Padron Series 4000 (Comparison Review)

Padron Series 4000 Natural & Maduro

Skip the fluff and jump straight to the review!

Cigar Stats
Brand Owner: Padron Cigars, Inc. – Miami, FL (website)
(distributor operates under the name Piloto Cigars, Inc.)
Factory: Tabacos Cubanica, S.A. – Esteli, Nicaragua
Factory: Tabacos Centroamericanos, S.A. – Danli, Honduras
Model/Vitola: Padron Series 4000 (Natural and Maduro)
Size: 6.5 x 54 (corona gorda)
Wrapper: Nicaragua
Filler & Binder: Nicaragua
Body: Medium to Full
Strength: Medium to Full
Average Retail: $6.77 USD
Cigar Insider/Aficionado Ratings: Low 90s

Fourteen other vitola sizes are available in the traditional Padron Series along with one which was recently discontinued.

Frontmark

Length x Ring

Shape

2000

5.0 x 50

robusto

3000

5.5 x 52

robusto

4000

6.5 x 54

toro

5000

5.5 x 56

robusto

6000

5.5 x 52

torpedo

7000

6.25 x 60

toro

Ambassador

6.875 x 42

lonsdale

Chicos

5.5 x 36

discontinued

Churchill

6.875 x 46

churchill

Corticos

4.25 x 35

short panatela

Delicias

4.875 x 46

corona extra

Executive

7.5 x 50

double corona

Londres

5.5 x 42

corona

Magnum

9.0 x 50

giant

Palmas

6.25 x 42

long corona

Panetela

6.875 x 36

panetela

All sizes come in lacquered cedar boxes of 26, packaged with cellophane sleeves on individual cigars. Many vendors list a box size of 25. I am not entirely sure why that is. It may be that Padron changed the box count since the initial release. The Corticos are the exception packaged in boxes of 30 or tins of 6.

From the Padron website …..Jose Padron, Sr.

“We deliver only the finest, handmade, complex cigars with the flavor of the Cuban heritage out of which the Padron recipe was born. Our primary mission is the exceptional quality of our product, not the quantity produced. As a vertically integrated, family-owned company, we pay personal attention to every detail throughout all steps of our tobacco growing and cigar manufacturing process. Because we strive to give you, the smoker, the confidence that each cigar is the same … perfect.”

If you are interested in more KOTF info on the Padron Story, you can read it here.

The Keepers of the Flame Padron Series Roundup

Cigarfan & Lucky7

This comparison review is one in a series on the original Padron line of cigars. When we have completed reviews on the entire line, a vertical tasting for each wrapper will be published. Each review will be an amalgam opinion of cigarfan and lucky7 along with that of the guest reviewer(s). Our guest reviewers for this vitola are:

Inspector - Cigar Inspector

GeorgeE - The Stogie Guys

Padron Series 4000 – Natural and Maduro

cigarfan's Padron Series 4000 - Natural (left) & Maduro (right) - Actual SizeThe first vitola roped in for the Padron Roundup was the mammoth 7000 toro, so it seems fitting that the last is the slightly smaller 4000 toro. In terms of cylinder volume, the 7000 is the largest in the line, followed by the Magnum (which is almost equal to the 7000) and then the 4000.

At 6.5 inches by a 54 ring gauge, the 4000 is a hefty stick that takes between 90 minutes to two hours to smoke at a leisurely pace. As George E. says, “You might wonder at first whether it came out of a humidor or a box of Lincoln Logs… this Nicaraguan puro is not just a smoke, it’s a commitment.”

Natural

The Padron 4000 Natural has a dark, relatively consistent milk chocolate brown wrapper that is barely distinguishable from the Maduro 4000. There are a few small veins, but by comparison with other natural wrappers in the line, this one is more refined. The roll is a little lumpy. The single caps are applied well in a flat “Cuban” manner. Some samples showed the ghost of a box press, while others were completely round.

Padron Series Band - Front & Back

Two of our reviewers had comments about the band, something we haven’t really touched on during the course of the Roundup. The band Padron uses for the classic line is a very simple, fairly small, two toned image of the island of Cuba embraced by two branches or leaves, over which is the name Padron. Inspector describes it as “ a minimalistic band that makes me think of Montecristos.” And George points out an additional attribute:

A small point, perhaps, but one that I think speaks to Padron’s attention to detail is that the band popped easily off the cigar — a pleasantly common occurrence with Padrons.

George noted that the prelight scent on the wrapper of this cigar was “a mouth-watering and inviting mint,” while lucky7 reported “very light barnyard” on the wrapper and “slightly sweet tobacco” on the foot.

Inspector's Padron 4000 Foot - Maduro & Natural

Inspector remarked that it took “a real physical effort” to cut this cigar. Cigarfan experienced this as well when he botched the cut — he had to cut his first cigar twice when the first cut was too shallow. Inspector's Padron 4000 Natural - Wrapper DamageThis resulted in the wrapper at the head unraveling a bit after 20 minutes of smoking. He employed a punch on the second stick with much better results.

The draw on these varied from perfect (according to three reviewers) to loose on one sample.

Our reviewers were greeted by a spicy initial kick with a little harshness on the throat upon lighting up the 4000. Inspector noticed a “tingling sensation on the lips” while cigarfan and lucky7 found the familiar peppery flavors settling after a half-inch or so into earthy tobacco, toasted wood, and the first indications of cocoa. The aroma is woody with a touch of caramel. Inspector related that the first third included “considerable amounts of spice, mixed with tobacco flavors, cork oak, and strong tannins.” The finish at this point is short and dry.

The burn is pretty good; it wavers a little bit, but never strays too far from home. The 4000 produces a large volume of thick white smoke and a gray ash with black flecks. George credits the torcedor who rolled the cigar for the conical cinder it creates:

When I knocked the ash off I noticed a nice cone burn, which I often take as a sign of the torcedor placing tobacco correctly while rolling the cigar. The burning cone was consistent from beginning to end.

Inspector's Padron 4000 Natural Ash

Both Inspector and cigarfan noticed that the flavor starts to sharpen up a bit after the first third, but then evens out again. In Inspectors words, “the flavor first becomes very astringent then smoothes out.” After that, he tasted roasted coffee bean and a few sugary notes; lucky7 and cigarfan independently verified the coffee flavors.

Into the last third, the flavors get toastier and finally move into leathery territory. Lucky7 found that there was little transition here. In his words, the last third was “uneventful, unchanging,” while Padron 4000 Natural with quarter for comparisonInspector found increasing intensity of leathery flavors. Cigarfan thought the last section was inelegant and strong, but unmuddied.

George concludes:

Overall, I would say this was a strong cigar with relatively straightforward taste, primarily that of nice consistent tobacco. Though that was occasionally mixed with some light leather and wood, it was not a complex cigar. There was little change from start to finish, though it did seem to smooth out a bit in the final third.

Maduro

The appearance of the Maduro 4000 is almost identical to the Natural. The wrapper might be a little oilier and slightly rougher, but that’s all. The Maduro seems to be more tightly packed than the Natural, and our reviewers found that the draw was consequently a little tighter, but not problematic.

Inspector's Padron 4000 - Maduro & Natural

George and lucky7 reported prelight scents that are if not unusual, at least unexpected. Lucky7 found barnyard on the wrapper, but “fishy tobacco” on the foot. (And it’s not the first time: he found the same scent on the 5000 maduro. Which reminds me, I gotta tell lucky7 to stop storing his cigars in the tackle box.) And in George’s words,

The most remarkable — and consistent — feature of this mildly dark cigar was peanuts. I smelled them when I ran the wrapper beneath my nose, I noticed them on my tongue when I tested the prelight draw and I tasted them throughout the length smoke.

