Tequila Wars
José Cuervo and the Bloody Struggle for the Spirit of Mexico
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4.0 • 1 Rating
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- $20.99
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- $20.99
Publisher Description
A revelatory history of the vast tequila empire born from the fires of the Mexican Revolution.
At the dawn of the twentieth century, José Cuervo inherited his family’s humble distillery, La Rojeña, in the Tequila Valley. Within a decade, he had transformed it into a complex national enterprise that would become Mexico’s leading producer of tequila. Cuervo grew his kingdom of agave by acquiring thousands of acres of estates throughout the valley; he brought electricity and a railroad line to Tequila, so he could reach drinkers across the country. But when the Mexican Revolution erupted, a charge of treason and a death threat against him by Pancho Villa forced Cuervo to flee. His disappearance turned him into an obscure, shadowy historical figure—despite having one of the most famous names in Mexican history.
In Tequila Wars, award-winning author Ted Genoways restores Cuervo to his place as a key player in Mexico’s formative period. Before the revolution, Cuervo’s acclaim spread worldwide, and once war broke out, Cuervo remained an impresario, kingmaker, and cultural force. In the face of his own government’s corruption and the nationalism of his northern neighbors, Cuervo reached American drinkers by establishing Mexico’s covert form of cross-border commerce with the United States. As the largest and most important distilleries in the Tequila Valley recognized the threat posed by Mexico’s unraveling, Cuervo also lobbied for suspending normal competition in favor of “a union of tequila makers”—what would become the first Mexican cartel.
With extensive original research, including access to the secret archives of the Cuervo and Sauza families, Genoways follows the violent, unpredictable, and hugely profitable world of tequila through the story of its most successful maker. The first biography of Cuervo, Tequila Wars uncovers the history of the man who would forever change not only the business of tequila, but international relations between Mexico and the United States.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
In this comprehensive biography, James Beard Award winner Genoways (The Blessed Earth) examines the life of José Cuervo, "an active and aggressive molder of his moment and milieu." The Cuervo family's involvement in growing blue agave and distilling it into tequila—named for the Tequila valley—was firmly established by the late 1700s, when José's great-great-grandfather was named Spain's political chief in the region. However, in 1887, José watched his father lose the family business to (literally) cutthroat competitors. His inheritance gone, José began managing the agave estate of a wealthy great-uncle, whose death a few years later left a much younger widow. José married her in 1900 and expanded the business, building a state-of-the-art distillery, acquiring thousands of acres, and lobbying for railway connections. In 1904, Cuervo exhibited tequila at the St. Louis World's Fair, where he made powerful American contacts. By the 1910 start of the Mexican Revolution, the region's productivity made Tequila and José himself a target for the rebels. His intrepid escapes, entrepreneurial flair, and political ties carried him through the revolution and prepared the nascent country for establishing trade ties with the U.S. Though studded with murders and battles, the narrative is somewhat dry—the most lively moments come from the diaries of José's niece, who kept sensitive and marvelously detailed records. Still, Genoways offers a rigorous and unique lens on Mexico's revolutionary period.