Sin Gusano

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ticuchi capon - ixcatlán

Batch: AAA-02

Producer: Amando Alvarado Alvarez

Agave: Ticuchi (A. Nussaviorum)

Community: Santa Maria Ixcatlán, Northern Cañada, Oaxaca

Distillation style: Clay pots, double pass

Special notes: Rawhide fermentation

ABV: 48.4%

Batch size: 39 litres

Distillation: March 2020

Release date: April 2022

Profile notes: Straight-up candy floss, but with a depth that can only come from this ancestral process.

Distilling through the night by candle light and head torch in Ixcatlán

In the north of the Cañada region of Oaxaca, not far from the border with Puebla, sits the tiny community (less than 700 people) of Santa Maria Ixcatlán. It’s here that Amando Alvarado Alvarez began distilling at a very young age.

Now in his early 30’s Amando has taken charge of the family palenque, become a champion of the heritage and traditions of the region he’s from, and launched the palenque’s own international brand, Ixcateco.

Wild agave Potatorum as far as the eye can see

Producers in this region are fundamentally working with maguey Papalome (A.Potatorum), which grows abundantly in the surrounding countryside. However the batch we have here is made from a relatively recently classified cousin of the Potatorum, Agave Nussaviorum, locally known in Ixcatlán as ‘Ticuchi’.

In layman’s terms, Nussavorium is a smaller version of Potatorum. It’s most obvious physical difference is a quiote that only sprouts a fraction of the height. For a much deeper look at the taxonomy of Agave Nussaviorum and how it compares to the more widely known Agave Potatorum, check out this research paper. We also discuss some of the differences in the April 2022 MAS newsletter.

This extremely rare batch is made from 100% capon, wild Ticuchi.

Rawhide fermenter

Fermenter made from stretched cow skin

The production process in Ixcatlán begins with the agave being roasted in a small earthen pit. The cooked agave is then mashed entirely by hand with heavy wooden clubs.

Crucial to the Ixcatlán profile is the fermentation process, which happens in the rawhide fermenters pictured above. This particular mico-batch was the first to be fermented in a brand new skin.

First drops running off the still

A small rope directs the dripping mezcal into the clay collection pot

The fermented mash is then double passed through the clay pot stills. Amando has a unique style of adding some extra fermented mash to the second distillation, which cools the still and protects the clay pots. It inevitably also results in a final distillate that’s a small percentage ‘ordinario’ or first pass distillate.

 

Amando shaves the agave leaves really tight to the piña - something we believe leads to lower yields and a sweeter tasting distillate

 

Gracias Amando


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