1. Mezcal Production in Mexico: Between Tradition and Commercial Exploitation
- Author
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Melchor Arellano-Plaza, Jesús Bernardo Paez-Lerma, Nicolás Oscar Soto-Cruz, Manuel R. Kirchmayr, and Anne Gschaedler Mathis
- Subjects
mezcal ,agave ,artisanal production process ,sustainability ,alcoholic beverage ,Nutrition. Foods and food supply ,TX341-641 ,Food processing and manufacture ,TP368-456 - Abstract
Mezcal is a traditional iconic Mexican distilled beverage obtained from varied species of agaves. Regardless of the area of production, the process always consists of five stages: harvesting the agaves, cooking, crushing, fermentation, and distillation. It is produced in a large area of Mexican territory, a large part of which is protected by the Denomination of Origin mezcal (DOM). Over time, the word mezcal has evolved from a generic name to a more specific term used to describe the agave-distilled beverages produced in the territory protected by the DOM under the Mexican official standard NOM-070-SCFI-2016 which defined Mezcal as a “Mexican distilled alcoholic beverage, 100% from maguey or agave, obtained by distillation of fermented juices with spontaneous or cultivated microorganisms, extracted from mature heads of maguey or cooked agaves, harvested in the territory covered by the DOM.” In the last 10 years, official production has increased, from
- Published
- 2022
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