Aroma
Citrus (Lemon, Lime, Orange, Grapefruit)
8 bottles with this note
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Tequila Aroma Kit
Develop your palate with the canonical reference for citrus (lemon, lime, orange, grapefruit) and related notes.

Siembra Valles Blanco
Siembra Spirits
Siembra Valles is the tequila that bartenders drink after their shift — the one they recommend when you ask for something real. David Suro-Piñera is not just a brand owner; he is a tequila scholar and advocate who founded the Tequila Interchange Project to promote transparency in the industry.

Maestro Dobel Diamante
Proximo Spirits / Beckmann Family
Maestro Dobel Diamante didn’t just create a tequila—it created a category.

Cascahuin Tahona Blanco
Destilería Cascahuin (Grupo Cascahuin)
Tahona production is brutally inefficient — the volcanic stone wheel extracts less juice, takes longer, and demands more labour than a mechanical shredder. Cascahuin does it anyway because the result is a blanco with a weight and mineral complexity that industrial methods cannot replicate. This is tequila at its most expressive — unaged, unfiltered, unapologetic. Drink it neat with a slice of orange and understand why the Rosales family has kept this process unchanged for generations.

Código 1530 Rosa
Código 1530

El Tesoro Reposado
Camarena Family / Beam Suntory (El Tesoro, est. 1937)
El Tesoro is the tequila nerd’s tequila. The Camarena family’s obsession starts with the tahona — a two-ton volcanic stone wheel that slowly crushes roasted agave hearts, extracting sugars along with fibers that go into the fermentation tank, adding savory complexity that roller mills strip away. Then there’s the distillation: El Tesoro is one of the only tequilas distilled to proof, meaning no water is added after distillation. What comes out of the still is what goes in the barrel. The Reposado spends 9–11 months in ex-bourbon barrels — long enough to add vanilla and caramel, short enough to let the agave and tahona character remain front and center. This is tequila that tastes like the earth it came from.

Don Julio Reposado
Diageo (Don Julio, est. 1942)
Don Julio invented the luxury tequila category. Before Don Julio, tequila was a commodity — cheap, harsh, and destined for margarita mixes. Julio González changed the rules by treating agave like fine wine grapes: planting further apart for full maturity, slow-roasting in 72-hour brick oven cycles, and aging in fine oak. When his sons created a tequila to honor his 60th birthday in 1985, it became the first tequila marketed as a premium sipping spirit. The Reposado expression — eight months in American white oak — strikes the ideal balance: enough barrel time to add complexity without masking the highland agave character that made the brand famous.

Tapatio Reposado
Tequila Tapatio S.A. de C.V. (Camarena family, 5th generation)
Tapatio is the tequila that tequila makers drink. The Camarena family — the same lineage that gave us El Tesoro and G4 — runs one of the most traditional operations in Jalisco. Carlos Camarena, the current master distiller, slow-roasts his highland agave for 48 hours in brick ovens, ferments with wild airborne yeasts and natural well water, and keeps production deliberately small. The reposado rests just four months — enough to round the edges without masking the agave. This is tequila for purists, and at around $45 it’s one of the best-kept secrets in the category.

Fortaleza Reposado
Destilería La Fortaleza (Guillermo Erickson Sauza)
Fortaleza is tequila made the way it was meant to be made. While most modern producers use autoclaves and diffusers for speed and efficiency, Guillermo Sauza — great-great-grandson of Don Cenobio Sauza, the “Father of Tequila” — insists on the tahona, the brick oven, and the wooden fermentation tanks. The volcanic spring water that feeds the distillery carries minerals from deep within the stratovolcano, and you can taste the terroir in every sip. The reposado rests just long enough to gain warmth and vanilla from the barrel without losing the agave’s voice.