School of Wine & Spirits
Tequila
92 reviews

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.

Don Fulano Imperial Extra Añejo 5 Year
Don Fulano
Extended aging often strips tequila of its identity, but Don Fulano's 5-year extra añejo maintains the balance between agave and wood with unusual grace. The French and American oak program adds complexity without erasure—this tastes like aged tequila, not tequila-flavored whiskey.

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.

El Tequileno Añejo Gran Reserva
El Tequileño
El Tequileño has been producing tequila since 1959, and this añejo shows the benefit of generational know-how. The two-year rest in American oak doesn't overwhelm the agave — it frames it. An añejo for people who believe tequila should still taste like tequila.

Don Julio Añejo
Don Julio
Don Julio Añejo remains one of the most reliable entry points into aged tequila. The 18-month maturation in American white oak strikes a balance between barrel influence and agave character that many longer-aged expressions lose. It's a study in how restraint in aging can produce a more honest result than ambition.

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.

Tears of Llorona Extra Añejo
Tears of Llorona
Tears of Llorona is one of the benchmarks for extra añejo tequila. Five years in a combination of Scotch and sherry casks gives it a complexity that rivals fine aged spirits from any tradition. The agave never surrenders to the wood — that balance is the achievement.

Don Fulano Imperial Extra Añejo
Don Fulano
Five years in a combination of French and American oak have transformed Don Fulano's highland agave into something approaching fine cognac territory. The Imperial bottling is proof that extra añejo tequila, done without additives, can stand beside the world's great aged spirits. The agave persists — that's the mark of quality.

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 Reserva Extra Añejo 7 Year
Fuenteseca
Seven years in French oak has turned this tequila into something closer to a contemplative spirit than a cocktail ingredient. Yet it never loses its agave identity, which is the real accomplishment. Proof that patience and good barrels can achieve what additives cannot.

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.

El Tesoro Paradiso Extra Añejo
El Tesoro
Finished in A. de Fussigny Cognac barrels after initial aging in ex-bourbon wood, Paradiso bridges the world of fine tequila and brandy without losing its identity. The tahona-crushed agave provides a textural richness that machine-milled tequilas rarely achieve. This is sipping tequila at its most contemplative.

Terralta Extra Añejo
Terralta
Terralta's Extra Añejo represents the rare aged tequila that never forgets its source material. Five years in barrel could overwhelm lesser spirits, but the highland agave backbone and additive-free commitment keep it honest. Felipe Camarena's fingerprint is unmistakable: precise without being sterile, complex without being fussy.