Friday 9 January 2015

Trip to raicilla country


 

Esteban Morales at a taberna in the western Jalisco mountains. He is holding a bat used to extract the juice from the cooked agave. This is extremely rudimentary , slow and inefficient.
Under the blue plastic is the fermentation pit. In the background are the clay stills.
 
Linda standing by the oven where the agaves are cooked.
 
 
Condensers of clay catching the condensate into pots.
 
 
 
The fermentation pit with fibers and "mosto muerte", dead must ready to be put into the clay still.
 
 
Putting the fibers and must into the clay still . On the left hand background is the bagasse taken out from earlier distillations.
 
Placing the condensers back onto the just filled clay stills.
 
 
 
Rekindling the fire to start the next distillation. Between the fire and the condensers are clay stills
about the same size and shape as the condensers.
 
 
 
From right to left, Tomas Estes, the family making the raicilla and Esteban Morales who takes the raicilla to market. Raicilla is a regional type of agave spirit at about 47 %abv. Which is loaded with rich, deep flavors.
 
 
Esteban showing how the new clay condenser fits onto a new clay still.
 
 
Agaves used to make raicilla growing wild near the town of Mascota.
 
 
Agaves "semi-cultivated" for raicilla production. These are planted amongst other wild plants giving an more rich influence of "terroir".
 
From right to left- Ruben the raicilla producer, Esteban and Anselmo enjoying drinks from the makeshift bar with plastic bottles of cola, Squirt and Ruben's raicilla. What else does a thirsty man need?
 
 
 
 

Thursday 8 January 2015

Ocho's next Rancho (2015): La Latilla

Rancho "La Latilla" is 1 km. from the distillery, 'La Altena' where Ocho is made. It takes its name from an adjacent village of 27 inhabitants of the same name. The Rancho is surrounded by oak and cedar trees. Before being planted in agave the land was used to raise cattle and sheep.
Notice the beauty of the sky gracing the land at more than 2000 meters altitude.




Rancho la Latilla being harvested. Only the ripest agaves are taken, the others will wait a year or more before being harvested.



Baby agave plants growing around the base of the parent agave. These will be taken and replanted in new Ranchos.



Young plants taken from the parent plants to be replanted.


Carlos Camarena, master distiller, trying the sweet cooked agaves of Rancho La Latilla


Harvested agaves from Rancho La Latilla ready for the oven at the distillery La Altena.

"Mosto" being fermented from Rancho La Latilla agaves.
Notice the wooden fermenters, very old fashioned and unusual.

A medium to small still distilling "mosto" from Rancho La Latilla to make "ordinario".

A small, 400 liter, all copper still finishing the Rancho La Latilla tequila, sweet and smooth right out of the still.

Dinner with the team at the one and only Carnitas Jaime's in Arandas after a hard day taste comparing different Ranchos of Tequila Ocho.