Session 16
The DO, regions & agave cycle
Session 16 · Block D — Origin & Agave

The DO, regions
& the agave cycle

The rulebook and the economics behind the bottle: where tequila can legally be made, who enforces it, and why a plant’s decade-long life makes the whole industry lurch between glut and shortage.

Duration
38 min · 28 learn / 10 review
You’ll need
Nothing required
Objective
Understand the DO & the boom-bust cycle
Reading · 1 of 2

The Denomination of Origin

Tequila is a place before it’s a product. It can only be made in five Mexican states — overwhelmingly Jalisco, home of the town of Tequila and the surrounding Valles, plus the highlands of Los Altos — and it’s certified by the CRT (Consejo Regulador del Tequila) under the NOM-006 standard. Made anywhere else, from any other agave, it legally isn’t tequila; it’s a different agave spirit.

Reading · 2 of 2

The agave cycle — why prices swing

Now the economics, and it ties straight back to Session 4’s 7-year problem. Because agave takes 5–9 years to mature, supply can’t react quickly to demand. High agave prices → everyone plants → years later a glut → prices crash → farmers stop planting → years later a shortage. This boom-and-bust cycle is the hidden force behind tequila’s quality swings.

Why the cycle is the course’s hidden villain

During a shortage, agave gets scarce and expensive — and that’s exactly when producers are pushed to harvest young, adopt diffusers, stretch with mixto, and lean on additives. Nearly every quality shortcut this course flagged has the same root cause: the mismatch between a plant that grows for a decade and a market that wants more tequila now.

Do this now · ~5 min

Connect price to practice

  1. Notice agave-shortage news

    Tequila’s booms make headlines. When you see "agave shortage," connect it to the shortcuts that follow years later.

  2. Value the honest producers

    Distilleries that hold quality through shortages — estate agave, no diffuser, additive-free — are making a real economic choice. That’s worth supporting.

Check yourself

Questions

Drill

Flashcards

Prompt
tap to flip
The 10-minute review

Lock it in

From memory:

  1. Where can tequila legally be made?
  2. What is the CRT?
  3. Why is the agave supply boom-and-bust?
  4. What do producers do during a shortage?
  5. How does the cycle connect to the course’s themes?
Session 17 · Block E — Cocktails & Pairing

Sipping
vs mixing

A short, practical block. The first rule of using tequila well: match the bottle to the purpose, so you neither waste a fine sipper in a cocktail nor overpay for a mixer.

Duration
36 min · 28 learn / 8 review
You’ll need
A blanco & an aged one, ideally
Objective
Match category to use
Reading · 1 of 1

Which tequila for which job

The aging spine you learned maps directly onto how to use each bottle. The vs-card lays out the logic:

Reach for it in cocktails

  • Blanco — bright agave and citrus for margaritas, Palomas.
  • Reposado — adds gentle oak depth to a cocktail.
  • Good value 100% agave — you’re adding lime and sweetness anyway.
  • Mixing "up" a modest bottle is smart, not sacrilege.

Save it for sipping neat

  • Extra añejo — delicate oak nuance lost in a cocktail.
  • Añejo — usually better savored than mixed.
  • Anything you paid a premium for its aging.
  • A special blanco can also be a superb sipper.
The one rule

Don’t mix what you should savor, and don’t overpay for a mixer. A $150 extra añejo drowned in lime and agave syrup is money poured away — its whole point is the subtle oak you just buried. Mix with blanco and reposado; sip the aged bottles neat.

Do this now · ~6 min

Test the rule

  1. Sip an aged one neat

    Take an añejo or good reposado in a proper glass, no mixers. Notice how much nuance is there to lose.

  2. Mix with a blanco

    Make a simple drink with a blanco and taste how its brightness survives the lime — which the aged one wouldn’t.

Check yourself

Questions

Drill

Flashcards

Prompt
tap to flip
The 10-minute review

Lock it in

From memory:

  1. Which categories belong in cocktails?
  2. Which belong in a sipping glass?
  3. Why is an extra añejo margarita a waste?
  4. What is a Paloma?
  5. State the sipping-vs-mixing rule.
Session 18 · Block E — Cocktails & Pairing

The margarita
& pairing

Close the cocktails block with the drink that made tequila global — done properly — and the principles for pairing agave spirits with food.

Duration
38 min · 28 learn / 10 review
You’ll need
Blanco, fresh limes, orange liqueur
Objective
Build a proper margarita; pair with food
Reading · 1 of 1

Doing the classics right

The margarita is simple, abused, and easy to fix. Click through the drink and the pairing logic:

  1. The real margarita

    Tequila + fresh lime + orange liqueur (a member of the "daisy" / sour family). Balanced, not sugary. The frozen, neon, sour-mix version is a different, lesser drink.

  2. The one upgrade that matters

    Fresh lime juice and a 100% agave tequila. Ditch bottled sour mix — it’s the single reason most home (and bar) margaritas disappoint.

  3. Blanco & food

    A peppery, citrusy blanco is a superb table spirit — it cuts through rich, spicy, fatty, and citrus-dressed dishes the way a crisp white wine does.

  4. Aged & food

    Reposado and añejo, with vanilla, oak, and spice, echo grilled, roasted, caramelized, and mole-sauced dishes.

The pairing principle

Same logic as wine: match intensity (don’t let either overwhelm the other) and bridge shared notes — bright blanco with bright/spicy food, oaky añejo with rich/roasted food. Tequila is a genuine food spirit, not just a party shot.

Do this now · ~8 min

Build one properly

  1. Make a fresh margarita

    A good 100% agave blanco, fresh-squeezed lime, a quality orange liqueur. Taste against any memory of a sour-mix version.

  2. Try a food bridge

    Sip a blanco with something citrusy or spicy, and (if you have one) an añejo with something grilled or chocolatey. Notice the echoes.

Check yourself

Questions

Drill

Flashcards

Prompt
tap to flip
The 10-minute review

Lock it in

From memory:

  1. What is a real margarita made of?
  2. What’s the single biggest home-margarita upgrade?
  3. Why does blanco pair well with food?
  4. What foods suit reposado/añejo?
  5. State the pairing principle.