Cocktail: Tequila vs. Mezcal — Agave, Production, and Flavor Chemistry
Tequila uses only Blue Weber agave cooked in autoclaves or hornos; mezcal uses 40+ agave species cooked in underground roasting pits producing pyrazines at 50–200 mg/L — the smoky character absent from tequila. Both distill at ≤55% ABV.
| Measure | Value | Unit | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tequila: permitted agave species | 1 | species (Blue Weber agave only) | Agave tequilana Weber, var. azul; no other species permitted |
| Mezcal: permitted agave species | 40+ | species | Espadín most common (80% of production); also tobalá, madre cuixe, arroqueño, tepextate |
| Agave piña sugar content (ripe) | 25–30 | °Brix | Agave takes 8–25 years to mature; sugar accumulates during final 1–2 years |
| Tequila distillation maximum | 55 | % ABV | NOM-006 maximum; most tequila distilled at 50–55% ABV before dilution |
| Mezcal distillation maximum | 55 | % ABV | NOM-070; clay pot stills (ollas de barro) and copper alembics common |
| Pyrazines (smoke) in mezcal | 50–200 | mg/L | From underground roasting pit (palenque); Maillard reaction on agave sugars |
| Tequila: Jalisco DO region | Jalisco + 4 states | Full tequila DO: Jalisco, Nayarit, Guanajuato, Michoacán, Tamaulipas | |
| Mezcal DO regions | 9 | Mexican states | Oaxaca (>85% production), Guerrero, San Luis Potosí, Durango, Zacatecas, and others |
Tequila and mezcal are the two major denominación de origen (DO) agave spirits of Mexico, connected by their shared raw material (agave) but separated by history, permitted agave species, geography, production method, and flavor profile. Both are protected designations under Mexican law and international trade agreements, with regulations enforced by separate regulatory councils.
Tequila vs. Mezcal: Production Comparison
| Attribute | Tequila | Mezcal |
|---|---|---|
| Permitted agave | Blue Weber agave only | 40+ species; espadín, tobalá, madre cuixe, etc. |
| Agave cooking | Autoclave (pressure cooker) or horno (brick oven) | Underground pit (palenque); wood-fueled |
| Fermentation | Stainless steel tanks with commercial yeast | Open-air wood vats; wild yeast common |
| Distillation | Copper or stainless pot stills | Clay pot (barro) or copper alembic |
| Pyrazine formation | Minimal (no roasting) | High (50–200 mg/L; from pit roasting) |
| Distillation max | 55% ABV | 55% ABV |
| DO regions | 5 Mexican states | 9 Mexican states |
| Annual production | ~350M liters (2022) | ~13M liters (2022) |
| Price range | $20–$500+ | $40–$1,500+ |
| Primary cocktail | Margarita, Paloma | Mezcal Negroni, Oaxacan Old Fashioned |
The Pyrazine Chemistry of Mezcal Smoke
When agave piñas are roasted in underground pits with burning mesquite, oak, or copal wood, the Maillard reaction between agave sugars and amino acids at temperatures exceeding 150°C produces pyrazines — nitrogen-containing aromatic compounds responsible for roasted, smoky, earthy, and nutty notes. The concentration of total pyrazines in mezcal (50–200 mg/L) versus tequila (essentially absent) is the primary chemical explanation for the two spirits’ dramatically different flavor profiles.
Key pyrazines: 2,6-dimethylpyrazine (nutty, roasted), 2,3,5-trimethylpyrazine (earthy, smoky), 2-acetyl-3-methylpyrazine (popcorn, roasted). These compounds have detection thresholds in the 1–10 ppb range — they are highly potent flavor contributors even at trace concentrations.
Agave Maturation and Sugar Accumulation
A Blue Weber agave used for tequila takes 7–12 years to reach harvest maturity. The piña (heart of the agave, the cooked portion) reaches 25–30 Brix at harvest. For espadín mezcal agave, maturation takes 8–20 years; wild agave species like tobalá can take 12–25 years. This long maturation cycle makes agave a slow-renewable resource — current demand for premium mezcal is outpacing the replanting of wild agave in some regions.
Related Pages
Sources
- CRT (Consejo Regulador del Tequila) — Tequila Official Mexican Standard NOM-006-SCFI-2012
- COMERCAM — Mezcal Official Mexican Standard NOM-070-SCFI-2016
- Benn, S.M. & Peppard, T.L. (1996). Characterization of tequila flavor. J. Agric. Food Chem.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is mezcal just smoky tequila?
No — this is the most common mezcal misconception. Mezcal is the broader category; tequila is technically a type of mezcal (specifically, mezcal from blue agave in the tequila DO). 'Mezcal' refers to any agave spirit from the designated Mexican regions. Smokiness is characteristic of many mezcals (from underground pit roasting) but not all — some mezcals, especially those made from green agave steamed above ground, have minimal smoke. The key differences are agave species diversity and production tradition, not just smoke.
Why does tequila use only blue agave?
The original Denominación de Origen tequila regulations (1974) specified Blue Weber agave because it was the dominant commercial agave at the time and produces high sugar yields with distinctive flavor. Requiring a single species created a traceable, consistent quality baseline and protected the nascent tequila industry. The consequence: agave monoculture creates vulnerability to disease (a problem that has repeatedly threatened the industry) and locks producers out of experimenting with Mexico's 200+ agave species.
How do I identify aged tequila categories?
Blanco (plata/silver): unaged or ≤2 months in oak. Reposado: 2–12 months in oak (any size barrel). Añejo: 1–3 years in ≤600L barrels. Extra añejo: ≥3 years in ≤600L barrels. Cristalino: aged tequila (usually añejo or extra añejo) filtered through activated charcoal to remove color, leaving aged flavor without amber color. Mezcal has joven (unaged), reposado, añejo, and añejo, with different time requirements.
What is the flavor difference between highland and lowland tequila?
Highland (Los Altos) tequilas from Jalisco grow at 1,500–2,000m elevation in reddish iron-rich soil. The agaves mature more slowly, accumulate more sugars, and produce tequilas with floral, fruity, citrus-forward character and lighter body. Lowland (Valley of Tequila) tequilas grow at 1,100–1,200m in volcanic soils and produce earthier, more herbaceous, pepper-spiced tequilas with more pronounced agave character.