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...You'll have to take the Tequila Express
...You'll have to take the Tequila Express

Economic Times

time2 days ago

  • Business
  • Economic Times

...You'll have to take the Tequila Express

Tourism used to be a simple equation. You went somewhere, checked out views, temples, eateries, and soaked in whatever else the place had to offer. But, now, sights and shopping aren't enough. You need a side of spectacle. Think vibes, curated playlists, mood lighting, the right Instagram filter. And if you've got extra dosh, throw in a themed train ride - with a tequila bar - that could make a mariachi weep. Hop on to the Tequila Express. This isn't some novelty name - it's a real train chugging across Mexico's agave-covered terrain. First launched in 1997 to kickstart 'tequila tourism', it took a break and is now back - refurbished, refuelled, and ready to serve 1.2 mn tipsy tourists a year. And this isn't just transport. It's a full-blown rolling fiesta connecting Guadalajara with Tequila, Mexico, complete with enlarged windows, soft lighting, piped-in mariachi music, and flat-screens flashing tacos and distilleries - basically, Agave Netflix while you sip your third shot before noon. Meanwhile, rival trains like the Jose Cuervo Express charge even more to wobble through the same cactus-studded scenery. The best bit? Tequila is now a Unesco World Heritage site. So, yes, getting sloshed on a train officially counts as cultural enrichment. Moral of the story: It's not where you go, but how you sell the ride. Just add lime and call it heritage. Elevate your knowledge and leadership skills at a cost cheaper than your daily tea. Everything 'e' won't make you a millionaire. Just look at e-pharmacies Are Indian banks staring at their worst in 7 years? How Uber came back from the brink to dislodge Ola Will Royal Enfield's back to the future strategy woo GenZ? Stock Radar: Cummins India stock breaks out from Ascending Triangle pattern on daily charts; check target, stop loss Weekly Top Picks: These stocks scored 10 on 10 on Stock Reports Plus Multibagger or IBC - Part 9: With exceptional margins, can this small-cap stock make it to the big league? These large- and mid-cap stocks can give more than 30% return in 1 year, according to analysts

The return of Mexico's famous Tequila Express train
The return of Mexico's famous Tequila Express train

