Tears Of Llorona–Tequila’s Higher Octave

“Don’t only practice your art, but force your way into its secrets, for it and knowledge can raise men to the divine.”–Ludwig van Beethoven

Germán González lingers over Tears of Llorona tequila.
Germán González lingers over Tears of Llorona tequila.

In music, an octave is the difference in sound between the first and eighth note on a musical scale.

In astrology, the planets Uranus, Neptune and Pluto are commonly considered the higher octaves of Mercury, Venus, and Mars, which are closer to the sun.

After savoring Tears of Llorona, the word octave comes to mind–something eight times greater than its tequila origin.

[Tweet “Savoring Tears of Llorona, “octave” comes to mind– 8x greater than its tequila origin. @TearsOfLlorona“]

Barrel Blends

In this snippet, Germán González, distiller of T1 Tequila Uno and Tears of Llorana, explains the secret barrel blends that result in this masterpiece.

[Tweet “Tears of Llorona Tequila: spectacular juice made better with barrel blending. @TearsOfLlorona“]

Tears of Llorona served in Riedel stemware.
Tears of Llorona served in Riedel stemware.

The Allure of Scotch

Here, Germán reveals the secret of a legendary Mexican rum and ultimately, the confirmation of why he favors using scotch whisky barrels for Tears of Llorona.

Why The Name?

In the following excerpt, Germán describes why he named his finest expression of tequila, Tears of Llorana.

[Tweet “Why the name Tears of Llorana? We cried tears of joy when we tasted it. @TearsOfLlorona“]

Swirling the magic of Tears of Llorona.
Swirling the magic of Tears of Llorona.

The Higher Things

 

In this final cut, Germán González discusses the real reason he creates such fine tequilas, reaffirms the lessons he has learned in life, and imparts his belief in higher ideals.  In the process, we learn what really makes him tick.

[Tweet “Learn what makes Master #Tequila Distiller, Germán González, tick. @TearsOfLlorona“]

Flavor Notes

Tears of Llorona serving suggestions.
Tears of Llorona serving suggestions.

How do you describe Tears of Llorona?  How do you depict what you have no benchmark for?  How do you relate something that is at once incomparable and incomprehensible, yet, strangely familiar, like déjà vu?

Perhaps the closest touchstone is given when deconstructing or reverse engineering Tears of Llorona.

For this first batch, Tears of Llorona is barreled in used sherry, scotch whisky and brandy barrels, achieving a spirit that does not betray its agave and tequila roots.

Instead, cradling the agave notes is a heady spiciness that continues to whisper to your senses the longer you swirl it in your glass.

Notes of bitter chocolate, sherry, leather, tobacco and coffee, along with hints of scotch and memories of the finest cognac or brandy culminate in a finish that resembles “a warm scarf on a cold day.”

[Tweet “Tears of Llorona Tequila: A warm scarf on a cold day. @TearsOfLlorona”]

While other extra añejos attempt to masquerade as something remotely similar to (or anything but) tequila, it is evident that Germán González has created Tears of Llorona to be Tequila’s higher octave.

Deliberately distilled to be lingered over, this gem is, as its website states, “an opus.”  A symphony composed and conducted by a true Master.

[Tweet “Tears of Llorona Tequila: A symphony composed & conducted by a true Master. @TearsOfLlorona”]

A symphony that can raise you–and your senses–to the divine.

Read the full story of Germán González and T1 Tequila Uno here.

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Learn all about tequila from field to glass and then get paid to share your love of agave spirits with others! Buy Them Both Now!

Tragedy Strikes Arta Tequila on National Tequila Day!

The luckiest day of the year, some would say, but not so for Tequila Aficionado.

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[Tweet “On July 24th, the FedEx man delivered a box of doom to our door.”]

On July 24th, the FedEx man delivered a box of doom to our door. Let’s start at the beginning… Arta Tequila will soon be launching a Limited Reserve, Triple barreled, Extra Anejo:

“Meticulously aged for five years (three years in American white oak, then split between French Cognac and Spanish Sherry barrels for another two years, and ultimately reunited) this limited reserve vintage (only four batches, 1,000 Bottles produced) has pushed tequila distillation and aging to an art form.”

