Cigar Review: Room 101 Ichiban Maduro Corona

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Appearance: 6.25×44 Corona. Medium brown color on the wrapper, slight sheen, a few veins. Evenly packed, medium dense. The wrapper has a sweet aroma, I’m reminded of fresh popcorn. Taste is salt and pepper. Looks good.

Smoking: Lots of smoke, good burn line all the way down, draw perfect for me — I like it on the light side with only a slight resistance. Enough to remind you you’re not just breathing through a wide straw. Smoke time was 90 minutes, this is a slow smoking cigar.

Flavors: Light cedar, some pepper. I taste significant sweetness here, balsa incense, some sweet wood or leather, some warm cinnamon-like spice, brown sugar. I should note here that I am pairing this cigar with Mocambo 20, reviewed here, a rich rum with a lot of effect on a cigar. There is also some burnt vegetal flavor in there one of the things that makes this smoke different from my Room 101 favorite the Namakubi. In the second half, the leather comes forward while the brown sugar and pepper dial back. Some minty hint comes and goes. As the cigar gets to the nub the pepper comes forward again but everything else, a little muted, is still there!

These are good, highly recommended. I think the Namakubi is a little less expensive, around $8 compared to near $9 for the Ichiban but these prices vary a bit by vendor and more by vitola so look around. I think the Namakubi is sweeter and richer in flavor, but the Ichiban has those complex roasted vegetable and char flavors that the Namakubi lacks. Your palate might easily favor the Ichiban! Either choice will be a good cigar experience.

Cigar Review: Asylum Lobotomy

scrapbook Asylum Lobotomy Petit-corona (4.25″x44) seems to be a Famous Smoke exclusive. There are a few vitolas, but these little babies are by far the smallest and they are tiny indeed, like my present favorite the Room 101 Ecuador petit-corona (see picture)! But it’s a very different cigar!

A Nicaraguan puro with Habano Maduro wrapper and Nicaraguan binder and fillers (otherwise unspecified). It looks real nice. Smooth dark wrapper, slightly oily, not densely packed but not loose either. Feels good with no aparent soft spots. The wrapper aroma is manure and barnyard, very rich. On the cold draw, I got little, but the wrapper is noticibly salty.

Smoking was good. Lots of smoke, perfect draw all the way along. I had to correct the burn a few times, but then I am a “serial corrector”. Oddly though, it did go out a couple of times and I didn’t think I was smoking too slowly. This being the first of these I’ve smoked, and they are fresh having only just been released in February 2016, I’ll see how others go in this.

lobotomynoruler Flavors… Well, if you like pepper bombs, you will love this cigar. From first to last, there is lots of pepper on the tongue and retrohale. It can get so bright that it sometimes tastes like there is a little lemmon peel in there once in a while. Otherwise the first half of the cigar has vegetal, barnyard notes, burnt wood, maybe cedar. As the cigar slips into the second half some sweetness comes in. Sometimes I sense nut, or flowers, roasted vegetables and maybe something like hops. One of the nice things this cigar does is transition from more burnt to sweet, but all sorts of flavor notes come and go adding to the layers here. Throughout it all there is the pepper. Every flavor seems to dance on the pepper but the pepper doesn’t mask the other flavors, instead I think it pushes everything else along. A very interesting blend!

Prices on these are very reasonable especially for the quality of the cigars. These petit-corona bundles of 20 come out to only $3.90/stick. Amazing!

Cigar Review: Asylum Nyctophilia

20160120_131410-2I’m smoking an Asylum Nyctophilia TAA cigar from Tampa Humidor. This is an amazing smoke for $5.50! Supposedly this “all maduro” cigar sports a Mexican San Andres maduro wrapper, with all maduro Nicaraguan binder and fillers (otherwise unspecified). I’ve smoked a half dozen of these now, the experience is pretty consistent.

20160120_134144-2On the wrapper and foot I sense rich organic dirt, manure, barn yard, and a little floral perfume. The wrapper is dark oscuro-chocolate in color, mostly smooth, a few veins, and a little oily. It looks beautiful. Well packed there aren’t any soft spots. Straight cut, perfect draw.

