Pulque
Pre-Columbian Mexican ferment of agave sap — viscous, milky, sour, sacred, almost vanishing
Profile
Pulque is the oldest documented alcoholic beverage of Mesoamerica — pre-Columbian by at least 1,500 years, sacred to the Aztec deity Mayahuel, controlled by religious caste before colonization, and now genuinely endangered as a tradition. The substrate is aguamiel — the sap of the maguey agave (Agave salmiana, Agave atrovirens, others), which is collected by hollowing out the heart of the plant when it reaches maturity (typically 8-15 years of growth) and scraping the cavity daily to keep sap flowing.
The microbiology is unusual. Pulque ferments through the combined action of Zymomonas mobilis (a relatively rare bacterial fermenter that produces ethanol like yeast does), Saccharomyces cerevisiae, Lactobacillus, Leuconostoc, and others — a wild mixed culture native to the agave plant and the acocote (the gourd traditionally used to collect aguamiel). The fermentation is fast (a few hours to a day or two depending on temperature) and produces a final beverage of 4-7% ABV with a distinctively viscous, slightly slimy texture from polysaccharides produced by the lactic acid bacteria.
Pulque's near-extinction is a real story: Spanish colonization marginalized it; 19th-century beer industrialization replaced it (German immigrants founded Mexican brewing); 20th-century cultural pressure marked it as low-class; the maguey takes 8-15 years to mature, making cultivation economically marginal. By 2000 the active maguey-cultivation acreage in Mexico had collapsed to a fraction of its historic peak. A 2010s revival is underway with urban pulquerias in Mexico City and small-scale production resuming in Hidalgo and Tlaxcala, but the tradition remains genuinely fragile.
Pulque does not export — it must be consumed within days of fermenting, and it cannot be pasteurized without destroying the texture and flavor. This makes it almost impossible to encounter outside of central Mexico and parts of the surrounding states. It is not the same drink as mezcal or tequila (those are distilled from cooked agave hearts, not the sap, and are completely different products microbiologically and culturally).
Key techniques
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Common mistakes
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