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H. Upmann Belvedere

Black Plague

New Member
Joined
May 11, 2006
Messages
539
I've been working second shift this whole week. Coming back at 12:00 AM, I was suddenly struck with the desire to have a little midnight breakfast. So I whipped a quick batch of little silver dollar pancakes, a few slices of bacon, both topped with some honey maple syrup, and a piping hot cup of good coffee. After enjoying my late night breakfast, it was time to lay back on the couch with my coffee and light up a nice cigar to top the night off.

H. Upmann
Belvedere
5 x 39 Belvedere


Prelight: This cigar possessed the old school Cuban mechanizado look. A roughly-applied conical cap, a mottled and wrinkly colorado maduro wrapper, stained with oil, having an ever so slight taper towards the foot. Box-pressed. This cigar must've been especially oil younger in life, owing to the dark stains on the wrapper and on the gold and red H. Upmann band. The cigar cut very nicely and felt firm. Prelight draws hinted at toasted tobacco, peppery spice, and a slight minty sensation.

Beverage: Medium-roasted Ethiopian Harrar coffee

Flavor: The flavor profile was pretty consistent from light to the final draw. Starting off, the flavor was a medley of exotic wood, dry toasted tobacco, bitter sensations on the throat of cocoa and coffee, spicy peppers on the tongue, a very earthy finish and a strong mid-palate flavor like ripe black olives.

The aroma was warm and spicy, hinting at the olives also present in the taste. At one-third, the finish grew increasingly woody, black pepper came forward, a sweet and spicy flavor developed on the tongue, a very subtle saltiness at times, crowned off by nuances of the defining H. Upmann "musty" flavor, but this was not nearly as dominant a dimension as in other H. Upmann models. The smoke left a very long, lingering spice on the finish, with a tinge of bitter herbs.

In the final third, the smoke grew increasingly spicier. The finish developed nuances of cinnamon powder and dark espresso. Never grew hot, bitter, or tarry.

Construction: The ash was an eye-pleasing powdery white, streaked with dark stripes of black. The burn started off a bad runner on one side, but behaved itself after a corrective touch from the lighter. The draw started a tad on the tight side, but gradually loosened to more acceptable resistance level.

Summary: A nice little cigar to relax to. I have no idea what the age of this one was, but I'd venture to guess it must have five or more years on it, judging by the oil stains on the band and the complexity of flavor. Not really a great cigar, but a good one for the purpose I chose it for: just a short smoke to relax to while watching TV. Have a Happy New Year, guys, and a good cigar! :)
 
Nice review, BP. I've heard good things about this little machine-made and your very readable post confirms that. :thumbs:

Wilkey
 
Very interesting about your note of black olives. I smoked a MM H. Upmann some time ago- can't remember which vitola and noticed an oily type of background note, not unlike olives. So far I haven't picked this up in any other cigar or marca. H. Upmann has some very good MM smokes in their line. Nice review.
 
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