Cocktail con Tequila
Drink vivaci e agrumati che valorizzano i distillati di agave
Tequila cocktails have undergone a seismic shift in reputation — from spring-break shots with training-wheel salt and lime to a category that serious cocktail bars now build entire menus around. The Margarita, in its original form of tequila, Cointreau, and fresh lime, is one of the world's most ordered cocktails for good reason: it's a perfectly tuned balance of strong, sweet, sour, and salty. The Paloma, Mexico's actual most popular tequila drink, replaces lime with grapefruit soda for something more sessionable and refreshing. Both depend on quality tequila made from 100% blue weber agave — check the label, because anything labeled "mixto" cuts the agave with other sugars and delivers a noticeably harsher result. Blanco tequila's peppery agave character shines in citrus-forward shaken drinks. Reposado, with a few months of barrel aging, adds vanilla and oak that work beautifully in stirred or spirit-forward recipes. Añejo and extra añejo sip more like aged cognac and deserve the same treatment — Old Fashioned riffs and slow-poured Manhattans. This collection spans the full spectrum from beach-ready highballs to contemplative evening pours.
Cocktail con Tequila Recipes
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Frequently Asked Questions
- What's the difference between blanco, reposado, and añejo tequila?
- Blanco (silver) is unaged or rested less than two months — it's the purest expression of cooked agave with peppery, citrus, and herbal notes. It's the standard for Margaritas and Palomas. Reposado rests 2-12 months in oak, gaining light vanilla and caramel while retaining agave character — excellent in a Tequila Old Fashioned. Añejo ages 1-3 years in oak and develops deep butterscotch, dried fruit, and wood notes better suited to sipping or spirit-forward cocktails. Extra añejo (3+ years) sips like fine cognac.
- Why does my homemade Margarita taste nothing like a restaurant's?
- The two most common culprits are sour mix and cheap tequila. Bottled sour mix is artificial-tasting neon green liquid that bears no resemblance to fresh citrus. Use freshly squeezed lime juice — nothing else. Second, use 100% agave tequila; mixto brands with added sugar produce headache-inducing harshness. The classic ratio is 2 oz tequila, 1 oz Cointreau (not triple sec), and 1 oz fresh lime juice, shaken hard with ice. A half-salt rim on a rocks glass finishes it properly.
- What is the difference between tequila and mezcal?
- All tequila is mezcal, but not all mezcal is tequila. Tequila must be made from blue weber agave in specific Mexican regions (primarily Jalisco). Mezcal can be made from over 30 agave varieties across nine states, and the agave hearts (piñas) are traditionally roasted in underground pits, giving mezcal its signature smoky character. Tequila's agave is typically steamed in ovens, producing a cleaner, sweeter flavor. In cocktails, mezcal brings a campfire smokiness that works like peated scotch — bold, distinctive, and best in recipes designed around that flavor.