Full Review

Don Amado

Don Amado
Largo Mezcal

Category: Blanco Mezcal

Date Tasted:
Country: Mexico
Alcohol: 46%
Certified Organic
93 Points
Gold Medal
Exceptional
$94

Don Amado
Largo Mezcal

Category: Blanco Mezcal

Date Tasted:
Country: Mexico
Alcohol: 46%
Clear color. Aromas and flavors of grilled green apple slices, lemon verbena, peppered leather, and dried lemon grass with a velvety, bright, dry medium body and an involved, medium-length finish that shows notes of lemon pepper, marzipan, savory, and peppered sesame candies. Smoky green fruits with an earthy, leathery, and nutty quality offering something captivating that just continues to bring you back for another sip.

Tasting Info

Spirits Glass Style: Spicy, Herbal & Complex
Aroma Aroma: grilled green apple slices, lemon verbena, peppered leather, and dried lemon grass
Taste Flavor: Same as aromas with notes of lemon pepper, marzipan, savory, and peppered sesame candies
Smoothness Smoothness:
Finish Finish: Normal
Enjoy Enjoy: neat and on the rocks
Bottom Line Bottom Line: Smoky green fruits with an earthy, leathery, and nutty quality offering something captivating that just continues to bring you back for another sip.

The Importer

Haas Brothers

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

Blanco Mezcal

Spirits Glass Copita Clear.jpg
Serve in a Copita
Blanco mezcal is a spirit from Mexico that can be made from as many as 18 different types of the agave plant, some cultivated and some wild. Most are produced in the Mexican state of Oaxaca. A blanco mezcal is distilled in a copper still (sometimes double distilled) and is not aged in oak, thus preserving a clear appearance.

Mezcal is often confused with tequila, as both are made from agave. But while tequila must be made from one specific blue agave, mezcal can be produced from eighteen different types of agave (maguey). There are two types of mezcal, those made exclusively from maguey and those made from at least 80% maguey mixed with other ingredients. Mezcal has similar aging terms as tequila, such as reposado and añejo, but generally mezcal is more of an artisanal product, so examples of mezcal vary more than tequila.

Most are double-distilled, while some are triple-distilled and then aged for several years in oak barrels. Flavors range from smoked herbs and pepper to tobacco and charred fruits. Serve these on their own, in an adventuresome cocktail, or with a cigar.