Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Tequila is more than: salt, shot, lime

A wide variety of choices offer many tastes

- By M. Carrie Allan Allan is a Hyattsvill­e, Md., writer and editor.

There’s something about tequila that activates the revelry gland, whatever part of the American brain it is that responds to a bottle of Cuervo by bawling “PAAAAARRRT­Y!”

No one bawls “PAAAAARRRT­Y!” when they see a bottle of Glenlivet.

Is it some dormant memory of Cancun, Mexico, vacations past? Did we all come of age in a Texas honky-tonk, where swallowing the worm at the bottom of a bottle was a means to prove we had hair on our chests?

Me, I don’t want hair on my chest. I want to have a good cocktail. I want to sip good spirits. And if you’re offering me a drink that requires me to first salt my palate, knock back a shot with my eyes closed, then suck on a lime to get rid of the taste . . . well, partner, sign me up for a hard pass.

I’ll go drink tequila somewhere they know better.

Tequila, opined a travel writer for The New York Times, “has come a long way in the last 20 years. It is now old hat to drink it ‘neat’ in the old manner — touching the tongue to a pinch of salt and then sucking in the juice from a sliced lemon as you grimace and gulp down the tequila.” He wrote that in 1968. I guess some “old hats” get stuck on heads forever.

I’d long assumed springbrea­k culture had helped perpetuate the shot-slamming approach to tequila and the lingering bias against it. Many a terrible cheap tequila is consumed in Cancun — or as I call it, Fort Lauderdale South — and consumed in great, sick-making quantities.

But some of the attitude is homegrown, says David Suro, an importer, restaurate­ur and president of Siembra Azul tequila. During Mexico’s golden age of cinema, he says, movies regularly depicted stars shooting tequila, wincing and reaching for lime and salt. In fact, Suro says, for years Mexican elites didn’t even drink tequila; they looked to European spirits and French wines, dismissing their native spirits as the stuff of peasants. It took

the investment and approval of wealthy foreigners to make many Mexicans give agave spirits a deeper look; these days, interest is surging and drinking mezcal is a point of national pride.

Adequately explaining the difference between tequila and mezcal is tricky. Tequila is a kind of mezcal, one that can be made only in the Mexican state of Jalisco and a few other places; it must use only agave tequilana, not other agave species. Mezcal can be made across a wider geographic­al range of Mexico, from a range of agave species. The difference­s in ingredient­s, terroir and production processes result in a bit of a headscratc­her: The mezcal sold as “tequila” doesn’t usually taste like the mezcal sold as “mezcal,” and “mezcals” can taste very different from one another.

Agave spirits break drinkers into camps. There are the haters, who once drank too much tequila and decided the experience was representa­tive and that all tequila sucks.

There are drinkers who have discovered “premium” tequilas. “Premium” is a confusing term, used by the industry to reference more expensive bottles, but often understood by drinkers to mean “better.” Many premium tequilas are beautifull­y bottled, celebrity-endorsed and brag of their multiple distillati­ons and resulting smoothness.

And then there are agave nerds. While some great, traditiona­lly made brands still exist, many of the bestseller­s have had their flavors smoothed by industrial

processes, emerging as what some now scornfully refer to as “aga-vodkas.”

Such “premium” tequilas alienate many in this camp, who gravitate instead to mezcals. Made by small producers working much as they would have 100 years ago, most mezcals are still hyperlocal, beloved by people who value spirits as expression­s of the places they came from. While the use of roasted agave makes a smoky taste a common note in the spirit, there are mezcals with flavors as varied as pine, cheese, flowers and leather. That variety and complexity is what enthusiast­s enjoy.

In Mexico, beyond limes and salt and margaritas, tequila is often served with sangrita (”little blood”), a nonalcohol­ic chaser of citrus and chile that’s sometimes part of a “bandera” — shots of lime, blanco tequila and sangrita, three colors echoing the Mexican flag. There are many recipes and commercial mixes — some have Worcesters­hire sauce, many have tomato juice; more traditiona­l versions lean toward citrus and pomegranat­e. Another occasional partner is verdita (”little green”), a mix of cilantro, pineapple, jalapeño and mint, which sometimes stands in for the lime juice shot in the bandera.

How should you drink these spirits? It really depends what you want to get from them. Hopefully the answer isn’t “drunk.”

If you’re aiming to taste the spirit, neat is the way to go, says Suro, the restaurate­ur and tequila executive. “Friends of mine in Mexico, they argue that the traditiona­l way to drink tequila is in a caballito” — a taller, slender shot glass — “with a lime and with salt. And I say, but why? What’s the reason to put it in a glass where it has absolutely no room to breathe? You pretty much eliminate all the potential that a good tequila has to offer to us, not just for taste but the aromatic characteri­stics.” (The jicara and copita used to serve mezcal, by comparison, have wider mouths that allow more aromas to circulate.)

And the orange slices and sal de gusano that accompany mezcal? He likes them as a delicious snack, but for him, they have nothing to do with tasting the spirit. “When I have a mezcal that came from an agave that took nearly 20 years to develop, and it has hundreds of . . . elements for me to discover, I really don’t need the distractio­n of lime or orange or gusano salt,” he says.

With lime and salt, with sangrita, with anything you pair with a good spirit, there’s a fine line between illuminati­ng the spirit’s

flavors and changing them. Some people argue that lime and salt are flavor enhancers; others think they’re there specifical­ly to drown out the burn of bad tequila. Sal de gusano tastes good with many mezcals, but it can also have a palate-punching heat.

Happily, you don’t have to commit to one way of drinking these spirits. Have a bright, summery Paloma. Try a margarita made with mezcal (Espita’s is delicious). Try one of those ultra-premium tequilas next to a small-batch mezcal, served neat so that you pick up their subtleties. Try a modern cocktail such as the Oaxaca Old-Fashioned, which unites tequila and mezcal in a truly beautiful drink.

Heck, you can even do the salt-shot-lime thing if you must. Just not with my good bottles.

 ??  ?? In Mexico, tequila is served with sangrita, a nonalcohol­ic chaser of citrus and chile.
In Mexico, tequila is served with sangrita, a nonalcohol­ic chaser of citrus and chile.

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