Collapse
We try to keep our shipping prices as low as possible!
Download the Blackwell's App on iOS or Android, LOG IN and AUTOMATICALLY get $10 OFF your first order!
Over 13 thousand trusted and verified reviews.
Shop carefree!
Shop thousands of brands
Free door to door delivery
No hidden costs of shipping fees
PRODUCT DESCRIPTION
Most people think of Oaxaca when they think of mezcal. Durango does not ask for that association — it simply offers something different, something that the Oaxacan tradition does not and cannot provide, and something that the educated agave enthusiast who discovers it typically finds impossible to forget. Maguey Cenizo (Agave durangensis) is the wild agave species specific to the mountainous northern state of Durango — the northernmost state within mezcal's denomination of origin, where the altitude, the mountain climate, and the specific soil composition of the Sierra Madre Occidental produce an agave of unusual character. Creamy. Fruity. Tropical. Floral. With a light smokiness that is softer and more atmospheric than the coastal-peat-adjacent smoke of Oaxacan Espadín, and a range of lot-specific aromatics — melon, mango, cinnamon, chocolate, cheese — that make the Mezcal Reviews community's batch tracking of this specific bottle one of the most entertaining and most informative in the agave spirits world.
Burrito Fiestero was founded by brothers Alejandro and Christian Rossbach at Hacienda de San José Acevedo in San Nicolás, Durango — Christian handling production, Alejandro marketing — and built around Maestro Mezcalero Juan Manuel Conde, whose family has produced this mezcal across generations at this specific site. The One-for-One reforestation commitment — one maguey Cenizo planted for every bottle produced, planting ten times more than what the production program uses — places sustainability at the center of the brand's identity rather than at its periphery. The solar-powered equipment, the agave fiber recycling into adobe bricks, and the position as the largest jobs provider in the San Nicolás community complete a picture of a brand that understands its relationship with the land and the community with unusual seriousness.
The liquid is the flagship expression — crystal clear, 42% ABV, produced from 12-year-old wild Cenizo plants in small copper pot stills alongside the agave fibers, double distilled, and bottled in lots that vary enough that the Mezcal Reviews community tracks them individually by number. This is what Durango mezcal tastes like. It is worth knowing.
Burrito Fiestero is produced at Hacienda de San José Acevedo in San Nicolás de Acevedo, Durango — a mountainous northern Mexican state whose position in the Sierra Madre Occidental gives it a dramatically different climate, altitude, and agave species profile than Oaxaca's central valley mezcal production. Durango is the northernmost state within the mezcal denomination of origin — a geographic outlier whose specific terroir produces mezcal of a character that the Oaxacan tradition simply does not replicate. The brand was founded by brothers Alejandro and Christian Rossbach as an expression of Durango's specific agave heritage, with Maestro Mezcalero Juan Manuel Conde — son of the founding mezcalero Arturo Conde, who produced earlier batches — now leading production.
Agave durangensis — Cenizo, named for the ash-grey color of its leaves — is a wild agave species endemic to the mountainous regions of Durango and the surrounding Sierra Madre states. Unlike Agave tequilana (Blue Weber) or Agave angustifolia (Espadín), which are widely cultivated for commercial production, Cenizo is primarily harvested wild from the mountainsides — a foraging practice that requires significantly more labor, produces less predictable yields, and results in the batch-to-batch flavor variation that the Mezcal Reviews community enthusiastically documents. The plants harvested for Burrito Fiestero are 12 years old at harvest — the age at which the Cenizo's natural sugar levels reach their peak and the aromatic compounds have fully developed. The One-for-One reforestation program is specifically designed to address the sustainability of wild harvesting: one Cenizo planted per bottle produced, planting ten times more agave than the production program consumes.