Of course, that’s how the song goes, isn’t it? “…Buy me some Padrons and Cracker Jacks / I don’t care if I never get back.”

Lucky7's Padron 4000 Maduro Ash with Grain Bumps

Inspector held his cards close and simply said that the prelight aroma was “sweeter and more pronounced” than the Natural. After fifteen vitolas in natural and fifteen more in maduro, cigarfan said he was tired of sniffing cigars and lit up his 4000 Maduro blind.

Like the majority of cigars in the classic Padron Series, this one starts up with a little bite and quickly settles after half an inch or so. Inspector said it was a “similar and perhaps a little bit more powerful beginning.” Cigarfan found an initial earthy flavor, followed by leather and pepper, but thought it was “not very maduro-like for the first inch.” Lucky7 remarked that there was “not quite as much sweetness on the nose as some of the other Padron Series Maduros, but it’s smooth with a small twang.”

After the initial bite, the 4000 settles into toasted wood and coffee flavors. Lucky7 also reported “notes of fruit (there are those raisins again)” and sweetened cocoa on the short, crisp finish.

Not to be outdone by reviewers with extraordinary olfactory discoveries, cigarfan noted a cereal-like tobacco flavor at the start of the second third. Flavor intensity increases at this point and brings with it earthy flavors and, as Inspector notes, a “typical maduro flavor profile with a lot of sweet, spicy and coffee aromas.”

Inspector's Padron 4000 Maduro Ash

Everyone seemed to agree that the Maduro did not burn as well as the Natural. Cigarfan found he had to correct the Maduro early on, as did lucky7; Inspector reported no problems with his, but George added that  “the burn line also was not as sharp on the Maduro.” Otherwise, George continued,

the burn displayed a similar cone to the Natural, but it flattened out at about the halfway point and remained that way to the end… Smoke production was full and thick, a great complement to the flavors that shifted throughout. The aroma as it swirled around my head was pleasant as well. I would rate the Maduro a medium-to-full bodied smoke, a tad lighter than its Natural sibling.

The final section of the 4000 Maduro is quite strong tasting, bringing bittersweet chocolate, char, and finally pepper to the table. Cigarfan thought it tasted like Connecticut broadleaf more than Nicaraguan Habano, while Inspector said that it was “definitely full-bodied. The spice dissipated to give way to cocoa undertones.” Lucky7 reported “plain tobacco with undertones of dark chocolate” and bitterness at the nub.

Lucky7's Padron 4000 Maduro Ash

And to conclude, let’s check with George in the peanut gallery:

The first few puffs generated a spicy undertone to the peanuts, with leather taking over about an inch into the cigar. The spice came back stronger and lasted another inch or so when I detected some cedar and leather again There was some bitterness — the unpleasant back-of-the-throat kind rather than the sometimes intriguing flat bitter taste — for a little while about halfway down. But that subsided as the peanuts returned. All in all, the cigar repaid attention with subtlety and intricacy.

Conclusion

Once again, our reviewers split down the line in terms of preference: everyone had complimentary things to say about both versions, but George and lucky7 favored the Maduro slightly, while Inspector and cigarfan chose the Natural.

In one corner, wearing brown trunks, the Natural scored points for balance and smoothness. In the opposite corner, also wearing brown trunks (with some darker streaks), the Maduro got votes for complexity and flavor. Inspector opined: “I prefer the Natural version, probably because it is more balanced and elegant than the Maduro which just tastes too ‘raw’.” George countered that “the taste of the Maduro was, for me, more satisfying than that of the Natural. It was generally smooth and complex.”

Cigarfan agreed with both of those statements, but found that the sheer brawn of the Maduro after the first half overpowered the flavor dividends it disbursed. The Natural, while not as complex as the Maduro, maintained its balance throughout the smoke and dispensed enough flavor to keep the party going for an hour and a half.

Lucky7 wraps it up:

One of the aspects of cigar smoking that I really enjoy and use as a discriminator is aroma (or nose as I like to call it.) Not the aroma in the room but rather my olfactory senses. These two cigars have got it. That wonderful aroma that I enjoy while smoking and think about when I’m not. Each vitola was easy going after the initial bite subsides and scrumptious for the first two-thirds. For slightly more than $4.00, I say you can’t go wrong.

I give a very slight edge to the Maduro in terms of preference but actually, I liked both quite a bit and will be spending time with the 4000 many times in the future.

Thanks to Inspector and, once again, to George E. for contributing their considered opinions to the Padron Roundup. Inspector is the founder and chief architect of Cigar Inspector, and George reports the news and writes reviews for The Stogie Guys.

And a final note of thanks to all of the fine folks from the blogs and forums who took part in the Padron Roundup. Your participation made this a truly balanced and — we hope — sincere evaluation. Coming up in a few weeks will be our vertical review of the entire Padron Series. We hope you’ll come back and let us know your thoughts.

“Don’t even talk about life without cigars.”

–José Orlando Padrón

 

… cigarfan & lucky7

Padron Series 2000 (Comparison Review)

Padron Series 2000 - Natural & Maduro

Skip the fluff and jump straight to the review!

Cigar Stats
Brand Owner: Padron Cigars, Inc. – Miami, FL (website)
(distributor operates under the name Piloto Cigars, Inc.)
Factory: Tabacos Cubanica, S.A. – Esteli, Nicaragua
Factory: Tabacos Centroamericanos, S.A. – Danli, Honduras
Model/Vitola: Padron Series 2000 (Natural and Maduro)
Size: 5 x 50 (robusto)
Wrapper: Nicaragua
Filler & Binder: Nicaragua
Body: Medium to Full
Strength: Medium to Full
Average Retail: $3.85 USD
Cigar Insider/Aficionado Ratings: Consistently high 80s

Fourteen other vitola sizes are available in the traditional Padron Series along with one which was recently discontinued.

Frontmark

Length x Ring

Shape

2000

5.0 x 50

robusto

3000

5.5 x 52

robusto

4000

6.5 x 54

toro

5000

5.5 x 56

robusto

6000

5.5 x 52

torpedo

7000

6.25 x 60

toro

Ambassador

6.875 x 42

lonsdale

Chicos

5.5 x 36

discontinued

Churchill

6.875 x 46

churchill

Corticos

4.25 x 35

short panatela

Delicias

4.875 x 46

corona extra

Executive

7.5 x 50

double corona

Londres

5.5 x 42

corona

Magnum

9.0 x 50

giant

Palmas

6.25 x 42

long corona

Panetela

6.875 x 36

panetela

All sizes come in lacquered cedar boxes of 26, packaged with cellophane sleeves on individual cigars. Many vendors list a box size of 25. I am not entirely sure why that is. It may be that Padron changed the box count since the initial release. The Corticos are the exception packaged in boxes of 30 or tins of 6.

From the Padron website …..Jose Padron, Sr.

“We deliver only the finest, handmade, complex cigars with the flavor of the Cuban heritage out of which the Padron recipe was born. Our primary mission is the exceptional quality of our product, not the quantity produced. As a vertically integrated, family-owned company, we pay personal attention to every detail throughout all steps of our tobacco growing and cigar manufacturing process. Because we strive to give you, the smoker, the confidence that each cigar is the same … perfect.”

If you are interested in more KOTF info on the Padron Story, you can read it here.