20160120_140049First flavors include some white pepper, and dark earths, cedar, burnt sugar, and some warm spice. Coffee and semi-sweet chocolate notes go in and out. Burn stays near perfect, the draw is just right, and there is lots of creamy smoke. In the second third there is a little more pepper, sometimes spearment, leather, and burning wood like the sweet smells of a home fire place. In the last third I sense something like wintergreen (flowers?), more pepper (but never too much), less sweetness, chocolate disappears, and something like heavily roasted vegetables. Lots of flavor layers here changing throughout the cigar. Even at the last half inch there was both sweetness and other flavors. The cigar never seems to go beyond the medium side of medium-full in nicotine strength. Really, this is a very well balanced cigar.

20160120_142711-2I haven’t tried one of these early in the day with coffee, but I suspect it would be a good pairing. I’ve paired these with a number of rums. The pictures show Gosling’s Black Seal, but both Mocambo 20 and Pampero Anniversario R. E. are better with this stick.

I understand that these are something of a special release for 2015 only, but there are still boxes of these to be found. If you like really rich darkly flavored cigars, you will enjoy this one.

 

LEAF by Oscar Cigar Review

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Those of you who have not seen one of these cigars are in for a treat. Each stick is individually wrapped, not in plastic, but in tobacco leaf, “the LEAF’s” signature gimmick, and it’s a good one! The leaf (or leaves, there’s often two on my sticks) are pliable, moist, and protect the cigars. They smell great too. My 20 lanceros (7″x38) came in a tight bundle, not a box. The bundle wrapped (4×5) in their own cigar leaves bound with a soft and thick paper band of the same material that bands the individual leaf-wrappers and the cigars themselves. The whole effect from bound bundle to the cigar is much like a multi-wrapped Christmas present in our favorite kind of paper — cigar leaf! The binder and filler are Honduran, while the lanceros come in four wrappers, Honduran Connecticut, Nicaraguan Jalapa Maduro, Honduran Corojo or Ecuadorian Sumatra. My bundle is the last of these. Love that Sumatra wrapper!

After removing the outer wrapping leaves the cigar is knarly! There are lumps and bumps here and there a softer spot on some of the cigars but not all. A cigar gets no points off for being rough looking, I don’t mind. Tell the truth the rough look is appealing to me. Perhaps the filler has a texture that is hard to work with, or the roller (torcedor) is a person who who has not yet mastered the craft but is trying hard and stretching his skills to do so! I admire that person whomever she or he may be. A lancero is hard to roll. Rough looking or not, uneven packing has to ding a review on construction grounds, but I’ve smoked 8 of the 20 in the bundle and only three had noticable unevenness besides right at the foot where they were all a tad soft. But remember this was a bundle not a box. Harder to protect a bundle and lanceros are a bit delicate. Easy to imagine the feet getting a little too pressed in shipment.

The big construction points for come down to how the stick smokes. Of the 8 I’ve smoked one was pretty plugged and another other plugged up here and there throughout the smoke. Luckily I have a tool and both cigars were fixable. Yes, I boast a 7″ draw tool! The remaining 6 cigars, including the one I’m smoking now, had a perfect draw for me. Just a little more than the slight resistance I look for in a robusto or even a corona. Perfect “tightness” for a lancero. To me the draw, and whether a good draw stays consistent throughout the smoke, are the two most important “construction” features of any cigar. Next is how much smoke gets produced. All of these have been very good smoke producers. A nice creamy smoke too, not at all harsh.

Most of these sticks hit some point, some softer spot (noticible or not) and just went out. But lanceros are the easiest cigars to relight! This construction-related issue is not really a problem here. The burn-line stayed pretty even on all but the plugged sticks. Ash hangs around for about an inch. When the draw was good (6 out of 8 so far), it remained consistent throughout the smoke! That’s an accomplishment in a lancero! One more thing. The wrapper leaf did not split, crack, or unravel anywhere on any of the smokes so far, nor did they arrive damaged in any way though unprotected by a box. I suspect the moisture and cushining effect of the outer leaf-wrappers contributed something to this.

