Monthly Archives: April 2012

How to be a Tequila Superstar

(Featured in HUSH Magazine 10/18/2012)

Let the countdown begin…

Vancouver is having a Tequila Expo!

This week, I was invited to a media tasting for a sneak preview. The invitation promised there would be an expert present to answer all of my Tequila-related questions.

Tequila-related questions I’ve had in the past include: “whose toupee did I just wake up wearing?” and “why am I digging up this grave?”

Meaning I love tequila, but know nothing about it.

Thankfully, I have Eric Lorenz in my corner. Eric is a Tequila Aficionado out of Michigan. The man has a mind like a Mexican leg-hold trap. Anything you want to know about agave spirits, this Sharp Shooter will spout off faster than your iPhone 4. Plus he looks a bit like the guitar player from Pantera.

Today, Eric is teaching me how to be a Tequila Superstar!

This is NOTHING compared to the lineup for the May 12 Expo.

The bottles in front of me this evening are Tavi Anejo, Cabo Wabo Reposado, Uno Mas Anejo, Herradura Anejo, and Tavi Silver.

Eager to get sipping, I pounce on the huge bowl of limes on the bar. Eric looks at me like he just saw my leaked nudes: shocked and disgusted, yet mildly amused.

To a Tequila connoisseur, limes are completely acceptable — if you’re drinking Tijuana sewer-rat pee.

“With a high end tequila, you want to actually TASTE it,” explains Eric.

Makes sense. Perhaps the limes are placed there as a trap? A way of sussing out the muchachos from the niños.

Eric pours me a sample of Herradura Anejo.

“So.” I ask him, swirling my glass and trying to look like Bruce Wayne, “How do you tell a good tequila?”

“A good Tequila is one you enjoy drinking. But if by ‘good’, you mean ‘won’t give you a headache’, then the easy answer is one with 100% agave. If it doesn’t say it right on the bottle, it definitely isn’t 100% agave.”

Most people think an agave is a cactus. Turns out this is a bigger myth than the Chupacabre. Agave is actually a species of Mexican lily!

Photoshop work (c) Samantha Stanway 2012

“Tequila is required to have a minimum of 51% agave,” continues Eric, “Cheap tequila with less then 100% agave are full of fillers and fermentable sugars. Remember: Sugar equals Hangover.”

There’s a reason the morning after Cuervo Gold aches like a drunk tank frotterizing.

“Gold rarely means Good,” Eric agrees. “The gold tinge comes from caramel colouring. They put it in the cheap stuff to make it LOOK like it’s been aged.”

From Left: Manuel Otero, Samantha Stanway, Ron Orr

From Left: Manuel Otero, Samantha Stanway, Ron Orr

“Also,” Eric goes on, “just like its not ‘Champagne’ unless it’s from France, a product is only ‘Tequila’ if it’s made in Mexico. Otherwise? It’s Mescal.” (also spelled Mezcal)

I ponder this a second.

“So. Tequila, Mezcal, Mescal…” I dribble a little bit of Tavi Silver on myself, “Cut to the chase: which is the one that gets you high?”

Eric pours a taster of his own. His eyes stay fixed on the glass.

“None of them. People confuse mescal with mescaline, the drug that Hunter S. Thompson used to do. Mescaline comes from peyote, which actually IS a cactus.”

“Does the Tequila worm get you high?”

For a second I fear he is about to strangle me with his ponytail.

“First of all, the worm is found in mescal, not actual Tequila. And usually Value-Priced mescal at that. It doesn’t get you high either. But honestly, if you’re hammered enough to eat a worm, you may as well be.”

I thank Eric and stumble out the door in search of pizza.

Now I’m really looking forward to the Tequila Expo. Best of all: I’m not totally clueless any more! Although these are just snippets of the bigger picture, having a bit of knowledge feels awesome.

No longer will I associate Tequila with sunburnt white folk on vacay and amateur filmmakers coaxing Girls to Go Wild. Like any other high-end product, Tequila is an art.

Now get on out there and appreciate it!


Snag a ticket to the Vancouver International Tequila Expo on May 12th here.

Have a Tequila-related question for Eric? Want to pester him for corroding the world’s moral fibre with liquor? Connect with Eric Lorenz here.

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Bottle Feature : The Big Take

Was lurking at a Tourism Vancouver Reception the other day. It was the 10th anniversary celebration of a local company called Tickets Tonight, plus they had snacks.

Apart from food pairings, I don’t drink much wine — unless it’s a bottle that blows my socks to Kansas. The old Gypsy lady I helped across the street that day must have been magic…   because I found one of those bottles.

Enter Misconduct Winery’s Richard da Silva. The guy is built like the doorman at a blind tiger and chases prowlers around his property with a backhoe for fun. Misconduct was one of several Okanagan wines poured at the event, and Richard turned me on to some certifiably primo hooch.

The Big Take – ’09 Vintage

Winery: Noir stylings and rakish attitudes abound. Okanagan insiders are buzzing about Misconduct throwing some pretty notorious shindigs this summer. Good thing I kept my trashy flapper costume from two halloweens ago.

Visual: When you’re underage, you pretty much have to put up with whatever you get from the irresponsible uncle/homeless person bootlegging for you. (Bacardi Breezers, Peach Schnapps, 7-dollar white blends with picture of a cat on the bottle…)

Because our liquor laws are so stern, many people don’t develop taste until very late in the game. Sure, these laws help keep the youth uncorrupted (until they turn 19, go nuts, and drink themselves into a rape-coma), but it also stalls the process of becoming a discerning drinker. Europeans know their poison — they’ve been boozing since childhood.

One reason BC Wine labels are so flashy could be to lure in clueless new wine drinkers. It does my soul good to know that maybe, some 19 year old (or bearded 18 year old if it’s a private store) could stumble upon this wine due to its striking label.

Varietal: The Big Take is a blend of 45% Merlot, 30% Cabernet Sauvignon and 25% Cabernet Franc.

Pairing: The winemaker (an avid hunter) suggests this wine be paired with deep-fried turkey, wild game like Elk, venison, or the stoolies who narced on your Speakeasy.

Nose: Smells like a Cadillac after a heist. Smoky and sexy. The smoke is largely due to FrancBarrel-aging for 12 months. (French & American Oak)

Tasting: The almost bacon-ish smoke barely comes through at all in the taste. Up front we have chocolate, blueberry, and cassis. Prohibition-style, the real party’s in the back with a slightly spicy finish of chocolate.

You’ll want to shimmy ’til your garters break… Even if you’re all man.

13.9% alcohol. The Big Take retails for 24 bucks a pop at government stores.

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