ARTA_BOTTLE_ExtraAnejo, arta, tequila, extra aged, limited edition, extra anejo,  triple barreled, cognac, sherry, oak, arta tequila, tequila aficionado

The combination of chemistry and art involved in aging a great extra anejo sometimes verges on the magical.  When Arta so kindly approached us with the prospect of a sample, you can guess our mouths were watering in anticipation. As if on cue, the package arrived on National Tequila Day.

arta, tequila, extra aged, limited edition, extra anejo,  triple barreled, cognac, sherry, oak, arta tequila, tequila aficionado

 

[Tweet “A Pandora’s Box of heartbreak arrives at Tequila Aficionado”]

That’s when tragedy struck. Mike Morales did the honors of opening the FedEx box.  Inside was a lovely light wooden crate. Little did we know it was a Pandora’s Box of heartbreak. Following is my letter of thanks to the wonderful people at Ground Floor Media who handle the promotion of Arta Tequila:

Thank you so much for sending the beautiful gift box with charred barrel coaster, etched glass snifter, branded metal flask, extra dark chocolate, and what smells and feels like a superb cigar.  The thought given to pairing this Arta Extra Anejo properly, the generosity of the gifts included, and the workmanship in creating a lovely gift crate have not gone unnoticed. 

But I am near tears at the tragedy that lies before me:  Broken glass, chocolate that has been melted and matted with straw, and a flask that raises too many questions about the indignities that may have befallen the painstakingly crafted spirit within. 

The heartbreaker here is the fact that we can’t possibly review what must certainly be a delightful spirit.  The liquid inside the flask has been heated and cooled innumerable times on its journey from office to aircraft, to warehouse, to truck and on and on.  We have no way of knowing whether the flask was cleaned prior to filling or even who filled it where. 

We can only assume that the spirit’s flavor has been compromised in such packaging and couldn’t, without compromising our own integrity and the reputation of the Arta brand, consider reviewing it. 

Thank you so much for all your efforts.  We’re so sorry we can’t provide a review for what reads like an amazing product.

We understand the expense involved in providing the gifts and accessories you have, so please know that we do this for the love of the agave spirit, not for the schwag. 

If you are ever disposed to send us sealed glass samples of this product, please don’t hesitate to do so.  We at Tequila Aficionado would love to taste what your master distiller has so lovingly created. 

Very Sincerely Yours, 

Lisa Pietsch,

C.O.O. Tequila Aficionado Media

arta, tequila, extra aged, limited edition, extra anejo,  triple barreled, cognac, sherry, oak, arta tequila, tequila aficionado

 

Allow me to explain, dear readers, the depth of the tragedy here:

Mike and I always pair tequilas with foods, cigars, and chocolates.

If you’ve seen any of our Tequila Test Kitchen articles, you understand that I love mixing tequilas into recipes to use for special pairings.  I have collections of pinboards on Pinterest that include hundreds of recipes I’m dying to tweak with just the right tequila.

Mike loves a good cigar and I enjoy shopping for them.  The feel of a good roll, the scent of lovingly grown tobaccos, mixed and rolled by experienced artisans are all delights for me.

And fine chocolates, the darker the better, are truly gifts from the gods.

For Arta to include a cigar and dark chocolate with their sample of Extra Anejo was sheer genius.

Did I mention we have an ever growing collection of well-used and much-loved snifters?

Arta thought of nearly everything in this amazing presentation, even including a coaster made of the barrel itself!

I did say “nearly”.

The flask.  The beautiful, and likely costly, flask.  The metal flask.  *Oh, the humanity!*

 

Ground Floor Media was quick to reply:

Lisa ~

We so appreciate your kind and gracious note below, and we feel terrible that the chocolate melted and the glass broke.

Talk about a perfect storm! 

In our excitement to provide you with an advance taste of our Extra Anejo, we neglected to explain the flask. The Arta Extra Anejo in the flask is from the company’s president’s and vice president’s private reserve, and they hand-filled them into the cleaned flasks. Unfortunately, we won’t have sealed product available until mid-September, which is why we provided this sample to you in the flask.

We have you at the top of our list to receive a sealed glass sample of Extra Anejo as soon as it’s available, and we hope that you will still consider Extra Anejo for review at that time. 

Best wishes,

Ramonna

 

[Tweet “Tequila, chocolate, FedEx, intense Texas heat: The Perfect Storm!”]

Of course we’re going to taste the nectar they included in the flask, but we can’t know how the heat and metal storage might have changed it until a bottle arrives for comparison. We’ll be sending little prayers on puffs of cigar smoke to Mayahuel in hopes that this estate-grown, pesticide-free, uniquely aged extra anejo tastes every bit as delightful as the tasting notes say:

Aromas of toasted seeds, roasted cocoa, coffee and almonds with wild acorns, intense vanilla and oak developing into jasmine and intense cinnamon greet a taster’s first sip in the glass.  The sweet, silky, rich Arta ultra–‐aged taste confirms roasted seeds with its very long mouth finish.

We’ll keep you posted…

 

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Learn all about tequila from field to glass and then get paid to share your love of agave spirits with others! Buy Them Both Now!