Sunday, February 9, 2025

Tequila Review #3: Olmeca Altos Plata Tequila (Blanco)

Tequila Review #3:

Olmeca Altos Plata Tequila (Blanco)

NOM: #1111


 

I bought this at a smaller liquor store that had a bunch of more obscure tequilas, compared to the mass market stuff that my provincial liquor chain pretty much exclusively carries. I got an online discount and couldn't resist picking up a bottle at a pretty fair price for what I hear is a good quality tequila. 

Nose: Smooth, subtle notes of flowers and vanilla, with a trailing note of butterscotch. It actually smells very pleasant. There's no acerbic harshness at all.

Taste: It starts out with cooked agave. Then, whereas I can't smell the ethanol, I can still distinctly taste it. It's not a harsh burn. There's a single punch but it quickly tempers out. The flavour I mostly get from this is white pepper, with a little bit of vanilla as it fades. The white pepper finish sticks around for a little while. It's not bad.

Of the blancos I've had, (the others being El Jimador, Espolon, and Cazadores) this one is easily my favourite. I'm not sure I'm a Blanco guy, but I intend to return to this. It's definitely the most enjoyable to drink of the Blancos I've had.

77/100

Tuesday, February 4, 2025

Mezcal Review: Bruxo X

Mezcal Review: 

Bruxo X

Lot: 01102

 

Bruxo X is only my second experience with mezcal.

My first was with a shot of Agua Santa Espadin at a Mexican restaurant I went to with my friends for my birthday. That first shot was like a punch to the mouth in the best way possible. The intensity of flavour blew my mind.

But this review is about the bottle of Bruxo X I bought a couple years ago. I've been very intermittently revisiting this bottle since I bought it, sipping here and there. It's an odd mezcal that I still haven't completely figured out the tasting notes for. When I first opened it, I got a very intense flavour that reminded me of rubber. I thought it might be the cork, so I thought I'd give it time to breathe before revisiting. Now, after a couple years and a few more drinks, I'm pretty sure that that's just the flavour.

Now, that's not necessarily a bad thing, but it is a very rough and surly flavour. I have to be in the mood to tango with el Bruxo.

Nose: Smoky and grassy. It brings to mind being in a deep, forest swamp.

Taste: Oily texture. Incredibly smoky. Whenever I taste it, it reminds me of a freshly-opened PVC model. Kind of rubbery and new, and I mean that in a good way. It's a harsh flavour, but it's not unpleasant either. There might be some slight grassy note mixed in there. The smoke really does dominate anything else though. I find it hard to dig too deeply past that.

I definitely enjoy Bruxo X, but I don't find it overly complex. I like returning to this every once in awhile, but I'm sure the world of mezcal goes much deeper than this. I'd like to explore more when I can.

Rating: 74/100



Friday, January 24, 2025

Tequila Review #2: El Jimador Reposado

 Tequila Review #2: 

El Jimador Reposado

NOM: #1119

This was my first ever tequila. About five or six years ago, I initially bought this for margaritas. I needed an accompaniment to go along with watching some true cinema, such as Beastars, Gundam Build Fighters Re:Rise, the Wes Anderson filmgraphy, and African Salaryman. I'm a big fan of limes, so margaritas felt like a logical cocktail for me. I was always curious about tequila. I thought I knew its reputation as a shooter at university parties, but I never tried it out myself. I was always curious though. I knew that, unlike vodka, it was supposed to have a flavour.

So, when the time came to make my first margarita, I looked for a cheap Tequila that I felt had at least some pedigree, at least compared to the likes of Jose Cuervo and Sauza. I landed on El Jimador, which I was able to buy for around 33$ (this was before the Pandemic inflation surge). I picked up some Cointreau and a couple limes and made my first margarita, using a recipe I found off youtube. Before I did, though, I wanted to try the tequila straight, to get a feel for the taste. I poured about half an ounce into a shotglass and drank it. I was stunned. The flavour of cooked blue agave hit me like a train, but I found myself falling for that smoky, slightly fruity, slightly tinny taste. After that, whenever I made margaritas for my weekly anime night, I found myself double dipping with another sip of neat El Jimador tequila. This was the beginning of my tequila journey.

It's been five years since then. Admittedly, my tequila horizons haven't broadened all that much. I've generally tried the cheaper, lower-end of the market brands, namely El Jimador, Cazadores, and Espolon. I have bought some higher-quality tequila that are sitting unopened in my liquor cabinet, but I find myself saving them. I say this to emphasize the fact that my sense of taste hasn't been spoiled by better tequila since that first bottle of El Jimador Reposado. The only frame of reference for reposado I've had is El Jimador, and the 20 year old, opened Sauza that I once found buried at the back of the cupboard. The rest have been blancos since I learned that's the tequila age of choice for margaritas.

The El Jimador Reposado that I'm drinking today is not the same tequila that I drank five years ago. 

I've since learned more about the distillation process, the Norma Oficial Mexicana (NOM) designation, and distillery numbers. I don't know if the El Jimador I had before was from a different distillery or not. I don't know if El Jimador changed the way that they make tequila. I don't know if the distillation process left in a really wide "cut" to make it so ethanol-forward. I know El Jimador has been a diffuser tequila for some time, a term that's used as a J'accuse in tequila circles, referring to the process in which a metal piece of equipment called a diffuser is used to extract the sugars and other carbohydrates of agave, but in a high volume in the name of efficiency. Along the way, unripe agaves are left in, altering the taste. This could be the reason for the harsh and astringent alcohol flavour, but even so, I at least tasted some complexity from this same brand before this bottle

It's a shame really, because I did like El Jimador, but if this is the rule rather than the exception, then I'll probably just pay five dollars more and try Espolon Reposado rather than El Jimador Reposado.


Nose: Mostly ethanol, with a slight hint of cooked agave.

Taste: Harsh, astringent alcohol. I can't taste anything other than ethanol, which is really disappointing. I've had El Jimador that's better than this, but if this is the standard nowadays, then I have to judge it accordingly.

Finish: Medium-length ethanol finish.Belated notes of black pepper once the alcohol burn wears off.

Score: 57/100

This was not a good bottle of tequila.


Tuesday, May 28, 2024

Tequila Review #1: Cazadores Blanco

 Tequila Review #1:

Cazadores Blanco

NOM: #1487

Nose: Cazadores has a strong alcohol smell with a slight scent of cooked agave, the agave notes being the only difference from a run-of-the-mill vodka. The smell is slightly medicinal and the overall odour mildly unpleasant.

Taste: It has a strong, harsh, alcoholic taste with only hot notes of pepper. Acerbic and not subtle or complex whatsoever. Of the five or six tequilas I've had, this is probably the worst. Both El Jimador and Espolon are better blancos than this. I would have almost preferred if they added some chemical additives. Overall, it's undesirable to the taste. It doesn't even make a good mixer for margaritas, with the usually harsh taste almost completely dissolving in the ice and resulting in a flat, watery margarita.

Finish: Basically zero. A second or two of lingering alcohol flavour.

Price: I bought this on sale for a couple dollars cheaper than my usual El Jimador. Normally it's more expensive than El Jimador, which is a better tequila, which keeps it from being good value apart from this one instance.

Rating: 52/100


Tequila Review #3: Olmeca Altos Plata Tequila (Blanco)

Tequila Review #3: Olmeca Altos Plata Tequila (Blanco) NOM: #1111   I bought this at a smaller liquor store that had a bunch of more obscure...