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Distiller FA 2020

Distiller magazine a publication of the American Distilling Institute, the Voice of Artisan Distilling; devoted to the craft spirits industry: vendors and distillers alike.

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fall 2020 | 75 Raicilla is a Mexican spirit, distilled like tequila and mezcal from the genus Agave. Essentially a Jalisciense mezcal, raicilla was granted a Denominación de Origen (DdO) in January 2019, the application of which has already engendered controversy. Originating in southwestern Jalisco, traditionally raicilleros created and sold their product without government regulation as allow- able DdO production within Jalisco had previ- ously been solely relegated to tequila. (As a side note, in 1999 the Cuervo family lost its exclusive right of use for the name raicilla, which it had held since the 19th century.) e most common agave species used to produce raicillas include angustifolia, maximiliana, inaequidens, valenci- ana, rhodacantha, silvestri and others, with the noted exception of azul — tequila's sole agave source. Most production occurs from December to May. Production areas and styles include:   ¡ La Costa — northern and more sub-trop- ical, rising from the sea upland with fruity and smoky characteristics   ¡ Sierra — possessing the greatest number of distillers, often offering more herba- ceous and complex characteristics   ¡ Southern — retains a longer tradition, possesses the largest diversity of agave varieties and technical styles My guide through raicilla-land was Xavier Villegran, owner of Balam brand. Villegran works mainly as a negotiant, sourcing what he thinks best from a variety of sources bottling a variety of categories and styles so as to create a definable brand. "Before my Oaxacan wife mar- ried me, I'd visit her in Tehuana, learning and falling in love with the magic of her culture and its native mezcal as I did the woman." Balam is founded upon sourcing a wide range of small production, wildcrafted Mexican spirits. For two centuries, the Contreras clan has dis- tilled tequila at their Valle de Juarez home in the Sierras de Tigre, also Balam's name of this bottling, whereas their more ancestral raicilla is Altamina's Ramon "Monkey" Morales

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