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A
Family Tradition: Five Generations of Mezcaleros
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Isaac
Jiménez
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Don
Isaac recounts awaking at 4 am, then walking from his village
of Matatlán, with his mule, to Oaxaca, arriving some
14 or 15 hours later
just to buy a large cántaro,
the traditional clay vessel then used for making and transporting
mezcal. Often he would stop en route, at Santa María
el Tule, for a drink of refreshing tejate before carrying
on. Quenching his thirst, putting his feet up for a short
while, and chatting with his favorite tejatero, made
the arduous journey accepted custom, just part of the job.
Eighty-eight-year-old Isaac Jiménez Arrazola has been
producing mezcal in Matatlán all his life, just like
his father and grandfather before him, his sons Enrique and
Octavio, and now his grandchildren. The town has a colorful
history and pride in being one of the oldest colonial settlements
in the country, founded in 1525, only a few years after Cortés
arrived in Mexico. But for literally hundreds of years the
crowning glory of Matatlán has been its status as world
capital for the production of mezcal. In fact by 1980 this
dusty one-horse-town had about 360 palenques [the facility
where the agave plant (maguey) is processed until mezcal
slowly drips out of the still] each producing about 2,800
liters monthly.
All of my children, Don Isaac emphasizes, from
when they were very young, the boys and girls alike, learned
all the steps
preparing the fields and tending the
maguey, watching out for infestations, harvesting,
and the process in the palenque. And my wife Juana
would be in charge and do everything when I was either on
the road selling, or playing in the band. You know Im
a musician as well, just like my grandfather Fidencio. He
was a Master violinist.
Fidencio Jiménez Romero was born in Ejutla de Crespo
in 1870. Towards the turn of the century he moved to Matalán,
as a young adult, and became the familys first generation
of mezcalero. He and his son both learned to distill
mezcal the old fashioned way, using clay pots for receptacles,
and carriso (tall river reed, similar in appearance
and functionality to bamboo) as the tubing required for the
condensation and cooling processes. It wasnt until grandson
Isaacs generation that copper was introduced into the
town. That was in 1935. From then until the early 1940s,
copper revolutionized the means of production, while at the
same time modes of transportation also underwent dramatic
changes.
The family patriarch recalls that using clay for transporting
had its definite downside, being fragile and at times dangerous.
So when the opportunity arose to transport in latas de
mantequa (large tins in which lard was then sold), he
seized the opportunity. And then with the arrival of larger
plastic containers, a further change occurred. But by about
1943, with the Pan-American highway by then almost arriving
at Oaxaca, imported oak barrels began to appear. Don Isaac
saw a chance to transport even larger quantities.
In those days we never thought about aging. We used
the barrels because they were big, and I could fit 12
14 of them on my truck, to go on my sales routes to towns
and villages on the coast and in the mountains. It would take
about a month to sell everything I had, so that was the longest
time mezcal would be allowed to age
until I was sold
out and could return home with a truckload of empty barrels.
But when I realized I was losing a lot of mezcal due to barrel
swelling and evaporation, I went back to plastic. I just couldnt
afford to sell from the barrel.
Throughout the 1950s business was good, with national
markets opening up as a result of improved highways. The family
put their modest profits to work by purchasing additional
tracts of land for growing agave. In 1957 they moved operations
into the family homestead (still occupied today by Isaac,
his wife, and son Octavio and his family).
When asked to be town mayor (el presidente municipal)
in 1966, Don Isaac of course couldnt refuse the three
year post, even though it was an unpaid position. It was an
honor, and considered part of tequio, ones moral obligation
to the community. Finances were strained, but with the assistance
of the family, business continued, and in fact thrived.
By the 1980s, the Jiménez family had begun to
barrel-age, bottle and export. The family realized that it
could command a higher price in the marketplace by producing
a smoother product with a different, and often more pleasing
flavor, imparted through barreling. This more than made up
for shrinkage.
Isaacs two sons fates had been sealed. Octavio
had less of an interest in academics than some of his siblings
who went on to complete university and teach. Although he
attended high school, he was more interested in working the
fields and life in the palenque. Brother Enrique completed
his secondary school education, then entered university in
Oaxaca, obtaining a degree in industrial chemical engineering.
During his college years he would spend the week living in
Oaxaca, and then Friday afternoon his father would pick him
up and bring him home to Matatlán. There he would work
at the family business, from time-to-time putting his newly-learned
expertise to work, bringing welcomed innovation to various
aspects of production.
Finally, by 1993 the family had its own domestic brand, Mezcal
del Maestro (now known as Mezcal del Amigo) which has met
with success in both Europe and the US.
Having five well-established types of mezcal in production
has given the Jiménez family a measure of security.
With Octavio and Enrique now at the helm, the family has recently
made a bold decision to move into the 21st century. The brothers
are at the cutting edge of a new technique for baking agave
which will enhance quality control, while at the same time
enable them to preserve the centuries old production methods
of stone-crushing the carmelized maguey using horsepower,
literally, fermenting in pine vats, and distilling using a
clay-brick oven.
Matatlán today remains a small town with the paved
Pan-American highway running through it, mezcal factories
and outlets (fábricas and expendios) on both
sides of the road extending for perhaps a mile. Fields of
agave under cultivation blanket the rolling hills in each
direction. But turn off the highway and you can still step
back into time and venture into the Jiménez homestead
and watch mezcal being made as it was in the early 1900s,
when Fidencio Jiménez Romero was teaching everything
he knew to his youthful grandson, Isaac. Just ask anyone in
town how to get to Don Isaacs, where youll meet
Octavio and Enrique Jiménez, and yes, their children,
the fifth generation of mezcaleros.
Mezcal del Amigo, the Jiménez family brand, will
be producing mezcal at its new facility on the left hand side
of the highway, entering Matatlán, effective early
2008. Youll be able to witness each stage of the production
process, and taste a variety of high quality mezcals. And
you can also ask one of Don Isaacs grandchildren to
run you by the old homestead to see how it all started.
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