JIMA
Day 1
The jimador reads the plant like scripture. After years—sometimes decades—of patient growth, the agave signals its readiness. With a coa (a sharp, circular blade), the jimador strips away the pencas (leaves) to reveal the piña, the heart of the plant. Each cut is deliberate. Each plant is a life's work.
"We don't harvest the agave. The agave tells us when it's ready to become mezcal."
— Traditional Mezcalero Wisdom
HORNEADO
3-5 Days
A conical pit is dug into the earth. Volcanic rocks are heated until they glow red. The piñas are placed inside, covered with agave fibers and earth, and left to roast for days. This is where mezcal gets its smoke—not from wood, but from the earth itself. The sugars caramelize. The transformation begins.
"The earth oven is a womb. The agave enters raw and emerges reborn."
— Traditional Mezcalero Wisdom
MOLIENDA
1-2 Days
The roasted piñas are placed in a circular stone pit. A massive volcanic wheel—the tahona—is pulled by horse or mule in endless circles, crushing the fibers and releasing the sweet, smoky juice. Some palenques still use wooden mallets, pounding by hand. The rhythm is ancient. The work is sacred.
"The tahona doesn't just crush. It meditates. Each rotation is a prayer."
— Traditional Mezcalero Wisdom
FERMENTACIÓN
8-30 Days
The crushed agave—fibers and juice together—is placed in open wooden vats or hollowed tree trunks. Wild yeasts from the air begin their work. No commercial cultures. No temperature control. Just patience and trust. The liquid bubbles and churns, transforming sugar into alcohol. Each palenque's fermentation is unique, shaped by its microclimate.
"We don't control fermentation. We witness it. The yeasts know what to do."
— Traditional Mezcalero Wisdom
DESTILACIÓN
2-3 Days
For ancestral mezcal, clay pot stills are used—the same technology employed for centuries. The fermented mash is heated over an open fire. Vapor rises, condenses, and drips into collection vessels. The mezcalero tastes constantly, separating the heads, hearts, and tails by intuition. The heart—the corazón—is the spirit.
"Clay breathes. It gives the mezcal its final character. Copper is efficient. Clay is alive."
— Traditional Mezcalero Wisdom
REPOSO
Weeks to Months
The fresh mezcal rests in glass demijohns, allowing the volatile compounds to mellow and integrate. Unlike tequila, most mezcal is not aged in wood—the goal is to preserve the pure expression of the agave and the mezcalero's hand. Time softens the edges. The spirit finds its balance.
"Mezcal doesn't need oak to be complete. It needs only time and glass."
— Traditional Mezcalero Wisdom