The Keepers of the Flame Padron Series Roundup

Cigarfan & Lucky7

This comparison review is one in a series on the original Padron line of cigars. When we have completed reviews on the entire line, a vertical tasting for each wrapper will be published. Each review will be an amalgam opinion of cigarfan and lucky7 along with that of the guest reviewer(s). Our guest reviewer for this vitola is:

TXMatt - Club Stogie

Padron Series 2000 – Natural and Maduro

Padron’s 2000 Maduro is arguably the most popular cigar in the Classic Series — it seems to be the most commonly available size on the shelves in the local cigar shops, and one of the most discussed cigars on the forums. Of all the vitolas, natural and maduro, reviewed at Top 25 Cigar, the 2000 maduro has the highest number of reviews, and with a cumulative rating of 8.3 it’s also one of the highest rated cigars in the Series. This is due in part to the popularity of the size. The standard 5 x 50 robusto is a nice size for a couple reasons: first, it’s short enough to smoke in a reasonable amount of time, and second, the large ring gauge allows for a large volume of cool smoke, a comfortable draw, Padron 2000 - Natural and Maduro - Actual Sizeand usually a well regulated burn. In the past year or so we’ve seen a nostalgic swing back to the thin cigar, but the market is still dominated by robustos, toros, torpedoes, and the like.

The “Thousands” series are all large ring gauge cigars, but the 2000 is Padron’s standard robusto contribution.

Natural

Padron’s 2000 natural wrapper is typical of the breed: rustic and veiny. The medium-brown wrapper is only slightly grainy and has a very dull sheen. Lucky7 noticed a small wrapper defect but said it didn’t affect the cigar’s performance. The caps are applied haphazardly: some are straight and well glued, others are loose. In most cases the roll is firm, though one sample appeared to be underfilled at the foot. And while the pack still feels a little lumpy in general, it’s above average by comparison to others in the line. It’s mildly box pressed. Matt remarked that “…this is a much better looking cigar than the maduro but still a “C minus” for appearance at best.

The prelight characteristics were unremarkable: compost and hay on the wrapper, and sweet tobacco on the cold draw.

The draw on the 2000 natural varied from perfect to slightly loose, and the burn line was straight for the most part. The accumulated ash was strong and medium gray in color with some dark striations and minimal flaking.

Most Padron cigars in this series start up with a peppery raspiness, but the 2000 natural was fairly gentle by comparison. Initially the power seems to be in the nose. As lucky7 says, “… with this kind of initial bite you may want to save the sinuses until you are a half inch in.” Matt noted pepper, wood and earth as initial flavors; lucky7 and cigarfan added leather to the list. Beyond this, lucky7 detected subtleties such as “notes of fruit, caramel and spice with hints of vanilla.” The finish at this point is short, dry and woody.

Lucky7's 2000 Natural Ash

The middle section becomes increasingly smooth and creamy and adds a little cocoa or coffee bean to the brew. The pepper subsides a bit, but doesn’t disappear completely, as Matt notes:

One third of the way through the pepper was still there but was muted; I really liked the fact that it remained. The cigar mellowed like the 2000 maduro and offered fewer complexities. Leather and nuts entered the mix, and wood notes were turned up a bit. I noticed some grassiness over what could be herbal/floral flavors.

The last third is marked by a body that grows from medium to full at the nub, continued woody flavors with some sweet elements, and a touch of earth. The finish has crossed the line to moderate in length and the aftertaste is slightly bitter with some char.

All of our reviewers really enjoyed the natural 2000, finding it an easy smoking, even tempered experience. This cigar seems to employ all of the flavors that we’ve come to expect from Padron with a minimal amount of harshness. It’s a solid woody smoke with leathery and sweet tobacco characteristics that make it an incredible value at around $2.50 per cigar (box price.)

Maduro

Padron 2000 Maduro Foot showing "squash press"It should be no surprise to hear that the Padron 2000 Maduro is lacking in the aesthetic department. Rugged, dark, veiny, and downright ugly were some of the adjectives employed to describe this popular favorite. The wrapper is oilier than the natural but less grainy than many of the other maduros in the line. Once again, some of the caps were loose and one sample appeared to be underfilled at the foot. The cigar is slightly box pressed (what lucky7 calls “squash pressed,” where the press is evident front to back only oriented by the band) and is firmly rolled.

The prelight scent is similar to the natural, but with an added sweetness on the wrapper and a hint of chocolate on the foot of the cigar. The draw is excellent with just the right amount of resistance.

Padron 2000 Maduro - Hole in the Wrapper

Immediately upon lighting up this robusto cigarfan was pleased to find the sweet nutty candied pecan-like flavor that he found in the Palmas and the Ambassador maduros, but in none of the other large ring gauge smokes. Lucky7 encountered a “base of sweet wood and leather with notes of bean, accompanied by an aroma of fruit (raisins) and toasty wood,” while Matt detected initial flavors of “pepper, coffee, bitter chocolate, earth and wood.

About a quarter of the way through, Matt’s cigar started to burn off kilter.

I corrected the burn by smoking it hot (a touchup wasn’t necessary.) I was impressed that the cigar didn’t punish my taste buds for smoking it hot; it got a bit stronger, but not bitter. The cigar produced copious amounts of smoke. I wish more cigars could produce such huge volumes. After taking each draw (which was near perfect) I really liked watching the wisps of blue and brown tinted smoke come off the foot, and the thick grey-white smoke continue to pour out the head.

Lucky7's 2000 Maduro Ash

Smoking our way into the middle section produced creamy smoke with more bean flavors — creamed coffee and cocoa — over a foundation of sweet wood and leather. The peppery flavors diminish and give way to some nice subtleties: Matt noted complex flavors like anise, nutmeg, and oak.

Lucky7's 2000 Maduro Ash with the "dreaded ridge"In the last section we noticed the flavors decline a bit into charred wood, leather, and at the end, burnt coffee. The finish lengthens into a peppery conclusion that finally capitulates with a bitter aftertaste.

Both Matt and lucky7 noted burn problems with the 2000 Maduro. While Matt burned through the problems without correcting, lucky7 had to touch up several times to encourage flame resistant parts of the wrapper to burn. He noted “… in the the last two inches, the ember kept burning under the wrap causing the dreaded ‘ridge’ which I find changes the flavor of the cigar significantly, and not for the better.”

Despite the burn problems and the anticlimactic last third, the maduro 2000 is still a great value. At a box price of $2.50 the first two thirds of the cigar are certainly worth enduring the troublesome burn.

Conclusion

With the Padron 2000 we have a case where the distinction between the maduro and natural cigar is much more apparent than we’ve seen in previous sizes. They are visually distinct as well as having discrete organoleptic qualities: the maduro is definitely sweeter, bolder, Padron 2000 Maduro with quarter for comparisonand richer in flavor than the natural, while the natural is milder with a far more subtle presentation.

Cigarfan preferred the natural to the maduro in this round, and surprisingly, Matt did too:

The natural wrapped version seemed less complex but the flavor was more enjoyable to me. It was notably “cleaner” which has been my preference of late. The pepper flavor remaining longer was also a big plus.

Lucky7 reflected on the robusto in general in his concluding remarks:

The robusto was my favorite size cigar until recently when I began dabbling in some smaller ring gauges. It comes in at about an hour on a regular basis and most often that is the perfect amount of time for me. It also allows the smoker to experience more nuances of the blend, in my opinion. Other than time spent, the 2000 didn’t do that for me. Although both were decent smokes, I found them ordinary and uneventful… Between the two, I found the Maduro tastier but probably won’t go back to either one if I can lay my hands on a 3000 for fifty cents more.