The production process is artisanal throughout. The wild Cenizo piñas are pit-roasted using traditional earth oven methods that develop the characteristic smokiness. Fermentation takes place in open-air wooden vats using wild airborne yeasts and mountain spring water from the Sierra Madre — the specific microbial environment of the Durango highlands contributing to the batch-specific character variation that makes this mezcal so interesting to track across lots. The fermented liquid is then double distilled in small copper pot stills alongside the agave fibers — an unusual production choice that includes the crushed fiber material in the still during distillation, extracting additional flavor compounds and contributing to the creamy, full-bodied texture that the magueyspirits.com official tasting note identifies. The finished mezcal is crystal clear and bottled at 42% ABV without filtration.
Magueyspirits.com (official producer notes): "Appearance: Clear and water-white tone. Aroma: Pronounced fruity-citrus, earthy notes and sweet aromas. Palate: Full body with intense fruity hints, creamy and soft finish, well balanced and slight buttered notes."
Agave Spirits Journey: "Produced from Cenizo Durangensis agave in the northern state of Durango. The 12-year-old wild plants whose brix levels are at their height produce a light smokiness pleasantly reminiscent of its northern origins. Burrito Fiestero coats the glass beautifully and has a definite viscosity."
Mezcal Reviews community — across multiple lots: Lot 025-A: "Bright fruit, mango, light jalapeño on the nose — melon, mango, with green finish. Very easy drinking." Lot 035-A: "Ashy roasted agave and green bell peppers on the nose — sticky-sweet palate with cinnamon, chocolate, and vanilla — finish of black pepper, bitter cassia, and BBQ." Lot 040-A: "Nose of Swiss and blue cheese, creamy and sweet with soft smoke."
Mezcalistas (Max Garrone): Identified Burrito Fiestero Cenizo as the flagship bottle of a growing line with "a great flavor profile for that agave — nice soft melon both on the nose and in the flavors — a great intro to this agave."
Nose Crystal clear in the glass — the unaged Joven designation confirmed in a spirit of complete transparency and freshness. The nose is immediately distinctive from any Oaxacan mezcal: the Cenizo's fruity, tropical character leading rather than the coastal-peat-iodine signature of Espadín. Melon and mango open the approach with a sweet, slightly exotic tropical richness that is entirely specific to Agave durangensis from the Durango highlands — bright, clean, and more fruit-forward than the agave varieties most mezcal drinkers encounter first. A light, atmospheric smokiness follows — soft and slightly ashy rather than aggressive, sitting beneath the fruit character rather than dominating it. Fruity-citrus notes add brightness alongside earthy qualities that speak directly to the wild plants' specific terroir. Green bell pepper and a light jalapeño note thread through as secondary aromas — the Durango highland agave's most specific varietal characteristic. Vanilla and sweet aromas add depth. The nose changes considerably by lot — the wild harvest's inherent batch variation producing the melon-mango-green-finish character of some lots and the cinnamon-chocolate-BBQ character of others, making each batch a genuinely distinct experience.
Palate Full body and creamy texture — the distillation-with-agave-fibers' most apparent quality in a mouthfeel of unusual richness and viscosity for a 42% joven mezcal. The entry is immediately fruit-forward: intense fruity hints arriving with the melon and mango concentration of the nose alongside a soft, buttered quality from the fiber-inclusion distillation. The Cenizo's characteristic creaminess develops through the mid-palate — smooth, coating, and genuinely full-bodied in a way that the Mezcal Reviews community consistently identifies across all lots regardless of the specific aromatic variation. The light smoke adds a gentle earthy depth without interrupting the fruit-forward profile. A soft pepper finish begins to build — the highland agave's natural pepper contribution adding structural warmth. The mountain spring water's mineral freshness is detectable as a clean, slightly cool quality that keeps the palate focused despite the fruit richness.
