Artisanal Tequila

Best Tequila to Mix: Artisanal Bottles and Easy Drinks to Try 

Finding the best tequila to mix isn’t about reaching for the most expensive bottle on the shelf, but rather about choosing a spirit with enough agave character to shine through ice, citrus, and soda. Artisanal tequilas, made the slow way and free of additives, do exactly that. They bring brightness, minerality, and real depth to a glass without disappearing behind the mixer. 

This guide walks you through three standout artisanal bottles worth mixing, answers the practical question of what to mix with tequila, and moves from effortless two-ingredient serves to fuller cocktails. Whether you’re building a weeknight highball or a weekend paloma, you’ll know exactly what to pour. 

Best Artisanal Tequilas to Mix 

[IMAGE GALLERY] 

These three bottles share a few things: they’re 100% agave, additive-free, and made with traditional methods. Each holds its own in a cocktail while staying friendly to a home-bar budget. 

Dobel Tahona — The Artisanal Anchor 

A genuinely traditional blanco, Dobel Tahona is crushed by a two-ton volcanic stone wheel — the centuries-old tahona method that very few brands still use. The organic agave is steam-roasted in masonry ovens, fermented alongside its own fibers with wild yeast, then double-distilled in copper pot stills, with nothing added. The result is bright and textured: cooked agave, white pepper, lemongrass, and a silky, mineral finish. That savory backbone is exactly what survives a splash of soda or a squeeze of lime. 

Cimarrón Blanco — The Everyday Bartender Pick 

When bartenders want clean agave without the markup, Cimarrón is the bottle they reach for. Made by celebrated distiller Enrique Fonseca in the highlands of Jalisco, it’s additive-free, agave-forward, and famously good value — often sold by the liter. Expect earth, ripe pineapple, pepper, and minerality. It’s a natural in palomas and margaritas, where its dry, crisp profile keeps a drink fresh rather than sweet. 

Tequila Ocho Plata — The Single-Estate Showpiece 

For a step up in nuance, Ocho was the first tequila to bottle single-estate, vintage-dated expressions treating each agave field like a wine terroir. Crafted by third-generation distiller Carlos Camarena, this additive-free blanco leans floral and citrusy, with orange blossom, mint, and black pepper. Named Best Blanco at the 2022 San Francisco World Spirits Competition, it’s refined enough to sip yet expressive enough to lift a top shelf paloma. 

Read more: Benefits of Tequila Blanco Artesanal 

Bottle Style Flavor profile Best for 
Maestro Dobel Tahona Organic blanco Agave, white pepper, lemongrass, mineral Palomas & spirit-forward serves 
Cimarrón Blanco Highland blanco Earth, pepper, ripe pineapple, dry Everyday margaritas & palomas 
Tequila Ocho Plata Single-estate blanco Orange blossom, citrus, mint, pepper Top-shelf palomas & sipping 

At a glance: how the three artisanal bottles compare for mixing. 

What to Mix With Tequila: Simple Mixes First 

The beauty of a good blanco is that it barely needs help. Start simple and let the agave lead: 

  • Soda water or sparkling mineral water — keeps the focus on agave for a clean, low-effort highball. 
  • Fresh lime juice — a squeeze plus a pinch of salt is the fastest upgrade there is. 
  • Grapefruit soda — the shortcut to a paloma (more on that below). 
  • Citrus & tropical juices — orange, pineapple, or fresh grapefruit add body and a touch of sweetness. 
  • Tonic or ginger beer — bitter or spicy options for a more grown-up serve. 

A general rule: the better the tequila, the less it needs. Reach for lighter mixers with your artisanal bottles so their character isn’t buried. 

What Soda to Mix With Tequila 

If you’re choosing a soda, match it to the drink you want: 

  • Grapefruit soda (Squirt, Jarritos, Fever-Tree) — the classic paloma base; its bittersweet tang amplifies tequila’s citrus oils. 
  • Soda water or sparkling mineral water — the lightest option, ideal for high-quality blancos where minerality is the point. 
  • Ginger beer — adds a spicy, earthy kick that plays off tequila’s pepper; excellent with blanco in a Mexican Mule. 
  • Citrus or lemon-lime sodas — sweeter and party-friendly, brightening a blanco or softening an añejo. 

Grapefruit is widely considered tequila’s best soda partner. It’s the heart of the paloma, often called Mexico’s national cocktail. 

Best Cocktails to Make With Artisanal Tequila 

Ready to go beyond the highball? These three let an artisanal bottle keep its voice. 

The Paloma (Classic) 

Build over ice: 2 oz blanco, the juice of half a lime, a pinch of salt, topped with grapefruit soda (or fresh grapefruit juice and a splash of sparkling water). Garnish with a grapefruit wedge. Light, tart, and endlessly refreshing. 

The Margarita (Classic) 

Shake 2 oz blanco, 1 oz fresh lime juice, and ¾ oz orange liqueur (or ½ oz agave syrup for a Tommy’s-style version) with ice. Strain over fresh ice in a salt-rimmed glass. A great blanco is the difference between a sharp, agave-driven margarita and a sugary one. 

Read more: Tequila Margarita Recipes 

Spicy Pineapple Tequila (The Twist) 

Muddle two jalapeño slices in a shaker, add 2 oz blanco, 1½ oz pineapple juice, and ½ oz lime. Shake, strain over ice, and top with a little soda water. The sweet-tropical pineapple and gentle heat wrap around the agave without smothering it — a livelier riff for warm evenings. 

◆ CMS NOTE — Gallery 

How to Choose the Right Artisanal Tequila for Each Drink 

Let the cocktail guide the bottle

  • Blanco for fresh, citrusy drinks — palomas, margaritas, and highballs, where crisp agave is the star. 
  • Reposado for richer or lightly oaked serves — its vanilla and soft oak pair beautifully with ginger or grapefruit. 
  • Añejo only when the drink needs real depth — usually best sipped, though a spirit-forward cocktail can carry it. 

With an artisanal, additive-free bottle as your base, almost any simple mix becomes something worth slowing down for. 

CTA: Explore more artisanal tequilas worth mixing 

Sources 

 

Maestro Dobel — Dobel Tahona (official) 

Robb Report — Maestro Dobel’s Tahona Blanco 

Boozemakers — Cimarrón Blanco review 

Sip Tequila — Tequila Ocho (single-estate) 

Tasting Table — Best sodas to pair with tequila 

Food Republic — Sodas that mix with tequila 

The Kitchn — Classic Paloma recipe 

Compartir en:

More about Artisanal Tequila

More about Artisanal Tequila

Categories

Explore tequila from every angle — tradition, technique, tasting, and trends.