Matt sums it up for us:

These cigars have been longstanding benchmarks for me when trying new cigars; if a cigar costs more than four bucks it has to prove itself better than the X000 series for me to buy them again.

Thanks to TXMatt for giving us hand with the Padron 2000. If you’re a Club Stogie member you know that on the subjects of Pepin and Cheap Smokes, he knows whereof he speaks. And if you’re not a Club Stogie member, why not check out the jungle some time?

… cigarfan & lucky7

Padron Series Churchill (Comparison Review)

Padron Series Churchill - Natural and Maduro

Skip the fluff and jump straight to the review!

Cigar Stats
Brand Owner: Padron Cigars, Inc. – Miami, FL (website)
(distributor operates under the name Piloto Cigars, Inc.)
Factory: Tabacos Cubanica, S.A. – Esteli, Nicaragua
Factory: Tabacos Centroamericanos, S.A. – Danli, Honduras
Model/Vitola: Padron Series Churchill (Natural and Maduro)
Size: 6.875 x 46 (churchill)
Wrapper: Nicaragua
Filler & Binder: Nicaragua
Body: Medium to Full
Strength: Medium to Full
Average Retail: $4.69 USD
Cigar Insider/Aficionado Ratings: Consistently high 80s to low 90s

Fourteen other vitola sizes are available in the traditional Padron Series along with one which was recently discontinued.

Frontmark

Length x Ring

Shape

2000

5.0 x 50

robusto

3000

5.5 x 52

robusto

4000

6.5 x 54

toro

5000

5.5 x 56

robusto

6000

5.5 x 52

torpedo

7000

6.25 x 60

toro

Ambassador

6.875 x 42

lonsdale

Chicos

5.5 x 36

discontinued

Churchill

6.875 x 46

churchill

Corticos

4.25 x 35

short panatela

Delicias

4.875 x 46

corona extra

Executive

7.5 x 50

double corona

Londres

5.5 x 42

corona

Magnum

9.0 x 50

giant

Palmas

6.25 x 42

long corona

Panetela

6.875 x 36

panetela

All sizes come in lacquered cedar boxes of 26, packaged with cellophane sleeves on individual cigars. Many vendors list a box size of 25. I am not entirely sure why that is. It may be that Padron changed the box count since the initial release. The Corticos are the exception packaged in boxes of 30 or tins of 6.

From the Padron website …..Jose Padron, Sr.

“We deliver only the finest, handmade, complex cigars with the flavor of the Cuban heritage out of which the Padron recipe was born. Our primary mission is the exceptional quality of our product, not the quantity produced. As a vertically integrated, family-owned company, we pay personal attention to every detail throughout all steps of our tobacco growing and cigar manufacturing process. Because we strive to give you, the smoker, the confidence that each cigar is the same … perfect.”

If you are interested in more KOTF info on the Padron Story, you can read it here.

The Keepers of the Flame Padron Series Roundup

Cigarfan & Lucky7

This comparison review is one in a series on the original Padron line of cigars. When we have completed reviews on the entire line, a vertical tasting for each wrapper will be published. Each review will be an amalgum opinion of cigarfan and lucky7 along with that of the guest reviewer(s). Our guest reviewer for this vitola is:

McCharlie - Club Stogie

Padron Series Churchill – Natural and Maduro

Padron Churchill Natural and Maduro - Actual SizeThe Churchill as a vitola did not originate with the famous prime minister of England; legend has it that before Winston came to prominence the size was in fact named for a different prime minister: Georges Clemenceau of France. As a tribute to his work on the Treaty of Versailles, the cigar that would be Churchill was named the “Clemenceau.” Two decades and one world war later, the Romeo y Julieta factory in Havana produced an unlimited number of cigars for Winston Churchill’s pleasure, and it just happened that his favorite size was the Clemenceau. Finally, after Churchill visited the plant in 1947, the 7 x 47 Romeo y Julieta was renamed in his honor. When the vitola was picked up by other marcas, the vitola itself became known as the “Churchill.”

Or so the story goes, according to Min Ron Nee’s Illustrated Encyclopedia of Post-Revolution Havana Cigars. Officially, the Cuban “Churchill” is vitola number 609, also known as the “Julieta 2.”

But we don’t really expect the Padron Churchill to conform to Cuban standards, and it doesn’t. It’s a bit shorter and a bit narrower than the Julieta 2; in fact, it’s the same dimension as the Delicias, but two inches longer. But that is where all resemblance to the Delicias ends. This is a different cigar altogether.

Natural

The natural wrapper on Padron’s Churchill has a reddish cast to it, a colorado maduro shade that distinguishes it not only from the maduro Churchill, but from the other natural vitolas in the Padron Series. The leaf is slightly veiny, moderately grainy, and otherwise about as rough as most of the other naturals we’ve smoked. It wouldn’t be a classic Padron without a few superficial dings and scratches.

Churchill Natural Wrapper

The head is flattened and as usual the caps tend to be a bit loose. The roll is lightly box pressed but solid, with a few dents here and there. McCharlie noticed that the natural was “slightly less springy” than the maduro, and lucky7 found straggling bits of tobacco bristling from the foot.

Churchill Natural Foot with Stragglers

Pre-light scents were in line with our other experiences: grass or hay on the wrapper, with a richer cocoa-like scent on the foot and the cold draw. McCharlie commented that the “natural smelled like a box of chocolate cookies,” and his sister detected a hint of pecan. (Editor’s note: No cigars for you, sister. Maybe next time.)

The natural Churchill starts up very smoothly, an indication of the manner in which this cigar proceeds to the nub. It produces a nice volume of cool smoke and a solid dark gray ash. We all agreed with McCharlie’s observation about the draw quality in both natural and maduro:

After reading several other reviews on the churchill I noticed many of the reviewers commented about the fairly loose draw of the churchill, which was not the case with these particular churchills. The draw was not too tight, but tighter than what most others I think have said.

Churchill Natural with quarter for comparisonInitial flavors include wood, leather, and a touch of spice. After an inch or so some cocoa flavors settle in and are accompanied by a short and dry finish. At this point there is an aroma of “sweet toasted wood and caramel with the familiar Padron twang,” lucky7 notes, “and it seems incredibly mild for a Padron.” At the conclusion of the first third, McCharlie found “a very nice earthy nut flavor.”

McCharlie went on to say that the middle section features “full bodied nut, wood, and good old tobacco flavors.” Cigarfan noted a “solid core of hardwood with a sweet edge and diminishing bean flavors” while the flavors “turned quite bland” for lucky7. The creamy texture of the smoke is also noteworthy at this point.

Lucky7's Churchill Natural Ash

The last third continues along the same path: simple mild tobacco flavors and a hint of char at the end.

We were all a bit surprised by the mild mannered nature of this cigar, since it’s not what we’ve come to expect from Padron. Lucky7 called the body and strength of this cigar “mild to medium through the first two thirds, building to medium plus at the nub.” Mild to medium is not what most folks will tell you about Padron cigars.

Despite this, it’s a very enjoyable cigar, and a great value at just above $3.00 per stick (box price.)

Maduro

The maduro wrapper on the Padron Churchill is veiny with a very light layer of oil — the color is effectively a dark matte brown with little sheen. The heads tend to be round rather than flat, and a little misshapen.

There are a few other minor aesthetic defects like small holes in the leaf and sloppy cap work, but the roll is firm (if a bit lumpy) and the draw resistance is good.

Churchill Maduro Punch Hole Anomaly - Looks like wood in there!