If the cigar smokes well (draw, smoke, etc) then the flavor is what makes or breaks it. These sticks are tasty. Roasted nut, brown sugar, sweet woodiness, maybe leather. There are other flavors I’m not quite identifying but they come and go. You catch a hit of flowers sometimes and nutmeg. Much of the flavor is in the retrohale, but this cigar has an easy nose. There doesn’t seem to be much pepper until the last two inches or so when it comes up on you. Of course much of this might be the result of my pairing experiments and so my rum adled brain!

Actually I’ve paired half of these with coffee in the morning. Everything works with coffee. These are on the mild side of mild-to-medium until the last third and so a great morning smoke. The other half I’ve paired with various rums of my present collection and the one that works best seems to be the Barbancourt 5 star, a light amber-colored rum whose mild sweetness and fruity but subtle profile seems to let the full range of cigar flavors shine through.

For me the cigar stays tasty all the way down to the last inch. Spices and sweet woodiness emerge here and there in the retrohale all the way down. It never gets stronger than medium, but being a long cigar it can still have an effect. It has enough flavor all the way along to be smokable any time of the day. A few seemed to smoke pretty fast for a lancero lasting just over an hour, but as I smoke more of them I see they go almost an hour and thirty, about average for a lancero for me. Every individual cigar has its own character. Physically speaking, the way they smoke, these vary more than most others I know, but everyone of them delivers the same smooth and sweet flavors. There is a lot here to recommend. Would I buy these again? This is my first venture into LEAF by Oscar because they normally are too expensive for me in my presently semi-retired state. But they are easily worth their standard prices and I won’t hesitate to snap up a deal on these when I see them.

Over-all construction grade: A-
Over-all flavor grade: A+

Blanco 9 Cigar Review

PhotoGrid_1446426046071Seeing a review of these (a different vitola) on #iRobusto #mitmcigar a couple of weeks ago (Episode 28. October 18, 2015) I thought I’d give them a try. I bought a box (30 count) of Blanco 9 lanceros for about $6/stick. The cigar is made by Los Blancos of Esteli Nicaragua.

I’ve had two of these now. This one I’m reviewing is paired with orange pekoe (black, unsweetened) tea as I didn’t feel like rum this afternoon. I paired the first one with Mocambo 20, a good rum with lots of cigars but not this one. At least I didn’t notice much about the cigar flavors through the rum. The tea is much better with this stick.

Pre-light: Don’t get much off the foot, but the wrapper (Nicaraguan Corjo) has a heady aroma of fresh hay, flowers and a little barnyard. Very nice! Not much on the cold draw but a little salt

Construction: Very good! Evenly packed, beautiful wrapper, draw excellent on the first, but a little tight for me on the second, burn line requires minor correction a few times (but I’m obsessive), lots of nice smoke, even the stick with the tight draw! These smoke very slow. The first lasted 90 minutes, and the second not quite that long. I had to use my draw tool once about 2″ in on the second stick — tricky with a lancero. The draw got a little too tight and the smoke output dropped. The cigar actually went out. I love how easy it is to relight a lancero though! Was fine through the rest of the smoke.

Taste: The flavors are of sweet wood and cloves, maybe a little cinnamon. There is pepper. Every once in a while I get a hint of earth, and brown sugar behind the wood and the aroma has a hint of pipe tobacco. There’s something like mint in there once in a while too. Moving into the second half of the cigar the sweet wood and baking spices fade back a bit while the mint comes forward, and the pepper remains. Everything is still present but what dominates changes. The cigar retains its flavors at least down to the last inch which is about as far as I can smoke it. The #mitmcigar crew said this was a strong cigar and they’re right! I got dizzy crossing into the last inch of both cigars!

Overall I’d say these are pretty good but not great. There are flavors and I enjoyed them. They even change a bit during the smoke and best of all, there is still something to be tasted down to the last inch. I like the lancero format. If the rest of the sticks turn out like the first (good draw throughout) rather than the second. I’ll enjoy the box at least. Are they worth $6+/stick? I think there are some better sticks around at the price (even below), but that is just my palate. They are at least as good as many cigars available in that price range today that I’ve smoked, so yes, it’s a fair price.