Siembra Valles Ancestral Blanco 51.2% 750ml Nom 1123 | Additive Free | Distilled-3-2022; Bottled 12-2022;
Description: | siembra valles ancestral What did the first tequilas taste like? This most special production is made with the most ancient, painstaking methods common to early distillers, and is more akin to traditional mezcal than present-day tequila. Siembras founder, David Suro Piera, pays tribute to his own ancestry with the Siembra Valles Ancestral label, which proudly features the Piera family coat of arms in red. Production Process is paramount We embrace traditional methods and reject additives and shortcuts. We hope you enjoy the result Roasting Earthen Pit Ancestral practice is to fire wooden coals at the base of a pit, cover them with agave fibers, pile on raw agave, cover with leaves and fabric, and then bury the entire mound. After five or so days, when the trapped heat has roasted the agave, its all dug up and the agaves are macerated and fermented. Extraction Hand Maceration w. Wood Mallets Ancestral is the only tequila in several hundred years to be hand macerated. Tequileros bash the roasted agave with large wooden mallets for hours at a time until the sweet juices are extracted. Oak mallets impart a unique woody flavor, and no agave flavor is lost to machinery. Fermentation Brick Wood Natural 70% of the juice is ambient-yeast fermented in an oak tank with bagasse. 30% is ambient-yeast, bagasse-fermented in brick tanks. Using no added yeast or inducement ensures that this tequila has no other flavors than its environment would have allowed thousands of years ago. Distillation Stainless w. Copper Serpentine Filipino-Style Pine Still The first distillation in copper and steel separates out more toxic alcohols. The second distillation, in a pine wood Filipino-style still, is focused on flavor adjustments and Abv. The wood imparts a touch of flavor, and alcohol is adjusted to above 50%. Cultivation The first several years of your spiritss life. Flavors and character develop for years in the fields. Expert jimadores sow and tend agave until its mature and then deftly harvest for a traditional production. Siembra means sowing. 100% Agave Tequilana Weber Azul Also called Blue Agave. Known for high sugar content, relatively fast maturity, easy cloning, and beautiful blueish spikes. Due to restrictive legislation, this is the only agave allowed in tequila production. Estate Grown The agave for this expression was grown on land owned by the producer. This eliminates the need for coyotes, who are often contracted to source harvested agave and are known to exploit jimadores and damage the agave market. Single Estate Every agave used in this expression was grown on the same plantation. This allows for greater expression of terroir, as the agaves from a single field will be more consistent. Theyll never be identical, though a slight variation in elevation or sun exposure across a field can have a great impact on flavor over several years. Registration # Traceability protects your glass from counterfeit tequila. Demand it. A grower must register agave within one year of planting to sell it to the tequila industry. The registry is meant to guarantee that the agave was grown in the Denomination of Origin, and tells us how much usable agave should be on the market, or will be in a few years. We print agave registration numbers to show consumers that its possible, and something they can and should demand. Planting and Harvest Were picky. Mature agave is central to traditional tequila production; years of maturation impart great depth of flavor. Some newer production methods can mask younger, lower-quality agave. Our agave-centric methods demand great raw material. Jima Type This refers to how close to the pia the jimadores chop the agaves spikes. A jima larga leaves more penca, or spike, than a jima normal, which in turn leaves more than jima rasurada, which leaves essentially none. Larga is common in diffuser tequilas, normal in traditional tequila production, and rasurada in ancestral mezcal. People Terroir is deeper than soil. From fields to distillery, everyone who interacts with our materials and spirits imparts their unique contribution the human aspects of terroir. Here are a couple names we think you should toast. Lead Jimador Jose Romero Agave harvesters, called jimadores, are the hardest working people in tequila. They generally work in teams of four, called cuadrillas, expertly harvesting 20 to 40 tons of agave per day by hand. They are paid about $3.70 Us per ton, which immediately sells for $1,400. Jose Romero proudly leads this cuadrilla, who are all blood related. Master Distiller Salvador Rosales Torres Salvador Rosales Torres is the patriarch and Master Distiller of the family-owned Destileria Cascahun. He oversees every aspect of production and operations, like his father before him. Why So Much Info? Production methods vary widely in tequila, and they impact sensitive ecosystems, the health of the industry and labor, and most certainly flavor. Informed consumers can seek out better tasting spirits that are better for the world. |
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Price: | $ 174.99 |
Price in original currency: | None |
Available from Hi-Time Wine Cellars
Address: |
250 Ogle Street Costa Mesa, CA 92627 United States |
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Telephone (toll-free): | 800-331-3005 |
Telephone (regular): | 949-650-8463 |
Fax: | 949-631-6863 |
First added to 1000 Corks on April 10, 2024.