The prelight characteristics are typical of mild maduro: grass and compost with a touch of chocolate. McCharlie described it as nutty/woody, and his sister thought it was more “tobaccoey” than the natural.

Like many of the Padron maduros in this series it starts up with a mild bite, but in this case it lasts for only a few puffs and then settles into a smooth and creamy concoction of wood, coffee and sugary spices. McCharlie thought the maduro started “like the middle third of the natural, strong earthy nut with a little more coffee flavors.”

The burn is straight and needs no corrections and the ash is a solid light gray with little flaking. The smoke volume is a little thin to start but increases in body and texture to medium at the midway point.

The flavors become more pronounced in the middle section and get toastier: a woody foundation over which a sweet char floats, resembling toffee at times. McCharlie noted diminishing coffee flavors and “more of a nutty spice flavor” in this section.

Churchill Maduro Ash Grain

The finale turns up the heat a little, but the flavors turn darker and somewhat more plain: strong tobacco, burnt coffee, and harsh spice were among the descriptions of the flavors at this point. The finish lengthens, but the aftertaste becomes bitter at the two-inch mark.

Our overall impressions were that this is a fine cigar, if a bit mild, for the first two-thirds, but it goes downhill from there. But like the natural, it’s still a great value.

Conclusion

The Churchill is quite distinct from other cigars in the Padron Series — for one, it is probably the mildest blend in the series. Other cigars in this category might be the Magnum and the Executive, but the churchill was probably the least aggressive of them all. All of our reviewers enjoyed this cigar, even if it wasn’t a highly dramatic experience.

Comparing the two wrappers, McCharlie remarked that

Both cigars were very enjoyable. The natural had more of that smooth wood and nut flavor I really enjoy, perfect for smoking in the morning… The maduro was a little bit stronger, something I would smoke after a big steak dinner. But if I had to choose one box to buy right now it would be the naturals. The natural has more of the good all around flavors I look for in a cigar at this point in my cigar smoking journey.

Lucky7 is on the fence with this one. He found the construction and performance of both cigars to be equally good, and the flavor profiles similar, though the maduro “has a small edge in sweetness and a fruity characteristic,” and the natural “has a unique cocoa aspect.” In the final analysis, he says,

It is truly a toss up regarding preference. I liked them both and will consider adding them to my list of smokes to stock for times when I’m reaching for a milder smoke. Even though the last third is, let’s say, uneventful and bland… for around $3.00 you can’t beat the first two thirds.

Cigarfan enjoyed both of these cigars as well, but rated the natural just slightly higher for the cocoa bean flavor and smooth creaminess of the smoke. Taken together, the Churchills are high on his list of the best of the classic Padron Series.

Many thanks to guest reviewer McCharlie, who almost had to forego his review for the Roundup when he was called into service as a National Guardsman. We would like to single him out for a moment to recognize his service to his country and fellow heartlanders as they struggled to deal with the wrath of mother nature.

Afterword

We all remember the recent flooding in the mid-west where so many were forced from their homes. It was so bad in Illinois, Governor Rod Blagojevich called in the National Guard to assist in shoring up the Sny levee system along 54 miles of the Mississippi River shoreline. If this levee had failed, hundreds of thousands of acres of farmland and several small towns would have been flooded. The levee had not been breached but as McCharlie tells it, the water level on the river side was so high your feet got wet walking along the top of the levee.

Along with nearly 1000 Guardsmen from across the state, our own guest reviewer McCharlie, member of the 182nd Airlift Wing, jumped to action and spent the better part of a month building up the levee and fixing potential leaks. The townsfolk were so grateful for the help, they pretty much kept the Guardsmen fed with good ol’ down home cookin’ saving them from the dreaded MRE (Meals Ready to Eat). Although MREs are much better than they used to be, you certainly wouldn’t eat them given a choice.

With the breadth of flooding and the continued onslaught of bad weather in the region, we thought McCharlie might be lost to the Roundup. Cigars just don’t smoke well in the rain and, even if you can sneak one, taking notes is nearly impossible. We were glad to hear the work along the river was completed in time and are very happy to report McCharlie’s valued opinion is represented in this review. Our thanks to McCharlie and all of the National Guard men and women who sacrifice so much and put in some really hard work whenever they are called. True patriots here on the home front!

… cigarfan & lucky7

Padron Series Panetela (Comparison Review)

Padron Series Panetela - Natural and Maduro

Skip the fluff and jump straight to the review!

Cigar Stats
Brand Owner: Padron Cigars, Inc. – Miami, FL (website)
(distributor operates under the name Piloto Cigars, Inc.)
Factory: Tabacos Cubanica, S.A. – Esteli, Nicaragua
Factory: Tabacos Centroamericanos, S.A. – Danli, Honduras
Model/Vitola: Padron Series Panetela (Natural and Maduro)
Size: 6.875 x 36 (panetela)
Wrapper: Nicaragua
Filler & Binder: Nicaragua
Body: Medium to Full
Strength: Medium to Full
Average Retail: $3.50 USD
Cigar Insider/Aficionado Ratings: None listed

Fourteen other vitola sizes are available in the traditional Padron Series along with one which was recently discontinued.

Frontmark

Length x Ring

Shape

2000

5.0 x 50

robusto

3000

5.5 x 52

robusto

4000

6.5 x 54

toro

5000

5.5 x 56

robusto

6000

5.5 x 52

torpedo

7000

6.25 x 60

toro

Ambassador

6.875 x 42

lonsdale

Chicos

5.5 x 36

discontinued

Churchill

6.875 x 46

churchill

Corticos

4.25 x 35

short panetela

Delicias

4.875 x 46

corona extra

Executive

7.5 x 50

double corona

Londres

5.5 x 42

corona

Magnum

9.0 x 50

giant

Palmas

6.25 x 42

long corona

Panetela

6.875 x 36

panetela

All sizes come in lacquered cedar boxes of 26, packaged with cellophane sleeves on individual cigars. Many vendors list a box size of 25. I am not entirely sure why that is. It may be that Padron changed the box count since the initial release. The Corticos are the exception packaged in boxes of 30 or tins of 6.

From the Padron website …..Jose Padron, Sr.

“We deliver only the finest, handmade, complex cigars with the flavor of the Cuban heritage out of which the Padron recipe was born. Our primary mission is the exceptional quality of our product, not the quantity produced. As a vertically integrated, family-owned company, we pay personal attention to every detail throughout all steps of our tobacco growing and cigar manufacturing process. Because we strive to give you, the smoker, the confidence that each cigar is the same … perfect.”

If you are interested in more KOTF info on the Padron Story, you can read it here.

The Keepers of the Flame Padron Series Roundup

Cigarfan & Lucky7

This comparison review is one in a series on the original Padron line of cigars. When we have completed reviews on the entire line, a vertical tasting for each wrapper will be published. Each review will be an amalgam opinion of cigarfan and lucky7 along with that of the guest reviewer(s). Our guest reviewers for this vitola are:

Kevin - The Box Press

Alex - Cigar Jack

Padron Series Panetela – Natural and Maduro

Panetela Natural and Maduro - Actual SizeThin ring gauge cigars are enjoying a renaissance in popularity recently, due in part to the outstanding wrapper leaf currently grown in Nicaragua. (It is interesting to note that the majority of lanceros in production for the American market are using Nicaraguan Habano wrapper leaf: Don Pepin Garcia, Illusione, Gran Habano Corojo, La Flor Dominicana Coronado and Oliva Serie V are a few that come to mind.)

