The Still & The VineSchool of Wine & Spirits
Don Julio Reposado
TequilaIssue 4

Don Julio Reposado

Diageo (Don Julio, est. 1942) · La Primavera (NOM 1449), Atotonilco El Alto, Jalisco, Mexico

$5380 (40% ABV) proof8 months in American white oak barrelsAtotonilco El Alto, Jalisco — where a fifteen-year-old orphan named Julio González borrowed 20,000 pesos, built his own distillery, and spent forty years walking the agave fields each day with a coa — creating what would become the world’s first luxury tequila brand.
Don Julio invented the luxury tequila category. Before Don Julio, tequila was a commodity — cheap, harsh, and destined for margarita mixes. Julio González changed the rules by treating agave like fine wine grapes: planting further apart for full maturity, slow-roasting in 72-hour brick oven cycles, and aging in fine oak. When his sons created a tequila to honor his 60th birthday in 1985, it became the first tequila marketed as a premium sipping spirit. The Reposado expression — eight months in American white oak — strikes the ideal balance: enough barrel time to add complexity without masking the highland agave character that made the brand famous.

Kit Aromas

Tasting Notes

Nose

Cooked agave, caramel, vanilla, white pepper, roasted citrus, and a subtle cinnamon warmth from the oak.

Palate

Rich and elegant — butterscotch, cooked agave sweetness, gentle oak spice, dark chocolate, and a mineral quality from the highland terroir.

Finish

Smooth and lingering with warm cinnamon, agave nectar, and toasted oak that fades slowly.

Specifications
Agave
100% Highland Blue Weber Agave
Production
Slow brick oven roasting (72-hour cycles), agave planted further apart for full maturity
Serve & Pair

Cocktail Suggestion

Cocktail — The Don’s Paloma: 2 oz Don Julio Reposado · 3 oz fresh grapefruit juice · ½ oz fresh lime juice · ¼ oz agave nectar · 2 oz club soda · pinch of salt. Build over ice in a highball with a Tajín rim. The reposado’s vanilla and oak complexity elevate this beyond a standard Paloma.

Food Pairing

Pair with: Carnitas tacos with pickled red onion and fresh cilantro. The tequila’s agave sweetness and oak warmth cut through the pork’s richness, while the pickled onion echoes the citrus notes in the spirit.

Train These Aromas
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