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How is Tequila made?
Why is it called Tequila?
Where did Tequila come from?
Whats Mezcal and Pulque?
What is the blue Agave plant?
Where does Tequila come from?
Whats the story with the worm?
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How is Tequila Made?
Tequila is made from the fermented and distilled sap taken from the "piņa" of
the blue agave plants. The piņa hearts are split open and steamed in 10-ton pressure
cookers. The resulting liquids flow into large steel vats for fermentation, which takes
48-72 hours. After a double distillation process that requires two weeks or more, a potent
150-proof tequila emerges. It was the Spanish conquistadors, who managed to distill the
sap into alcohol. With their supply of wine and brandy exhausted, they turned to the
tequila plant. The conquistadors frequently used hollowed cattle horns as drinking
vessels, and this could be the reason why mescal and tequila, when served straight, are
traditionally poured into tall, narrow glasses today.
All Tequila is white when it comes out of the still. This white, colorless
"silver" tequila is then reduced with distilled water to the desired proof, 80
to 86 proof for the U.S. market. Tequila becomes "gold" from a process of aging
a minimum of six months in large redwood tanks. Super premium Tequila is aged longer in
oak whiskey barrels. Depending on the aging technique the tequila takes on a different
flavor and smoothness.
Although of superior quality, the dark or "gold" tequila is often passed up by
consumers who assume that the clear write product is better, a problem long familiar to
rum producers.
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