The lancero has been a standard in the Cuban cigar pantheon, exemplified by the Cohiba Esplendido, but the Padron Panetela is thinner yet – nearly as narrow as the Corticos, but of course longer.

The wrapper to filler ratio in a smaller ring gauge cigar highlights the wrapper’s aromatic qualities, so it’s no wonder that it has made the comeback that it has among experienced cigar enthusiasts. On the other hand, the thin cigar is prone to construction flaws: a tight draw and hot burn chief among them.

Natural

Padron’s natural Panetela falls in line with many other naturals in the Classic Series: it’s rough and ready to rumble, or as Kevin puts it: “Sometime before it was slipped into its cello sleeve, it sustained more nicks and cuts than Arturo Gatti on a bad night in Atlantic City.” He counted “no fewer than four spots where binder was visible through the wrapper tears.” Alex noted bumps and veins on the wrapper, and the KOTF guys held their cigars to the light and — after careful consideration — just said, “Yep.”

Kevin's Panetela Natural Wrapper Tear (oh no, a cut above the left eye - wiil he be able to go the distance?)

Panetela - Band OverlapThis thin cigar is lightly box pressed and the standard size bands tend to overlap themselves. As lucky7 remarks, “it looks like some young boy trying to wear his daddy’s belt.” (Maybe Padron should use the smaller Corticos style bands on these?)

The pre-light characteristics were unremarkable aside from a draw that was clearly inconsistent from cigar to cigar. Some were quite tight, others fairly loose. Barnyard scents and a hint of leather dominate the pre-light aromas.

The natural Panetela starts up with the smooth flavors of leather and spice, but Alex was expecting more:

The initial flavor notes on this cigar weren’t very strong. There were definite leather hints and some spice, but not much else. As the cigar progressed in the first few minutes, the flavors got stronger, but leather was definitely the predominant note, with hints of spice in the background. I gave it a few long, languid puffs and cleared my palate a couple times, but the leather and spice was all that I could note in the flavor profile, much to my annoyance.

Kevin found a little more complexity, but was similarly underwhelmed:

Initial flavors are leathery with hints of hardwood and raisin in the background. Between the leather and a dry texture, it is reminiscent of some lighter DPG blends but with a shorter, less satisfying finish.

Kevin's Review Pair (Maduro top/front)

Lucky7 and cigarfan found the first stage of the cigar smooth but uneventful: toasted wood flavors serve as a foundation, over which there are sweet tobacco flavors and a slightly fruity aroma. The texture is creamy and quite pleasant.

The mid-section continues along the same course, though Alex reported diminishing spice and “…a strong leather note which left a sour aftertaste in my mouth.” Kevin powered through a tunneling start to be rewarded with “a powdery cocoa flavor that begins to come through and mix nicely with the leathery base.”

Cigarfan detected some cocoa as well, while lucky7 noted a little bitterness and a short finish. Otherwise there didn’t appear to be much development.

Alex's Panetela Natural

The last third picks up the pace with a lengthier finish, flavors of burnt wood and char, and a little more pepper. Kevin greeted the return of raisin and hardwood from the first stage of the cigar, while Alex managed to squeeze some enjoyment out of an otherwise mediocre experience:

…the spice notes came back with a vengeance and pushed the leather into the background about halfway through the cigar. The spice here was mostly peppery, with some slight char notes. At this point I finally started to enjoy my smoke and settled back into my seat.

Kevin's Panetela Natural Wrapper Grain

The natural Panetela is a straightforward, even tempered cigar that is a bit of an underachiever in terms of construction and performance. Kevin sums it up when he says that “it fits squarely in the middle of the spectrum for me. It’s a whisper above average…but it isn’t demonstrative enough to make my regular rotation.”

Maduro

The maduro wrappers were typical of Padron maduro: just a couple shades darker than the natural, with a little more oil, a fine layer of grain, and a pre-light scent of compost, chocolate and coffee.

Kevin's Review Pair (Maduro in front)

A couple of the maduro Panetelas had what appeared to be loose wrappers, where the wrapper seemed to warp and separate from the roll. They looked like they might unravel immediately on cutting, but they actually stood up pretty well once cut and lit. Panetela Natural with quarter for comparisonThe draw on these tended to be a little firmer than the natural, but they also seemed to burn a little better.

The maduro starts up with a pronounced bite and a strong peppery aroma. As Alex says, “This cigar hit with nice strong flavors and never looked back.” Kevin noted:

“…a sharp, vegetal funk from the outset. I hit this one very slowly for the first two inches, just enough to keep it lit, as I was concerned this bite might contaminate the entire smoke.

Lucky7 remarked that after the initial blast wears off it mellows to a “core of chocolate and coffee, with notes of toasted wood and spice, along with a sweet aroma and a familiar twang on the nose.” Cigarfan found some sweet notes here, but felt that these were overwhelmed by pepper and a hot burn.

Alex's Panetela Maduro

These flavors remain constant through the middle third as the smoke takes on a creamier texture. Alex, who greatly preferred the maduro, says:

By the time the smoke got to the middle section, the leather had pretty much disappeared. The strong spice kept strong, while the coffee and molasses notes played in and out. Also in the middle section came some delightful tastes of hickory and dark chocolate…that created a nice complexity.

Panetela Maduro Wrapper Grain

On the other hand, cigarfan agreed with Kevin when he said that

It became more smokeable after a third, but it retained a thin, sharp bite. At halftime, it still tastes green to me. Compared to the natural, the maduro was certainly stronger and more peppery, but not pleasantly so.

The reviewers who liked the way this cigar started liked the way it smoked to the end, and those of us who were put off by the raspy introduction never really found a way to make friends with it. Alex enjoyed the “spice and hickory notes until my fingers got too hot to keep smoking,” while Kevin found the maduro to be “aggressively young.” And lucky7 simply warns, “be ready for some nasty stuff if you don’t slow down for the last third.

Conclusion

Many cigar smokers are partial to Padron cigars in maduro, which has given Team Maduro something of a home field advantage throughout the Padron Roundup. Panetela Maduro Foot (looks almost juicy, doesn't it?)The extra fermentation gives the maduro an added dimension that is lacking in the natural, but at the same time can create an unbalanced smoke if the blend isn’t just perfect.

Alex overwhelmingly preferred the maduro Panetela:

I preferred it to the natural wrapper completely. This isn’t usually a vitola that I would smoke, but for this cigar, I can see myself making an exception. This was a great cigar.

Lucky7 found both wrappers enjoyable, but marginally preferred the maduro: “I would probably go for the maduro because it has a more complex flavor profile, but both these ‘gars are quite a nice smoke.

Panetela Maduro Ash with GrainOn the other hand, cigarfan agreed with Kevin in his assessment that the natural was a more balanced cigar. As Kevin puts it,

I expected to like the maduro better than the natural, but that’s not how it panned out. Where the natural was easygoing and seemingly well aged, the maduro was aggressively young. The burn and draw were above average, but I hold out little hope for the flavor.

In the contest between the natural and maduro Panetelas we appear to have a draw! Try them both and decide for yourself, or take lucky7’s advice and consider the Corticos as an alternative:

Where the Corticos had good flavor to the nub, the Panetela was rather bland in the last third. Considering the cost, the little Corticos is just as big a bang for the buck and it takes up less humi space.

Thanks again to Alex and Kevin for participating in this bout of the Padron Roundup. Both provided some excellent photos in addition to their reviews. Alex regularly contributes reviews and commentary to the Cigar Jack website, and Kevin is the wizard behind the curtain at The Box Press. Be sure to check ’em out!

