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Anejo Shark

Macion Grey

the Libertine
Joined
Mar 2, 2008
Messages
1,374
I realise what I am about to say a lot of my fellow CPers are going to find sacrilegious: I don't like the Anejo Shark. Let me start at the beginning.

The Shark is rolled in a rather novel way, with a very square foot tucked into a pyramid vitola. Pre-light had suggestions of the very off-putting flavour that would plague me during the whole experience: Dirt. Not the all too familiar damp earthy tones we enjoy in a lot of our favourites. Dirt. Dry, acrid and sour. Before you jump down my throat and say 'Hey, Mac... Clearly you have poor storage conditions.' Wrong, astute reader. You would be incorrect in that assumption. This cigar has been sitting in a Heartfelt regulated 65% for a good year now, inside my humidor with an excellent seal and full of Habanos for company.

Curious more than put off, I proceeded to carefully light the foot with my Xikar, after first cutting the head with my Palio (tools were fine for the job, no fault there). The first inch was smooth and very Fuente, but even after the third inch was passed the burn began to get rather uneven. The ash was incredibly, incredibly flaky and had a rather distracting habit of falling all over my clothes. I had to relight twice, as well as use my draw poker halfway through.

Now, for the flavour. To put it simply, it tasted as if someone had dropped their pepper steak on the dusty, dusty ground, and decided to attempt to wash the dirt off with brandy. I have enjoyed the steaky Fuente profile before with a Hemmingway Short Story, but this was a perverted, sour version of that. When I used the draw poker as previously mentioned, I was greeted with the foulest, most acrid smoke I have ever experienced... horrid. There were brief moments of glory when the cigar managed to pull itself together, but it was not enough.

This has to be a cigar you either love or hate. I hated it. It seemed rather confused about it's identity, in my opinion.




Edited spelling.
 
Sorry to hear that you didn't enjoyed it at all.
I read only good things about this cigar,maybe it just a bed one?
Try another one and see how it goes...
 
One truism I learned a long time ago... never judge a cigar by one, or even a half dozen specimens. You very well may just not like this cigar, but the reason I state that is the taste profile you mention in your review doesn't sound like the typical Añejo taste profile.

I remember some years ago, a CPer finally got ahold of some Opus, after seeking them for some time. He smoked it, said it was horrible, and wrote a rather confusing taste profile. So he send me one of the cigars, which he obtained from some online site, and the cigars had undoubtedly changed hands a number of times.

I smoked the Opus... and it was real... but he was right, it tasted horrible. So I sent him some Opus I have, and to him it tasted nothing like the cigar he panned... and he very much enjoyed it.

Anyway, I think that no matter where the cigar is from, it's always best to have a few of 'em before dismissing a line of cigars... and make sure that you're obtaining said cigars from a source with known-good provenance. Sometimes on these cigar boards, cigars change hands so many times... and lord knows if everyone down that chain kept them in good condition.

"Sour" and "dirt" is just not what an Añejo should taste like.
 
You said it was there for about a year....read this thread...

http://www.cigarpass.com/forums/index.php?...41651&st=20

Apparently the sharks from last years release might have had some storage issues at the factory...and a lot of cigars had mold on the foots and hidden inside of them.

I'd give another a try from a different year.

Interesting. This is very likely to be one of the bad batch. I couldn't see any mould on the foot, but it certainly reminded me of when I had a poorly stores RASS.
 
This is pure speculation but worth considering. Did maybe have a tar issue. I find that if you do not cut enough of the head on torpedo shape cigars that tar may build up. Some where they bubble to the top while other times just around the tip enough for the tongue to pick up. As Moki said, don't judge your taste profile of a cigar with one sample.

But then again, if you REAL LY do not want your sharks...I eat dirt alot :laugh: :whistling:
 
This is pure speculation but worth considering. Did maybe have a tar issue. I find that if you do not cut enough of the head on torpedo shape cigars that tar may build up. Some where they bubble to the top while other times just around the tip enough for the tongue to pick up. As Moki said, don't judge your taste profile of a cigar with one sample.

But then again, if you REAL LY do not want your sharks...I eat dirt alot :laugh: :whistling:

Certainly wasn't tar. I am familiar with that flavour spoiler. (Gurkha anyone?).

While I am familiar with the concept of reserving judgement until you have smoked a box, I personally don't care for that method at all. I forget what cigar manufacturer said it, but I think it rings very true: 'When you are trying to attract new customers, you are only as good as your worst cigar.'

Honestly, are you really going to smoke even 10 of each cigar out there before you make your mind up? Not me. If I don't like the first one or two (I usually get two to measure them against each other), I am not going to be motivated to keep trying them. It seems foolish to judge otherwise.

