Full Review

ArteNOM

ArteNOM
Selección De 1146 Añejo Tequila

Category: Añejo Tequila

Date Tasted:
Country: Mexico
Alcohol: 41.3%
92 Points
Gold Medal
Exceptional
$89

ArteNOM
Selección De 1146 Añejo Tequila

Category: Añejo Tequila

Date Tasted:
Country: Mexico
Alcohol: 41.3%
Light amber color. Aromas and flavors of cinnamon and vanilla, chocolate cherry cheesecake, candied basil, and licorice with a round, lively, bone-dry medium-to-full body and a warming, complex, medium-long finish conveying notes of cherry, walnut, and pecan pie, old leather books soaked in honey, finely aged tobacco, and cherry barbecue pork belly. Decadent and old but absolutely delicious barrels; this is for lovers of well aged spirits.

Tasting Info

Spirits Glass Style: Spicy & Complex
Aroma Aroma: cinnamon and vanilla, chocolate cherry cheesecake, candied basil, and licorice
Taste Flavor: Same as aromas with notes of cherry, walnut, and pecan pie, old leather books soaked in honey, finely aged tobacco, and cherry barbecue pork belly
Smoothness Smoothness: Warming
Finish Finish: Long
Enjoy Enjoy: neat and on the rocks
Bottom Line Bottom Line: Decadent and old but absolutely delicious barrels; this is for lovers of well aged spirits.

The Importer

Haas Brothers

The Importer
1808 Wedemeyer St. #160
San Francisco, CA 94129
USA
1 415-282-8585

Anejo Tequila

Spirits Glass Copita Amber.jpg
Serve in a Copita
Añejo ("old") Tequila is aged in wooden barrels (usually old Bourbon barrels) for a minimum of 12 months. The best-quality añejos are aged 18 months to three years Beyond three years they can be called extra añejo.

Aging takes place in barrels formerly used to mature bourbon and rarely Cognac. Those aged in the latter vessels have more of a mellow edge, with aromas ranging from vanilla to tobacco, while those aged in former bourbon barrels often have notes of dill and coconut from the American oak. Añejo tequilas should be sipped neat, after dinner in a copita or snifter and perhaps enjoyed with a cigar.