
Tequila Ocho Curado Espadín
Tequila Ocho · Destilería La Alteña
This is a fascinating bridge between the worlds of tequila and mezcal, executed with Ocho's trademark terroir focus. The espadín infusion doesn't turn this into a mezcal impersonation — it adds a smoky dimension while the highland agave character remains firmly in the driver's seat. A conversation starter with substance behind it.
Nose
Roasted agave and green vegetal notes mingle with a distinct minerality. There's fresh lime zest and a subtle herbal quality — almost like bruised thyme. The espadín infusion adds a smoky floral character that sits behind the cooked agave.
Palate
Medium-bodied and surprisingly dry. Cooked agave drives the palate, supported by white pepper and a mineral earthiness. Mid-palate introduces a gentle smokiness from the espadín, with citrus brightness cutting through. The finish of the palate carries an herbaceous quality.
Finish
Clean and dry, with lingering mineral notes, a whisper of smoke, and residual lime zest.
- Agave
- 100% Blue Weber Agave (highland), infused with Espadín agave
- Production
- Brick oven slow-cook, tahona crush, open-air fermentation, copper pot distillation
- Region
- Arandas, Jalisco, Mexico
- Cooking Method
- Brick oven slow-cook, tahona crush, open-air fermentation, copper pot distillation
- Distillation
- Slow-cooked in brick ovens, tahona-crushed, fermented in open wooden vats, double distilled in copper pot stills
- NOM
- 1474
- Additives Free
- Yes
Cocktail Suggestion
Smoke Signal Paloma — 2 oz Ocho Curado Espadín · 1 oz fresh grapefruit juice · 0.5 oz fresh lime juice · 0.5 oz agave syrup · 2 oz sparkling mineral water · Build over ice in a salt-rimmed highball, stir gently, garnish with grapefruit wedge.
Food Pairing
The charred, tender octopus echoes the spirit's smoke, while the bright, herbaceous salsa verde complements the tequila's green vegetal notes and citrus brightness.
Created through a collaboration between the late Tomás Estes and master distiller Carlos Camarena at La Alteña, Ocho Curado infuses highland blanco tequila with slow-roasted espadín agave hearts.
Be the first to comment.
Leave a comment

Ableforth's Bathtub Gin Navy Strength
Ableforth's
The compound method — cold-infusing botanicals rather than vapor-distilling them — gives this gin a texture and depth that column-distilled gins rarely achieve. At navy strength, the botanical payload is amplified but not exaggerated. It punches above its price point with confidence.

Teeling Brabazon Bottling Series 04 Muscat Casks
Teeling
The Brabazon Series is Teeling's exploration of wine cask finishing, and this Muscat expression is the most harmonious yet. The dessert wine casks could easily overwhelm, but the distillery's spirit is robust enough to absorb the influence and come out more complex for it. A rewarding pour for anyone who thinks Irish whiskey can't do bold.

Talisker Distillers Edition 2023
Talisker
The Distillers Edition takes Talisker's coastal intensity and routes it through sherry cask maturation, creating a dialogue between smoke and sweetness that neither wins. It's a demonstration of how finishing can complement rather than mask a distillery's character.

Hampden Estate HLCF 2016 Single Vintage
Hampden Estate
HLCF is Hampden's medium-ester mark, and at seven years it hits a sweet spot where the distillery's funk is fully developed but the cask has had enough time to integrate. This is Jamaican rum at its most unapologetically expressive — not for the faint of heart, but essential for anyone who wants to understand what pot-still rum can achieve.

Herradura Ultra Añejo Cristalino Tequila
Herradura
Cristalino tequilas polarize purists, but Herradura's version makes a compelling case for the category. The añejo base provides genuine depth — cooked agave and oak influence survive the charcoal filtration — while the clarity and smoothness open doors for sipping occasions where a heavy reposado might feel out of place. Style with substance.

Gran Centenario Plata Tequila
Gran Centenario
Gran Centenario Plata demonstrates that entry-level tequila need not sacrifice character. The selección suave process—a brief rest in new American oak—adds a whisper of complexity without masking the agave. This is an honest blanco that works beautifully in cocktails but merits straight sipping on its own.

Fuenteseca Cosecha 2020 Blanco
Fuenteseca
Enrique Fonseca's Cosecha series is built on the idea that agave harvested in a specific year has a unique terroir signature worth preserving. The 2020 Cosecha is bright and precise, showcasing how slow-roasted highland agave can produce a blanco of uncommon depth. No additives, no shortcuts—just agave, time, and fire.

ArteNOM Selección de 1549 Blanco
ArteNOM
ArteNOM's 1549 expression captures the highlands terroir in a way that feels unmanipulated and direct. This is agave-forward blanco with no need for embellishment, demonstrating what additive-free production and careful distillation can achieve at a fair price.