insight
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- Joined
- Aug 24, 2006
- Messages
- 8,384
This is the review for the mystery cigar gifted to me by stevehawk in the blind PIF. Now I had decided I was going to smoke this tonight because my wife and 7 month old son have both caught a cold in the last two days and I have a feeling I am not far behind. However, the cigar gods felt like toying with me tonight.
So I started by giving the cigar a closer look and preparing to take some pictures only to find the digital camera battery was dead. I threw it on the charger for a half hour or so and set the cigar on my desk. As I am reaching for the camera to put the battery back in I knock over a desktop picture frame which conveniently lands on the cigar !@$!%!@%# Oh no! The wrapper is torn near the cap, this might pose a problem!
The good side- A very nice maduro churchill. The cigar is veiny and oily, but not excessively so.
The bad side: The tear in the wrapper is big enough to have loosened a good portion of the wrapper. I decide to use my punch instead of the xikar in hopes of minimizing the damage but ~2 inches of wrapper near the cap flake off :angry:
Not to be deterred from my mission I head outside to torch this baby up, wrapper problems be damned! The prelight draw is very smooth and doesn't seem to be drastically affected by my idiocy at this point. I start to toast the foot and my colibri runs out of fluid. Lets try again! I get the cigar lit and ease into the first third.
The burn is remarkably even and consistent, with a thick white ash. The first third starts off fairly mild, with a slightly sweet nutty flavor. After a couple of inches I exhale a bit through the nose and detect some hints of coffee. The cigar tastes familiar at this point, and I am pretty sure it is Dominican. At about this point the ash falls off and the cigar switches gears a bit. The spicyness picks up but the smoke stays very smooth.
A bit into the second third, the wrapper tries to quit on me but I'm not having it. I tighten it up and hold it in place while I move along. The coffee flavor returns and is here to stay. Unfortunately as the cigar approaches the last third the remaining wrapper falls apart and I have to put it down (and it had already been going 1 1/2 hours!). The picture of the binder minus wrapper came out blurry but I am sure everyone can imagine what it looks like.
So I go back inside and open up the extremely well wrapped enevelope to find:
I have had toranos before but never this type or this vitola. Despite the unfortunate problem with the wrapper this was a really enjoyable cigar. I will definitely try another one and will do my best not to drop anything on it :blush: Thanks for the chance to try this out Steve
So I started by giving the cigar a closer look and preparing to take some pictures only to find the digital camera battery was dead. I threw it on the charger for a half hour or so and set the cigar on my desk. As I am reaching for the camera to put the battery back in I knock over a desktop picture frame which conveniently lands on the cigar !@$!%!@%# Oh no! The wrapper is torn near the cap, this might pose a problem!
The good side- A very nice maduro churchill. The cigar is veiny and oily, but not excessively so.
The bad side: The tear in the wrapper is big enough to have loosened a good portion of the wrapper. I decide to use my punch instead of the xikar in hopes of minimizing the damage but ~2 inches of wrapper near the cap flake off :angry:
Not to be deterred from my mission I head outside to torch this baby up, wrapper problems be damned! The prelight draw is very smooth and doesn't seem to be drastically affected by my idiocy at this point. I start to toast the foot and my colibri runs out of fluid. Lets try again! I get the cigar lit and ease into the first third.
The burn is remarkably even and consistent, with a thick white ash. The first third starts off fairly mild, with a slightly sweet nutty flavor. After a couple of inches I exhale a bit through the nose and detect some hints of coffee. The cigar tastes familiar at this point, and I am pretty sure it is Dominican. At about this point the ash falls off and the cigar switches gears a bit. The spicyness picks up but the smoke stays very smooth.
A bit into the second third, the wrapper tries to quit on me but I'm not having it. I tighten it up and hold it in place while I move along. The coffee flavor returns and is here to stay. Unfortunately as the cigar approaches the last third the remaining wrapper falls apart and I have to put it down (and it had already been going 1 1/2 hours!). The picture of the binder minus wrapper came out blurry but I am sure everyone can imagine what it looks like.
So I go back inside and open up the extremely well wrapped enevelope to find:
I have had toranos before but never this type or this vitola. Despite the unfortunate problem with the wrapper this was a really enjoyable cigar. I will definitely try another one and will do my best not to drop anything on it :blush: Thanks for the chance to try this out Steve