About Siete Leguas Siete Décadas Blanco Tequila
Siete Leguas is celebrating 7 decades of making tequila and you just know this is going to be something special. For their 70th anniversary, they released exactly 70,000 bottles of Siete Decadas Blanco, one of the best Tequilas on the market. This Spirit is made exclusively from Agave Criollo, a smaller and more concentrated subvariety of blue weber, that is grown in the wild, therefore producing much richer piña, and collected on the peak of its maturity. After a 3-day cook in the small stone ovens, this agave is then crushed with a large stone wheel. The orchards surrounding Casa Siete Leguas provide ambient yeast that is typical for all Siete Leguas Tequilas. An instant collector’s item, this premium Tequila is to be marveled at and drank most carefully, appreciating each drop of this full, rich, decadent drink.
Don’t deprive yourself of this spectacular Tequila and grab your bottle today!
About Tequila Siete Leguas
As the Mexican Revolutionary War began in 1910, José Doroteo Arango Arámbula — commonly referred to as Pancho Villa — joined the pro-democracy forces of Francisco Madero, and eventually rose through the ranks to become one of the country’s most prominent generals. Between 1910 and 1914, Villa fought in nine major skirmishes, all of them successful. He was a masterful tactician — the strategies Villa leveraged during the war were studied by the United States Army — and his image was eventually immortalized with that of his favorite horse, 7 Leguas (Seven Leagues).
Today, nearly a century after his death in 1923, Don Ignacio Gonzales Vargas pays tribute to the Mexican hero with Tequila 7 Leguas. Vargas’s estate, which is situated in the Jalisco region of Mexico, is home to a tiny farm that specializes in the growth and maturation of blue weber agave.
After the estate-grown agave have matured for nearly a decade, they are harvested by expert jimadors, who test each batch of agave in order to ensure that the sugar content of the piñas — the heart of the agave plant — is enough to produce a rich and flavorful tequila. Then, the piñas are slowly cooked in masonry ovens under the watchful eye of a stoker. The heat from the ovens softens the fibers of the piñas, and caramelizes their natural sugars. The cooked piñas are then crushed under the weight of a traditional stone wheel that is pulled by a mule, and the remaining agave juice is fermented in stainless steel fermentation tanks using a unique strain of yeast developed specifically for the distillation of tequila. Following fermentation, the agave wash is twice distilled through copper-pot stills.
About Tequila
Although tequila has developed a bad reputation, there’s more to the spirit than just shots on a Saturday night.
This traditional Mexican drink origins in the state of Jalisco when according to a local legend, lightning struck an agave cactus before the Nahua tribe drank its warm nectar. Behold, tequila.
Legally, tequila has to be made of 51% of Blue agave around the Jalisco region in Mexico. There are different types of tequila according to age – from the youngest representatives, blanco, reposado, and añejo, to the oldest extra añejo.
Check out our impressive selection of tequilas, find your new favorite in Top 10 tequila & mezcal, or explore our treasury of Rare & hard to find tequilas.















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