reserva
Tequila

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.

$4080 Proof (40% ABV) proof
Volcán De Mi Tierra Cristalino
Tequila

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.

$5580 (40% ABV) proof
Fortaleza Añejo
Tequila

Fortaleza Añejo

Tequila Los Abuelos (NOM 1493)

Fortaleza Añejo is what happens when traditional methods meet patient barrel aging — and neither rushes the other. The tahona wheel produces a spirit with more texture and mineral complexity than a modern roller mill, and eighteen months in oak adds caramel depth without burying the agave.

$7080 (40% ABV) proof
Siembra Valles Blanco
Tequila

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.

$3880 (40% ABV) proof
Maestro Dobel Diamante
Tequila

Maestro Dobel Diamante

Proximo Spirits / Beckmann Family

Maestro Dobel Diamante didn’t just create a tequila—it created a category.

~$5780 (40% ABV) proof
Espolòn Reposado
Tequila

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.

$2580 (40% ABV) proof
Chinaco Añejo
Tequila

Chinaco Añejo

Chinaco (González family)

Subtle pear, wildflowers, vanilla, light smoke, dried herbs, and a distinctive softness that sets it apart from Jalisco tequilas80 (40% ABV) proof
Don Fulano Anejo
Tequila

Don Fulano Anejo

Tequila Fonseca

Don Fulano Anejo is highland tequila at its most refined.

$6080 (40% ABV) proof
Gran Centenario Añejo
Tequila

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.

$3580 (40% ABV) proof