Tequila Production: From Raw Agave to Epicurean Elixir It takes at least eight years to make a bottle of tequila, sometimes as long as 20. That's because tequila is not made from the typical grains or fruits most alcoholic beverages are made from. It is distilled from the roasted centre (piña) of the blue agave (maguey) plant - the agave tequilana weber azul - one of 136 species of agave that grow in Mexico. It has a lifespan of 8-14 years, depending on soil, climate and cultivation methods, and will be harvested at between 8 and 10 years. That's about 3,000 days before the harvest, a long time to wait. A farmer who plants a one-year-old shoot (hijuelo) today, in 2007, won't even harvest it for tequila until at least 2014, and maybe as late as 2018. And then, if it's aged at all it could take another one to five years before it appears on the shelf - 2015 to 2023. An agave is a one-time use. It's not like a grape where you can plant a vine and have grapes every year. Imagine having to plan - and budget - for a product you won't see for perhaps another decade. Imagine having to care for and nurture those agaves from their planting to their harvesting, many years later, without knowing how the market will unfold in the interim, but still having to hire farm workers to weed, prune and maintain the fields.

The part of the plant that is used for tequila is the heart (root), or piña (also called the head, or cabeza), which looks like a large pineapple or pinecone. It starts underground, but soon pushes its way into the light. A mature piña usually weighs 80 to more than 300 pounds (36-136 kg, although most are harvested under 100 pounds/45 kg). Even 500-lb. piñas have been reported in the highlands, although they are rare. Tequila starts when the jimador - the harvester - cuts the agave from the ground and starts trimming away the 200-plus leaves that protect it. Much of the work is done manually, rather than by machine, starting with the first planting of the agave shoots, through harvesting, right to the bottling of the final products. While agave prices per kilogram are lower than sugar prices at present, the cost to harvest and process the agave to get the fermentable sugars is still higher than the cost of cane sugar, hence the continued prevalence of mixto tequilas. It's about a seven-to-one relationship between the weight of the agave and the volume of the tequila produced. A single agave head, weighing 21 kg, will produce roughly 3 litres of tequila, after all the steps. At about 7 kgs per liter, a 45 kg agave will make 5 litres. Today most ripe agave heads average 50-60 kg, which will eventually make 7.1 to 8.5 liters of tequila. Of course, it isn't that simple an equation: to get from raw agave to tequila there are many steps to take, each one essential to the final product, and a lot of water is needed to make that tequila, too. And it is in how each producer takes those steps and treats the process that the differences in tequilas is manifest. And the condition of the agave, its sugar volume, the type of yeasts and the use of chemical nutrients or accelerators also affect the yield. Basically the seven-step process, as explained on each page is: Harvest Cook Shred Ferment Distill Age (reposado and añejo types) Bottle

Once all tequila had to be made by law only in Jalisco state. Although that has been changed for more than 20 years, only two distilleries are currently in business outside Jalisco. The owners of La Gonzaleña - makers of Chinaco - fought a long battle to get the laws changed to permit tequila to be made outside Jalisco. They won their fight only in 1977, and now operate the sole distillery in the northeast state of Tamaulipas. The other distillery outside Jalisco is Tequilera Corralejo, which opened in 1996 in the city of Penjamo, in Jalisco's neighbouring state of Guanajuato. This distillery is named after an earlier distillery opened in the state in 1755. Blue agave for tequila use may also be grown in the states of Nayarit, Guanajuato and Michoacan. Each stage in the process has its own page here, starting with the agave itself and working all the way to the final product in the bottle. There are fewer distilleries than there are tequila companies. As a result, many distillers lease out their premises and equipment to other companies. This allows smaller producers to make product without the significant capital outlay required for the fabrica (factory). In most cases, the third party takes over the plant for the leased period, bringing in its own engineers, blenders, and workers. However, sometimes the workers are part of the deal. Most of the third parties also bring in their own agave, too, but some may buy their agave from the leasing plant, or from local farmers. Making a tequila in leased premises does not mean the tequila is in any way inferior. Many premium tequilas are produced this way. You can find out where a tequila is made by checking the producer's NOM registration against an up-to-date list of NOM assignments. Sometimes the leasing companies change factories. Porfidio, for example, was made in El Viejito, Tres Alegres Compadres, Regional, J. R. Reyes and even Arette. Apparently Porfidio is an 'agave spirit' now, no longer a tequila - see my piece on agave spirits. In 2006, the total production of tequila was 228,226,209 litres, of which 77,745,302 were 100% agave, or about 34%. In the first five months of 2007, production of 100% agave tequilas represented more than 46% of the total production. So the trend is clearly towards 100% agave tequilas and away from mixtos. The four largest tequila makers - Cuervo, Sauza, Herradura and Cazadores - account for more than 50% of the total market. Approximately 45% of all tequila is produced around the town itself, 12% around Amatitan 10% around Arandas and 8% around Tototlan. Sources 4 Copas - first organic tequila Back to top