Finish Soft, creamy, and gradually warming. The characteristic Cenizo finish varies by lot — some closing with clean melon and green freshness, others with black pepper, cinnamon, and BBQ warmth. Across all lots the finish is well balanced and the creamy, buttered quality persists into the close as the most consistently identified characteristic. Medium length, honest, and entirely approachable.
| Category | Details |
|---|---|
| ABV / Proof | 42% ABV / 84 Proof |
| Style | Mezcal Joven — Artesanal |
| Agave | 100% Wild Agave durangensis (Cenizo) |
| Plant Age | 12 years — wild harvested at peak brix levels |
| Origin | San Nicolás de Acevedo, Durango, Mexico |
| State | Durango — northernmost state in mezcal's denomination of origin |
| Maestro Mezcalero | Juan Manuel Conde |
| Brand Founders | Alejandro & Christian Rossbach — Maguey Spirits |
| Fermentation | Open-air wooden vats · Wild airborne yeast · Mountain spring water |
| Distillation | Double distilled in small copper pot stills with agave fibers |
| Energy | Solar-powered equipment |
| Sustainability | One-for-One reforestation — 1 Cenizo planted per bottle · 10x more planted than used |
| Agave Fiber | Recycled into adobe bricks |
| Community | Largest employer in San Nicolás de Acevedo |
| Batch Variability | Significant — wild harvest produces lot-specific flavor variation (tracked by Mezcal Reviews community) |
| Style / Identity | Creamy, fruity, tropical Durango mezcal — light smoke, full body, batch-variable |
| Aromas & Flavors | Melon, mango, tropical fruit, light smoke, green bell pepper, jalapeño, vanilla, cinnamon, chocolate (varies by lot) |
| Bottle Size | 750ml |
Best served neat in a copita or wide-bottomed tulip glass at room temperature — the melon, mango, and creamy character of the Cenizo agave are most fully expressed without dilution or ice. The relatively approachable 42% ABV makes it genuinely accessible neat without the intensity of higher-proof artisanal mezcals. A single drop of mountain spring water mirrors the production's own water source and opens the tropical fruit notes further. An exceptional introduction to Durango mezcal for anyone whose agave experience has been entirely Oaxacan — the Cenizo's creamy, tropical, light-smoke character is genuinely surprising and genuinely distinctive. Outstanding alongside Mexican chocolate, dried tropical fruits, roasted corn, mole negro, grilled meats, and anything with a sweet-savory-smoky combination that mirrors the agave's own character.
Cenizo Paloma 2 oz Burrito Fiestero Cenizo · grapefruit soda · squeeze of fresh lime · pinch of salt. Built over ice in a highball. The tropical melon and mango character plays naturally against grapefruit's bitterness in a Paloma that is more exotic and more fruit-forward than standard Espadín versions.
Durango Margarita 2 oz Burrito Fiestero Cenizo · 1 oz fresh lime juice · ¾ oz Cointreau · agave syrup to taste · salted rim. Shaken over ice, served in a rocks glass. The creamy, fruity Cenizo character adds tropical depth to the classic Margarita format — the light smoke adding a warm dimension that pure blanco tequila cannot achieve.
Cenizo Negroni 1 oz Burrito Fiestero Cenizo · 1 oz Campari · 1 oz sweet vermouth · orange twist. Stirred over ice, served in a rocks glass. The Cenizo's creamy tropical fruit character bridges Campari's bitterness in a Negroni that is softer and more fruit-forward than Oaxacan mezcal versions — an excellent entry point for Negroni enthusiasts exploring agave spirits.
Melon Sour 2 oz Burrito Fiestero Cenizo · ¾ oz fresh lime juice · ½ oz honey syrup. Shaken over ice, served up. Honey syrup mirrors the sweet aromas on the nose — lime amplifies the citrus dimension — and the creamy Cenizo character produces a sour of unusual tropical richness and gentle smoke.
Bottle Size: All bottles are 750ML/700ML unless otherwise noted.
21 and Over: Adult Signature Required
Don’t worry! We won’t share or sell your email address
WHILE STOCK LASTS!
Get 1 Free Bottle of Bourbon From Bean & Sheldon

Taxes, discounts and shipping calculated at checkout.