If you buy a particular product even once and do not find it to your liking, how many times would you go back and purchase another? Usually never. Cigars are a product like any other, and I am not willing to spend a lot of money buying bulk (ie boxes) of something I may not like. If I am not won over by the second sample smoke, forget it.
 
Sounds like the taste of mold. If you have another from the same batch, autopsy! It's not like you are very likely to smoke it anyway, and all of your other sticks are at risk.

Of the Anejos, the shark is my least favorite, but because it is subtly different from the rest of the line in a way I don't care for.
 
"Sour" and "dirt" is just not what an Añejo should taste like.
This is for sure. I agree with the moldy comments; even though your storage sounds on the mark, if the poor stick had issues before it got to you, there's no way to "un-do" previously bad conditions. What you are describing to me sounds like a moldy stick.

Not sure about my shark supply but if you'd PM me your shipping address I'm sure I can find a couple of nicely aged Anejos for you to try that I can assure you aren't moldy..... :whistling:

Regards - B.B.S.
 
This is pure speculation but worth considering. Did maybe have a tar issue. I find that if you do not cut enough of the head on torpedo shape cigars that tar may build up. Some where they bubble to the top while other times just around the tip enough for the tongue to pick up. As Moki said, don't judge your taste profile of a cigar with one sample.

But then again, if you REAL LY do not want your sharks...I eat dirt alot :laugh: :whistling:

What Joe meant to say was that he eats MY dirt a lot. I agree with what everyone has said here, but on top of it I will add that about a year ago, I considered myself one of the lucky few who did not like Anejos. I found them to be too strong. Now I would watch a bus full of our nation's elderly slowly sink to the bottom of a lake just to get a 5er of 77s.
 
I'm going to throw something out there that is earth-shattering, to say the least. Maybe, just maybe, it was a bad cigar. :0 I know, I know, it is just too difficult to comprehend that Fuente would make a bad cigar. They never rush the hands of time remember? But, maybe the cigar was a "dud."

This is all in jest, there are a number of reasons why it could've sucked, including the fact that it was just a shitty cigar. Try another one sometime and see if it changes your mind. If you get two bad ones, then it probably isn't a cigar for you.
 
You said it was there for about a year....read this thread...

http://www.cigarpass.com/forums/index.php?...41651&st=20

Apparently the sharks from last years release might have had some storage issues at the factory...and a lot of cigars had mold on the foots and hidden inside of them.

I'd give another a try from a different year.

That's odd. An owner from one of the B&M's I go to said that there weren't any Sharks rolled last year because the only person that rolls them up and got married and left Fuente (the nerve). It is possible that he was misinformed, though. I do remember the mold issues, though.
 
I've had some awful anjeos and I've had some really great ones as well.

Andrew said it best. Never judge a whole line of cigars by the first one you have smoked.
 
That was some nasty smoke. Thank God, I have NEVER had that experience with an Anejo. This cigar is one of my top five smokes, but the Shark is not my favorite vitola for this cigar. PM me your addy and I'll send you a little package with a couple of different Anejos to try.
 
Louie, where you talking to me? :blush: :whistling: j/k Bro. Happy Holidays and I will see you at the QSH IV

Best,

Joe
 
Honestly, are you really going to smoke even 10 of each cigar out there before you make your mind up? Not me. If I don't like the first one or two (I usually get two to measure them against each other), I am not going to be motivated to keep trying them. It seems foolish to judge otherwise.

Honestly, yes, I've done that in several cases.

The cases where I have had a number of a particular cigar after an initial bad experience have been the result of people I know who have similar tastes to mine liking said cigars. In some cases, they've been right, and I just got a bad cigar for the initial tasting -- in others, I just haven't liked the cigar.

Any hand made product that is so highly dependent on proper storage for it to taste as it should requires a bit of flexibility, if your goal is to evaluate a particular marca to see if it suits yours tastes.
 
Sounds like poor construction was an issue. It happens. The sourness was most likely tar build up due to the bunch being too tight. I've noticed this in a few anejos.
 
I wasn't a big fan of Anejos at first, but I've grown a taste for them. I agree with Moki though. The first CAO Criollo I has was EXCELLENT, but every one I've had ever since has been crap. I think cigars can be very hit or miss. Also, I would suggest different sizes. I enjoy the larger sized Anejos over the smaller ones. YMMV
 
Never had a bad Shark before thankfully as I love this vitola. The second favorite Anejo is the #55 for me. I have several aged Anejo Sharks from '03-'05 and they are smoking wonderful now. I don't believe I have smoked any from the previous years batch that had a lot of reported mold issues. I suggest trying an older or a current release as I have smoked 2 of those and they have had the same great flavor profile as always. If you still don't like you can certainly send them to me and I'll hook you up.
 
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