… cigarfan & lucky7

KOTF’s own lucky7 had to try his hand at what has become known as a Brian Hewitt tradition. Heck, why should Brian have all the fun anyway! Considering how much work these are to capture and prepare, lucky says “this may be the one and ONLY KOTF Burning Tower of Padron Series Panetela!”

Lucky7's Burning Tower of Panetela

Padron Series Executive (Comparison Review)

Padron Series Executive - Natural and Maduro

Skip the fluff and jump straight to the review!

Cigar Stats
Brand Owner: Padron Cigars, Inc. – Miami, FL (website)
(distributor operates under the name Piloto Cigars, Inc.)
Factory: Tabacos Cubanica, S.A. – Esteli, Nicaragua
Factory: Tabacos Centroamericanos, S.A. – Danli, Honduras
Model/Vitola: Padron Series Executive (Natural and Maduro)
Size: 7.5 x 50 (double corona)
Wrapper: Nicaragua
Filler & Binder: Nicaragua
Body: Medium to Full
Strength: Medium to Full
Average Retail: $6.62 USD
Cigar Insider/Aficionado Ratings: Consistently low 90s

Fourteen other vitola sizes are available in the traditional Padron Series along with one which was recently discontinued.

Frontmark

Length x Ring

Shape

2000

5.0 x 50

robusto

3000

5.5 x 52

robusto

4000

6.5 x 54

toro

5000

5.5 x 56

robusto

6000

5.5 x 52

torpedo

7000

6.25 x 60

toro

Ambassador

6.875 x 42

lonsdale

Chicos

5.5 x 36

discontinued

Churchill

6.875 x 46

churchill

Corticos

4.25 x 35

short panatela

Delicias

4.875 x 46

corona extra

Executive

7.5 x 50

double corona

Londres

5.5 x 42

corona

Magnum

9.0 x 50

giant

Palmas

6.25 x 42

long corona

Panetela

6.875 x 36

panetela

All sizes come in lacquered cedar boxes of 26, packaged with cellophane sleeves on individual cigars. Many vendors list a box size of 25. I am not entirely sure why that is. It may be that Padron changed the box count since the initial release. The Corticos are the exception packaged in boxes of 30 or tins of 6.

From the Padron website …..Jose Padron, Sr.

“We deliver only the finest, handmade, complex cigars with the flavor of the Cuban heritage out of which the Padron recipe was born. Our primary mission is the exceptional quality of our product, not the quantity produced. As a vertically integrated, family-owned company, we pay personal attention to every detail throughout all steps of our tobacco growing and cigar manufacturing process. Because we strive to give you, the smoker, the confidence that each cigar is the same … perfect.”

If you are interested in more KOTF info on the Padron Story, you can read it here.

The Keepers of the Flame Padron Series Roundup

Cigarfan & Lucky7

This comparison review is one in a series on the original Padron line of cigars. When we have completed reviews on the entire line, a vertical tasting for each wrapper will be published. Each review will be an amalgam opinion of cigarfan and lucky7 along with that of the guest reviewer(s). Our guest reviewer for this vitola is:

Jeff - Cigar Jack

Padron Series Executive – Natural and Maduro

Executive Natural and Maduro - Actual Size
At one time the term “double corona” referred to any large parejo shaped cigar, roughly twice the size of a standard five-inch corona. Over time the term became a little more refined, especially when Winston Churchill’s favorite vitola was introduced commercially in the mid-twentieth century. Compared against the “Churchill,” the double corona is just a bit bigger: a 50 ring gauge as opposed to the Churchill’s 47 or 48, and slightly longer by a half-inch or so.

One of the interesting things we’ve learned over the course of the Padron Roundup is that the size of the cigar does not necessarily correlate with smoking time. Padron’s double corona entry, the Executive, is indeed a large stick and requires a good hour and a half to two hours to smoke in a leisurely fashion, but this is only slightly longer than the time required for several of the smaller cigars.

Natural

The natural wrapper on the Executive is unusually uniform in color — an even milk chocolate with some veiny roughness and fine grain throughout. The roll is even and a little lumpy on close inspection.

Executive Natural - Holes in the HeadConstruction values were inconsistent throughout the review samples: some cigars were rolled a little too loosely and displayed the slapdash cap we’ve become accustomed to, and other cigars had perfect draws and surprisingly neat heads. Small holes near the cap, a light patch that almost looks like a glue smear, and a disintegrating wrapper that exposed the binder might have spelled disaster for lucky7, but he wisely decapitated his Executive at the quarter-inch mark after assessing the situation. Cigarfan’s sample was nearly perfect, including a well formed single cap, and Jeff’s cigar was a combination of aesthetic flaws and a good roll:

This is a firm veiny, rugged, lumpy looking stick! Definitely not your eye candy! Upon taking it out of its cello, I immediately noticed the barnyard smells. Quite pungent actually. Easy clip with pre-lit flavors of spice and wet hay. It had a perfect firm draw.

Lucky7's Executive Natural Cap ExplosionOther pre-light traits were typical of the line — barnyard and hay scents on the wrapper — though lucky7 found a “chocolate tobacco” note on the foot, which is somewhat unusual. The cold taste was of familiar sweet tobacco.

The Executive natural starts up easily without the bite common to Nicaraguan puros. After a few puffs it picks up a little zing and the bright acidic taste that occurs with many of Padron’s larger ring gauge cigars. Gradually the flavors settle into a woody/leathery foundation and some light cocoa notes emerge sporadically. The finish is very short. Jeff found the first third to be earthy, “smooth and mellow, not too complex.”

The second third continues in the same vein with a smooth toasted wood flavor that becomes increasingly creamy in texture. Lucky7 reported that the “nose twang” from the first third began to dissipate in this section. We all noticed a lack of development until the half-way mark. As Jeff points out,

That’s when I noted a black coffee taste that combined with the hay. Very nice combination. Still very smooth and mellow!!

From this point and through the last third the flavors intensify, taking on more burnt wood and coffee flavors with a dash of pepper. The ash is a solid medium gray color and shows evidence of the grain that we’ve seen in some of the other vitolas.

Lucky7's Executive Natural Ash

Overall, the natural Executive is a very smooth, medium-bodied cigar that never overwhelms the taste buds or the nervous system with nicotine. There is the expected slight bitterness at the very end, but that’s after 90 minutes of relaxing, easy-going smoke. Lucky7 felt that the size was nicely balanced in the hand (unlike the Magnum) and noted that “a lot of the other Padron Series vitolas heat up considerably toward the nub but not so with the Executive. It was very well behaved… On the other hand, it’s sure a long time to spend with a cigar.

Jeff’s final thoughts:

I’d rate it about a medium strength and body until the end. Then it kicked up a notch. All in all, a very good smoke! I only wished it would have started the way it ended!! Almost two hours to finish!!

Maduro

The Executive maduro is only slightly better looking than its natural sibling — its dark brown wrapper shows a little grain and a dull sheen. The wrapper is rough but relatively attractive by comparison to others in the series, though it sounds like Jeff disagrees: “Another ugly stick! Once again, a firm veiny, rugged, lumpy looking stick!

Executive Maduro Wrapper Grain

The roll was inconsistent across the samples, from slightly soft with lumps and dents to firm and solid. A few of these also had a slight bend, a drooping which did nothing to enhance its aesthetic appeal.

The prelight qualities were as expected: barnyard with a hint of chocolate. As Jeff notes, ” The barnyard smells dominated after taking it out of its cello, though it’s not as pungent as its natural brother. The pre-lit flavors were much more spicy, shadowing hints of earth and hay.

