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64 Forty Five Ten on Main The Hunt wallpaper, $14 per yard. F or those of us who live and breathe the artist- laden Colonial town of San Miguel de Allende, we have a new place to taste. The petite and altogether charming Casa Dragones Tasting Room in the heart of town packs plenty of design punch, along with the premium, silky-smooth tequila itself, produced 350 miles away in Jalisco. The story behind Casa Dragones has garnered signifi cant attention, not just for its top-tier tequila, but for the enigmatic female force who is the soul of the brand, co- founder and CEO Bertha González Nieves. She's the fi rst-ever female tequila master distiller in a male-dominated industry, who in just eight years has made Casa Dragones one of the world's most highly prized fi ne spirits, ringing up at $75 and $285 a bottle. During the debut of the Tasting Room, her eyes are wide with pride. "Passion is the fuel that drives you to focus," she says. "When you have passion, it's so strong and power- ful it takes over. In our case, the journey of craftsmanship is what drives us forward." The diminutive new Tasting Room, designed by New York fi rm Meyer Davis, seats six, and its shape takes inspiration from the Casa Dragones tequila bottle. Mexico City designer Gloria Cortina had 4,000 obsidian tiles — a stone prevalent in volcano-rich Mexico and in the agave fi elds where Casa Dragones is produced — hand- cut and polished by Mexican craftsmen, to line the walls and barrel-vault ceiling. The rest of the details, from the concrete fl oor tiles sourced in San Miguel to light fi xtures designed by Mexican artisans, all play into Nieves' homage to Mexican craftsmanship. "You fi nd work all over our country that you no longer fi nd, really, anywhere in the world," she says. Despite the Tasting Room's surreal beauty, the star is Casa Dragones, available for sipping in two variations: aged Joven and good-for-mixing Blanco. Mixologists (Jim Meehan of PDT, Dave Arnold of Booker and Dax, and Rael Petit of Mulberry Project) conduct short-term residencies, and the room can be reserved for private tastings. "I'm able to translate the craft behind the process of producing our tequila and create a place for people to enjoy one glass or one cocktail," Nieves says. "That's what I'm proud of." Reservations and information concierge@casadragones.com. Libertine Spring/Summer 2017 Johnson Hartig in his Los Angeles studio BY CHRISTINA GEYER A SLIP OF A PLACE IN SAN MIGUEL Casa Dragones co-founder Bertha González Nieves takes us on a spin through her diminuto new Tasting Room. The historic Casa Dragones stable- turned-house in San Miguel Casa Dragones Tasting Room The signature blue facade