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Tequila

Casamigos Tequila

Casamigos Tequila emerged in 2013 from a collaboration between friends seeking a smooth, sipping tequila for personal enjoyment in Mexico. Founded by George Clooney, Rande Gerber, and Mike Meldman, the brand spent years refining recipes before commercial launch, prioritizing taste over marketing. The name translates to "house of friends," reflecting its origins as a private-label spirit shared among the founders before gaining wider distribution.

Produced in the Jalisco highlands at Productos Finos de Agave, Casamigos uses 100% Blue Weber agave grown at higher elevations, which typically produces sweeter, more complex flavor profiles. The brand offers expressions across blanco, reposado, and añejo categories, each following traditional production methods with proprietary variations in fermentation and aging. Diageo acquired the brand in 2017, expanding distribution while maintaining production standards at the original distillery.

Casamigos Tequila emerged in 2013 from a collaboration between friends seeking a smooth, sipping tequila for personal enjoyment in Mexico.

Read more about Casamigos Tequila

Casamigos Tequila emerged in 2013 from a collaboration between friends seeking a smooth, sipping tequila for personal enjoyment in Mexico. Founded by George Clooney, Rande Gerber, and Mike Meldman, the brand spent years refining recipes before commercial launch, prioritizing taste over marketing. The name translates to "house of friends," reflecting its origins as a private-label spirit shared among the founders before gaining wider distribution.

Produced in the Jalisco highlands at Productos Finos de Agave, Casamigos uses 100% Blue Weber agave grown at higher elevations, which typically produces sweeter, more complex flavor profiles. The brand offers expressions across blanco, reposado, and añejo categories, each following traditional production methods with proprietary variations in fermentation and aging. Diageo acquired the brand in 2017, expanding distribution while maintaining production standards at the original distillery.

20 products

Casamigos750 ml

Casamigos Añejo Tequila

$44.99
Casamigos375 ml

Casamigos Spicy Margarita FIFA 26

$13.99
Casamigos750 ml

Casamigos Mezcal

$66.99
Casamigos750 ml

Casamigos Blanco

$45.99
Casamigos750 ml

Casamigos Reposado Tequila

$45.99
Casamigos1.75 L

Casamigos Casamigos Reposado

$81.99
Casamigos750 ml

Casamigos Cristalino Reposado

$41.99
Casamigos750 ml

Casamigos Jalapeno Blanco

$41.99
Casamigos1.75 L

Casamigos Casamigos Blanco

$76.99
Casamigos Casamigos Añejo 1.75 L
Casamigos1.75 L

Casamigos Casamigos Añejo

$85.99
Casamigos Margarias 4 Flavors 8 pack 200 ml
Casamigos Blanco (12 pack) 50 ml
Casamigos50 ml

Casamigos Blanco (12 pack)

$57.99
Casamigos Blanco 375 ml
Casamigos375 ml

Casamigos Blanco

$17.99
Casamigos Reposado 375 ml
Casamigos375 ml

Casamigos Reposado

$19.99
Casamigos Añejo 375 ml
Casamigos375 ml

Casamigos Añejo

$22.99
Casamigos Blanco Jalapeno Excluisivo 1 L

Production Method and Agave Selection

Casamigos sources agave from family-owned farms in the highlands of Jalisco, where plants mature for a minimum of seven years before harvest. Highland agave develops different characteristics than lowland varieties due to elevation, climate, and soil composition—typically producing fruit-forward notes and natural sweetness. After harvesting, the piñas undergo a slow roasting process in traditional brick ovens for approximately 72 hours, converting starches to fermentable sugars while developing the cooked agave flavors fundamental to tequila character.

Following roasting, the agave is crushed and fermented using proprietary yeast strains. The brand extends fermentation time beyond industry norms, allowing for fuller flavor development before distillation. Double distillation in copper pot stills removes impurities while preserving essential agave character. The blanco expression rests for two months in stainless steel before bottling, while aged expressions mature in American white oak barrels previously used for bourbon whiskey, contributing vanilla, caramel, and spice notes to the base agave profile.

Expression Styles and Aging Specifications

The blanco expression represents the purest expression of the house style, showcasing the agave-forward profile without wood influence beyond the brief resting period. This makes it suitable for evaluating the brand's core flavor profile and works well in cocktails where agave character should remain prominent. The reposado ages for seven months in ex-bourbon barrels, developing light caramel and vanilla notes while maintaining agave presence. This falls within the reposado category's regulatory minimum of two months but exceeds the typical three-to-six-month aging period many brands employ.

The añejo expression ages for 14 months, nearly reaching the extra añejo threshold of three years. This extended aging produces deeper caramel, oak, and baking spice characteristics while softening the agave's natural vegetal notes. The brand also produces a cristalino expression—an añejo filtered through charcoal to remove color while theoretically retaining aged character—a style that has grown popular across the broader cristalino category since the 2010s.