BBC News

time27-05-2025

  • Business
  • BBC News

The return of Mexico's famous Tequila Express train

With "tequila tourism" gaining popularity in Mexico, a train taking tourists to the home of the spirit has relaunched after nine years away. The Tequila Express offers a gateway to an intriguing culture, alongside impressive on-board cocktails. As I boarded the Tequila Express at Guadalajara railway station, a tour guide with curly gelled hair was holding court in a bar carriage. Holding a gold-coloured microphone and a bottle of tequila, he spoke enthusiastically to a group of Mexican tourists about their country's famous spirit. At 10:30, when the train left the station, he handed out shot glasses. From Nuremberg's Techno Train to the late-night London to Margate Train, I've witnessed many chaotic alcohol-soaked railway adventures. I wondered if the long-awaited return of the Tequila Express, the tourist train running between the city of Guadalajara and the town of Tequila in Mexico's Jalisco state, would signal a similar experience. The Tequila Express launched in 1997 to serve the nascent "tequila tourism" industry in Tequila, its namesake city, which now has a population of around 45,000 and is the epicentre of the tequila industry, home to around 25 distilleries. Knocking back tequila on the two-hour, 65km ride across Jalisco's cactus- and agave plant-lined landscape proved popular, and, in 2012, the Jose Cuervo tequila company launched a rival – and much more expensive – tourist train on the same route. The original Tequila Express stopped running in 2015, then relaunched in 2017 in collaboration with the Herradura tequila brand. In 2020 it stopped again, as Covid decimated tourism. It finally returned in September 2024. Mexico's tourism industry was healthy again, and by 2023, Tequila was attracting 1.2 million visitors a year, with more distilleries offering tours. Government authorities and tourism companies reportedly invested around 170 million pesos (£7m) to get one of the world's most unique short-distance tourist trains, which offers a trip directly to the heart of the culture behind Mexico's most famous export, back on track. Carriages were refurbished for the relaunch, to the degree that my journey felt more boutique hotel than party train. I'm teetotal, so at a marble-topped bar I ordered Almave, a non-alcoholic spirit made from the same agave plants used for tequila. Piped mariachi music was constant, and tasteful low-light lamps were attached to wood-panelled walls. TV screens showed distilleries and tacos: pleasures awaiting us in Tequila. Onboard, I chatted to Antonio Cabrera from northern Mexico, who told me he was 55, but only now taking his first Mexican train journey. With Mexico currently lacking a country-wide passenger rail network, its best-known trains are arguably tourist routes such as the Tequila Express, the controversial new Tren Maya, and the Chepe Express Copper Canyon train. There were a few European backpacker types dotted throughout the carriages, but most passengers were well-dressed middle-aged Mexicans, like Cabrera. As a bartender stirred a creamy cocktail, carefully placing herb sprigs on its textured glass, Cabrera and I happily agreed that there seemed little sign of the trip getting messy, at least before we got to Tequila. The mic-wielding guide explained flavour notes as tourists gently sipped. Cabrera himself was drinking Corona. "I'm from the border area; tequila is not that popular there," he said. "But I want to try tequila later." The drinks had a socially lubricating, if not quite party-starting, effect. An exuberant American in a floppy sunhat named Leigh was on her second Tequila Express trip, and eager to talk about the previous ride. "People were dancing as they got more inebriated," she said. Silverton belly danced as we trundled past rows of Agave tequilana, the species of large, spiky blue agave farmed for tequila. The train's carriage windows were enlarged during the refurbishment to allow for better views. In the far distance, Jalisco's mountains loomed over orange-dry land. The agaves, planted by farmers with regimental precision and bearing blue sword-like leaves, had conquered the dirt all around us. The agaves' ubiquity can be explained by regulations. Since 1974, for tequila to legally be tequila, it has needed to be produced in Jalisco or one of the designated tequila municipalities located in four other states. In 2006, Unesco named Tequila's cinematic, agave-dominated rural landscape, along with the town's ancient industrial facilities, a World Heritage site. When we arrived at Tequila's Sun-blasted single-platform station, buses took tourists to agave fields and the massive distillery owned by Sauza, a major tequila producer. Passengers can buy these tours as part of train ticket packages or explore Tequila independently after departing the Tequila Express. I'd arranged to meet tour guide Luis Alberto Gutiérrez Rojas in the town's main square. We met by the large, colourful "TEQUILA" letter blocks erected for Insta-tourism impact. Around us, street musicians created a sound-swirl of guitar, trumpet, accordion, double bass and wailing vocals. Gutiérrez showed me a vast mural depicting lightning striking agave plants. This, he said, represented Indigenous people discovering the liquid that would become tequila, long before the Spaniards arrived in the 1500s. According to legend, after lightning struck agaves, juice from the burned plants fermented and the alcoholic discovery was made. He pointed out the faces of people from tequila-producing families depicted in the mural. The Cuervo and Sauza families were among Tequila's early commercial distillers, beginning in the 18th and 19th Centuries, respectively. These names still adorn some of Tequila's biggest distilleries. More like this: • The Train Maya: Mexico's ambitious new tourism megaproject • A 58-tunnel slow train through India's Eastern Ghats • The Baltic Express: Central Europe's new hop-on hop-off train We walked along Calle José Cuervo – as well as a distillery, an entire street bears the Cuervo name – and into a small cantina. A green sign behind the frayed wooden bar read: "One More Batanga". La Capilla is Tequila's oldest cantina and a place the Tequila Express staff said I must visit – for atmosphere if not alcohol. The batanga cocktail was reportedly created here in the 1960s by founder Don Javier Delgado Corona, using Coca-Cola, lime and El Tequileño Blanco tequila made in a distillery 500m from the bar. Don Javier died in 2020 aged 96, but still keeps watch over the bar in portrait form, depicted with white hair and offering a batanga. I ordered a "virgin" batanga from the barman, who assured me that he was related to Don Javier. I gave two guitar-toting musicians wearing huge black hats 100 pesos (£3.80) to play a jaunty song, then got chatting with an agave farmer. I nodded as he complained about the plant's price dropping to under 10 pesos (38p) per kilogram due to supply outstripping demand. The next morning, I was on farmland myself. I'd booked a tour with Atanasio Tequila, a small distillery also recommended by Tequila Express staff. Sheccid Carranza, who started working with Atanasio after her family invested in the company, took me to the distillery's agave field in the back of a truck. Some other Tequila tours, including Sauza's, also visit agave fields. But many are more about consumption than education, with reggaeton-blasting party trucks designed to resemble tequila barrels carrying shot-downing tourists around town. "Drinking, drinking, drinking," said Carranza. "We were forgetting about the essence, the roots… we don't appreciate how much the field workers work." Picking up a barretón – a shovel-like tool – Carranza stabbed the base of a large agave then pulled up a pineapple-sized mini-agave. She held it aloft, like a hunter with freshly slain prey. This was a hijuelo, a young agave that grows from its parent via asexual reproduction. "Your turn," said Carranza. I made 40 barretón stabs to a nearby hijuelo's base before hearing the crunch signalling that I could pull the spiky infant agave free. Carranza said that if I were a real field worker, harvesting one hijuelo would earn me one peso (4p). Planting it away from its parent plant, where it would grow for around seven years before being harvested, would earn me another peso. Carranza said that these field tours show that behind every tequila shot is a culture of hard work and farming experience. She handed me a pick-axe-like tool called a talache and ordered me to dig a hijuelo hole. I thudded the talache into the ground. As red dirt flew up, I considered how, rather than a ticket to alcohol oblivion, the Tequila Express opens up a far more insightful ride. -- For more Travel stories from the BBC, follow us on Facebook, X and Instagram.

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