Session 19
Comparative technique
Session 19 · Block F — Comparative & Consolidation

Comparative
technique

The fastest way to make everything you’ve learned real: hold all but one variable constant, taste side by side, and let the difference teach you. Three flights, three lessons.

Duration
40 min · 30 learn / 10 review
You’ll need
2–3 tequilas for one contrast
Objective
Design a single-variable tequila flight
Reading · 1 of 1

Build a flight that isolates one thing

A good flight changes exactly one variable so its effect becomes unmistakable. Three worth running:

Aging flight (isolate oak)

  • One distillery: blanco → reposado → añejo.
  • Everything but barrel time held constant.
  • You taste exactly what oak does over time.
  • The clearest way to feel the spine.

Production / terroir flights

  • Traditional agave-forward vs industrial blanco — the diffuser/additive divide.
  • Or highland vs lowland blanco — terroir.
  • Same category, so the one variable stands out.
  • Often more surprising than the aging flight.

The rule for any flight: same glassware, unmixed, side by side, at the same time. Hold the serving constant so the only thing that differs is the variable you’re studying — exactly the discipline behind every "structure first" tasting.

Do this now · ~12 min

Run one flight

  1. Choose your variable

    Aging, production, or terroir. Get 2–3 tequilas that differ only in that.

  2. Taste side by side

    Same glasses, no mixers, small pours, water on hand. Slurp/nose across them.

  3. Write the sentence

    Complete: "As ___ changes, the tequila gets ___." That sentence is the lesson, learned by taste, not by reading.

Check yourself

Questions

Drill

Flashcards

Prompt
tap to flip
The 10-minute review

Lock it in

From memory:

  1. How do you isolate the aging variable?
  2. How do you taste the production divide?
  3. How do you taste terroir?
  4. What must stay constant across a flight?
  5. Why does comparative tasting work?
Session 20 · Block F — Comparative & Consolidation

Consolidation,
final & mezcal

Tie the whole course together, take the twelve-question final, and step through the outward door: tequila is one agave spirit among many, and mezcal is where the map keeps going.

Duration
45 min · review & final
You’ll need
A good tequila & your notes
Objective
Consolidate; pass the final; look onward
Reading · 1 of 2

The whole course, in one view

Read a tequila backwards and you have the course: aging (blanco→extra añejo, time in oak) sits on top of production (the agave, cooked in oven or diffuser, crushed by tahona or mill, fermented wild or cultured, distilled to keep or strip character), grown in a specific origin (highland fruity vs lowland earthy), under a rulebook (blue Weber agave, the five states, the NOM — which permits more than buyers assume).

The recurring truths: cooked agave is the soul, and its absence is the warning sign; every production step forks between character and efficiency; "100% agave" is necessary but not sufficient; color and price prove nothing; and the plant’s 5–9 year life is the pressure behind nearly every shortcut. Structure first, brand and bottle last.

Reading · 2 of 2 — the outward door

Tequila is a kind of mezcal

Here’s the reframe to end on: all tequila is technically mezcal — an agave spirit — just a specific, heavily-regulated one made from a single agave in a defined region. Step outside those rules and a whole world opens up:

  1. Mezcal

    Made from dozens of agave species (espadín, tobalá, tepextate…), often in different regions (notably Oaxaca), traditionally roasted in underground pits — giving the smoky, wild, hugely varied character tequila lacks. The obvious next journey.

  2. Other agave spirits

    Raicilla, bacanora, sotol (actually not agave, but adjacent) and more — regional Mexican distillates, each its own rabbit hole.

  3. How to explore

    Bring the exact same instrument and structure-first habit: taste the agave, attribute flavor to process and origin, judge what’s in the glass. The framework transfers completely.

Where to go next

Go deep on one distillery’s range, or one region, or make the jump to mezcal and taste what agave does without tequila’s rulebook. The palate and the method you built here work on all of it.

Check yourself

Questions

Drill

Flashcards

Prompt
tap to flip
The 10-minute review

Lock it in

Before the final, from memory:

  1. Recite the aging spine and the production chain.
  2. What is cooked agave, and why does its absence matter?
  3. State the character-vs-efficiency fork.
  4. What does "100% agave" not guarantee?
  5. How does tequila relate to mezcal?
Course complete

You can read the agave

You started with a spirit most people only know as a burning shot. You end able to trace a tequila back through its aging, its production, its origin, and the rulebook that shapes it — and to tell real cooked-agave craft from an industrial spirit dressed up with additives. That’s the whole discipline: taste the structure, attribute it to a cause, and judge the bottle on what’s in the glass, not on the glass itself.

The one thing this course can’t give you is the tequila. Buy 100% agave, favor transparent producers, taste the blanco, and keep notes. And when you’re ready, the door out of tequila leads straight to mezcal — below.