Evaluating Quality and Value in the Category

When assessing any highland tequila, look for smoothness without harsh alcohol burn, clarity of agave flavor, and appropriate balance between raw agave character and any wood influence from aging. The distillery's NOM number (1416 for Casamigos) appears on every bottle and identifies the production facility, allowing consumers to research production methods and verify authenticity. Understanding NOM numbers helps identify which brands share production facilities and potentially similar base processes, though each brand maintains proprietary specifications for fermentation, distillation cuts, and aging.

Casamigos positions itself in the premium segment of the tequila market, competing with brands like Patrón, Clase Azul, and Maestro Dobel. When comparing options in this tier, consider the expression type suited to your intended use: blancos for cocktails or pure agave flavor evaluation, reposados for balanced sipping with moderate wood influence, and añejos for whiskey drinkers exploring tequila or those preferring pronounced oak character. The brand's consistent quality across expressions makes it suitable for both newcomers to premium tequila and experienced drinkers seeking reliable flavor profiles.

Cultural Context and Market Position

Casamigos entered the market during a broader premiumization trend in tequila, as consumers increasingly sought 100% agave expressions over mixto tequilas blended with neutral spirits. The brand benefited from celebrity association and extensive marketing, but its commercial success stems from approachable flavor profiles that appeal to drinkers transitioning from vodka or whiskey categories. The smooth character and reduced bite make it accessible to those unfamiliar with agave spirits' traditional vegetal and earthy notes.

The 2017 Diageo acquisition valued Casamigos at up to $1 billion, reflecting both the brand's sales trajectory and the spirits giant's interest in the growing premium tequila segment. This corporate backing ensured widespread distribution across retail and on-premise channels while maintaining production at the original Jalisco distillery. The brand competes in a crowded field that includes heritage producers like 1800 and Cazadores, newer celebrity-backed entries like 818, and craft-focused brands like Cazcanes. Understanding this competitive landscape helps buyers evaluate whether Casamigos' flavor profile and market positioning align with their preferences and budget.

Frequently asked questions

What makes highland tequila different from lowland tequila?
Highland tequila comes from agave grown at higher elevations in Jalisco, typically above 4,000 feet, where cooler temperatures and red volcanic soil produce sweeter, fruitier agave with floral notes. Lowland tequila uses agave from the Tequila Valley's flatter terrain, where warmer conditions and different soil composition yield more earthy, herbaceous, and mineral-driven flavors. Casamigos sources exclusively from highland farms, which shapes its characteristically smooth, sweet profile.
How long should tequila age to be considered añejo?
Mexican regulations require añejo tequila to age at least one year in oak barrels not exceeding 600 liters in capacity. Most añejos age between 12 and 24 months, developing caramel, vanilla, and oak characteristics from the barrel. Expressions aged three years or longer fall into the extra añejo category, where wood influence becomes more pronounced and can overshadow agave character if aging extends too long.
What does NOM mean on a tequila bottle?
NOM (Norma Oficial Mexicana) is a four-digit identifier assigned to each distillery authorized to produce tequila by Mexico's regulatory body. This number appears on every legitimate tequila bottle and allows consumers to identify the production facility, even when multiple brands are produced at the same location. Different brands with the same NOM may share base production methods but maintain distinct recipes, yeast strains, aging specifications, and quality standards.
Should I drink reposado or añejo tequila neat or in cocktails?
Both reposado and añejo tequilas work well neat for sipping, especially if you prefer some oak influence and softer agave character. Reposados balance well in spirit-forward cocktails like Old Fashioneds or Manhattans adapted for tequila, where moderate barrel aging complements other ingredients. Añejos generally suit neat sipping or simple preparations due to their complexity and higher price points, though some drinkers enjoy them in minimalist cocktails that showcase the aged character.
How does tequila compare to mezcal in production?
Tequila must use 100% Blue Weber agave (for premium expressions) or at least 51% Blue Weber agave (for mixtos), produced exclusively in designated regions of Jalisco and four other Mexican states. Mezcal can use over 30 agave species, produced across nine Mexican states, and traditionally roasts agave in underground earthen pits rather than brick ovens. This pit-roasting gives mezcal its characteristic smoky flavor, while tequila emphasizes the agave's natural fruit and vegetal notes without smoke influence.
What are cristalino tequilas and how are they made?
Cristalino tequilas start as aged reposado or añejo expressions that undergo charcoal filtration to remove color while theoretically retaining barrel-aged flavors. The process strips out tannins, wood extractives, and color compounds, producing a clear spirit with some aged characteristics but lighter body than unfiltered aged tequila. The cristalino style emerged in the 2010s as a premium category appealing to drinkers who want aged complexity without the darker color or full oak impact of traditional añejos.
Why do some tequila brands cost significantly more than others?
Price variation in tequila reflects multiple factors including agave sourcing costs, production scale, aging duration, packaging expenses, and brand positioning. Longer-aged expressions require years of barrel storage and inventory carrying costs, while highland agave typically costs more than lowland agave. Small-batch producers face higher per-bottle costs than large-scale operations, and luxury packaging with hand-blown glass or ceramic bottles adds substantial expense. Marketing, distribution agreements, and brand prestige also influence retail pricing beyond production costs.