Viva XXXII Reposado Tequila
  • Category Tequila
  • Country Mexico
  • Age NAS
  • Style Tequila
  • Alcohol 40%*
*please note that the ABV of this bottle may vary California residents: Click here for Proposition 65 WARNING.
  • vanilla
  • caramel
  • floral
  • butter
  • nutty
  • sweet
  • brown sugar
  • lime juice
  • spicy

VIVA XXXIII Tequila

Viva XXXII Reposado Tequila (0.7l, 40%*) *please note that the ABV of this bottle may vary

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Character Goatson

Super smooth Reposado Tequila with a twist.
 
There’s a buttload of Tequilas out there and they usually have a certain reputation: one Tequila, two Tequila, three Tequila – blackout. It’s time to change that “nuclear option only” notion. Meet Yvonne Niami, a prolific entrepreneur with a nose for excellence and a sense for giving back. In 2016, she created a premium Tequila brand represented by a swarm of black triangles – she named it VIVA XXXII. Her mission is twofold: taste good, doo good; and be premium but affordable. Yvonne’s bringing top-notch hand-crafted Tequila for us to enjoy tippling neat or in snazzy cocktails – like cultured human beings. Forget Tequila-induced unconsciousness, it’s time for conscious indulgence where ten cents on a dollar go to charities that prevent animal abuse.
 
VIVA XXXII Reposado Tequila is a sumptuous estate-grown sipping Spirit that spent four months in new American oak barrels. Yvonne made sure no unnecessary costs were added to this marvelous Spirit, which means we're getting a lot of bang for the buck. The Reposado is an old-school Tequila with a modern twist, perfect when sipped neat; wonderful in the Viva la Sandia cocktail. We don't know about you, but The Reposado made us believe.

  • Category Tequila
  • Country Mexico
  • Age NAS
  • Style Tequila
  • Alcohol 40%*
*please note that the ABV of this bottle may vary California residents: Click here for Proposition 65 WARNING.
Appearance / Color
Pale gold
 
Nose / Aroma / Smell
Agave-forward nose with hints of vanilla and caramel.
 
Flavor / Taste / Palate
Crisp and buttery balance with a hint of toasted nuts on the palate.
 
Finish
Medium finish with vanilla and floral notes.
Flavor Spiral TM
About the Flavor Spiral
What does Viva XXXII Reposado Tequila taste like?

The Flavor Spiral™ shows the most common flavors that you'll taste in Viva XXXII Reposado Tequila and gives you a chance to have a taste of it before actually tasting it.

We invented Flavor Spiral™ here at Flaviar to get all your senses involved in tasting drinks and, frankly, because we think that classic tasting notes are boring.

Back to flavor spiral
  • vanilla
  • caramel
  • floral
  • butter
  • nutty
  • sweet
  • brown sugar
  • lime juice
  • spicy
Dog Dogson's Smartass corner
Character Dogson
Tequila labeled Gold (Oro) is your indicator (i.e., red flag) that you’re dealing with a mixto Tequila - unaged silver Tequila that has been colored and flavored with caramel to give the appearance of aged tequila.
In general, price of Tequila goes up with age, so añejos and extra añejos will be the most expensive and blancos the cheapest.
Tequila labeled Gold (Oro) is your indicator (i.e., red flag) that you’re dealing with a mixto Tequila - unaged silver Tequila that has been colored and flavored with caramel to give the appearance of aged Tequila.
Need a salt shaker and lime? Nah. The Mexicans take their Tequila neat and prefer to leave the lime and salt for their margaritas. Wouldn’t be a bad idea to follow suit.
Tequila goes bad with time. Once you open a bottle of Tequila, you better be in the mood to drink it. Generally, you have one to two months before oxidization and evaporation diminish the Tequila quality and destroy the Agave flavor profile.
The strongest Tequila available for sale clocks in at 75% ABV (150 proof). This shouldn’t come as a surprise, but drinking huge amounts of this spirit is likely te-quil-a.
Similar drinks
Dog Dogson's Smartass corner
Character Dogson
Tequila labeled Gold (Oro) is your indicator (i.e., red flag) that you’re dealing with a mixto Tequila - unaged silver Tequila that has been colored and flavored with caramel to give the appearance of aged tequila.
In general, price of Tequila goes up with age, so añejos and extra añejos will be the most expensive and blancos the cheapest.
Tequila labeled Gold (Oro) is your indicator (i.e., red flag) that you’re dealing with a mixto Tequila - unaged silver Tequila that has been colored and flavored with caramel to give the appearance of aged Tequila.
Need a salt shaker and lime? Nah. The Mexicans take their Tequila neat and prefer to leave the lime and salt for their margaritas. Wouldn’t be a bad idea to follow suit.
Tequila goes bad with time. Once you open a bottle of Tequila, you better be in the mood to drink it. Generally, you have one to two months before oxidization and evaporation diminish the Tequila quality and destroy the Agave flavor profile.
The strongest Tequila available for sale clocks in at 75% ABV (150 proof). This shouldn’t come as a surprise, but drinking huge amounts of this spirit is likely te-quil-a.
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