Both Jeff and lucky7 agreed that the draw on this cigar could have used some tightening. Lucky7 said it was “too airy; like breathing” (though it tightened up around the 2/3 point) and Jeff said that “the draw on this one was much lighter than the natural, almost too light.

Executive Maduro with quarter for comparisonThe Executive maduro opens up without the bite common to Padron maduros, but at the same time it doesn’t forego the pepper and spice flavors to which we are accustomed. Cigarfan found the base flavor to be woody, with accents of coffee and a raisin-like sweetness on the nose. To this lucky7 added some leathery notes, and Jeff found earthy flavors in the background.

This melange of flavors and aromas continues on without too much development into the second third. The finish remains fairly short up to the mid-point, where the flavors begin to intensify. At this point Jeff felt the spiciness faded a bit and was replaced by black coffee, while cigarfan noted bittersweet chocolate and a sweet char on the nose.

The last third becomes earthier, but for the most part remains the same. The finish is dry and grows increasingly peppery. Lucky7 reported that “for the last two inches the flavor is mostly creamy strong tobacco with just a tad of sweetness hanging around; it’s definitely more peppery.”

Executive Maduro Grain - Wrapper and Ash

Jeff felt that the maduro Executive was not as mellow as the natural; on the other hand, lucky7 and cigarfan thought that by comparison with other maduros in the line, it was relatively tame. All of our reviewers were happy with this cigar, saying it was “a very nice smoke!” and “I would recommend it without reservation.” Additionally, at a box price around $4.25 per stick, it’s a great value, particularly for a double corona.

Conclusion

Though we ran into a problem that seems common to the series — sloppy finish work on the heads of the cigars — the construction values for both natural and maduro Executives were overall pretty good. Lucky7’s natural cap problem seems to have been an anomaly. The fact is that cigars in this series are everyday value cigars, and this kind of thing is expected to occur every once in a while.

Our reviewers did not come down decisively for one wrapper over another; the maduro was judged to be a bit harsher, but also a bit richer, than the natural, while the natural won us over with its smooth cocoa, coffee and sweet tobacco flavors. Both were excellent, easy smoking medium-bodied cigars that held their own for 90 minutes or more. Lucky7 sums it up for this round’s review crew:

I liked both of these cigars. If I had to choose one or the other, I’d probably reach for the Maduro. But then I am a sucker for Maduro wrappers with the typical sweetness and flavor depth they impart. The Padron Series Executive was a tasty, even tempered smoke well worth the money. I will be going there again, even if I can’t spare the whole hour and a half!

Special thanks to Jeff for contributing his thoughts on the Executive. Be sure to tune into Cigar Jack for more of Jeff’s reviews and the latest news on the cigar world!

… cigarfan & lucky7

Padron Series Ambassador (Comparison Review)

Padron Series Ambassador - Natural and Maduro

Skip the fluff and jump straight to the review!

Cigar Stats
Brand Owner: Padron Cigars, Inc. – Miami, FL (website)
(distributor operates under the name Piloto Cigars, Inc.)
Factory: Tabacos Cubanica, S.A. – Esteli, Nicaragua
Factory: Tabacos Centroamericanos, S.A. – Danli, Honduras
Model/Vitola: Padron Series Ambassador (Natural and Maduro)
Size: 6.875 x 42 (lonsdale)
Wrapper: Nicaragua
Filler & Binder: Nicaragua
Body: Medium to Full
Strength: Medium to Full
Average Retail: $3.58 USD
Cigar Insider/Aficionado Ratings: Consistently high 80s to low 90s

Fourteen other vitola sizes are available in the traditional Padron Series along with one which was recently discontinued.

Frontmark

Length x Ring

Shape

2000

5.0 x 50

robusto

3000

5.5 x 52

robusto

4000

6.5 x 54

toro

5000

5.5 x 56

robusto

6000

5.5 x 52

torpedo

7000

6.25 x 60

toro

Ambassador

6.875 x 42

lonsdale

Chicos

5.5 x 36

discontinued

Churchill

6.875 x 46

churchill

Corticos

4.25 x 35

short panatela

Delicias

4.875 x 46

corona extra

Executive

7.5 x 50

double corona

Londres

5.5 x 42

corona

Magnum

9.0 x 50

giant

Palmas

6.25 x 42

long corona

Panetela

6.875 x 36

panetela

All sizes come in lacquered cedar boxes of 26, packaged with cellophane sleeves on individual cigars. Many vendors list a box size of 25. I am not entirely sure why that is. It may be that Padron changed the box count since the initial release. The Corticos are the exception packaged in boxes of 30 or tins of 6.

From the Padron website …..Jose Padron, Sr.

“We deliver only the finest, handmade, complex cigars with the flavor of the Cuban heritage out of which the Padron recipe was born. Our primary mission is the exceptional quality of our product, not the quantity produced. As a vertically integrated, family-owned company, we pay personal attention to every detail throughout all steps of our tobacco growing and cigar manufacturing process. Because we strive to give you, the smoker, the confidence that each cigar is the same … perfect.”

If you are interested in more KOTF info on the Padron Story, you can read it here.

The Keepers of the Flame Padron Series Roundup

Cigarfan & Lucky7

This comparison review is one in a series on the original Padron line of cigars. When we have completed reviews on the entire line, a vertical tasting for each wrapper will be published. Each review will be an amalgam opinion of cigarfan and lucky7 along with that of the guest reviewer(s). Our guest reviewers for this vitola are:

Ricky - Cigar Command

Matt - Matt's Cigar Journal

Padron Series Ambassador – Natural and Maduro

Padron Ambassador - Natural & Maduro - Actual Size
The Ambassador shares a ring gauge size with two other vitolas in this line: the Palmas, which is about half an inch shorter, and the Londres, which is about an inch and half shorter. Conventional wisdom would suggest that all of these cigars should taste pretty much the same if the blend is consistent, but so far that hasn’t been our experience. The Londres fared rather poorly in our assessment, while the Palmas garnered applause.

We will be comparing all three of these against each other in our vertical review at the end of the Roundup. For now, we are going to see how the natural stacks up against the maduro.

Natural

The natural Ambassador is rolled extremely well, despite the fact that it looks like many of the natural cigars in this series: slightly shabby. The caps on some of these looked like they’d been slapped on, and the heads of a few samples suffered wrinkles. There were a few water spots, but in general the wrapper is a uniform milk chocolate color with a fair amount of oil for a natural leaf. By now we’ve come to expect this. As Matt says, “Typical of almost every Padron, the cap is sloppily applied and ugly.” With most of the cigars in this series it’s best to not trust in appearances.

Ambassador Natural - Wrinkled Head
The roll is even and firm, as is the draw. The prelight characteristics are grassy with a little leather, along with the basic sweet tobacco traits. Ricky reported some pepper on the prelight draw.

Everyone noted a very firm but manageable draw on the Ambassador; the flip side here is that the burn was very slow and results in a cigar that lasts for well over an hour, which is slightly surprising given the slender stature of the stick.

This lonsdale starts up with a touch of trademark Nicaraguan pepper, but quickly mellows to “a base of toasted wood and leather.” Matt found the first third to be earthy with a dry finish, while Ricky picked up on the sweetness of the natural tobacco: “honey and wood with a slight pepper background.”

The texture of the smoke becomes creamier after the first third, or as Matt says, it was “smooth and creamy…it has a chewy feel to it.” Later he noticed that the flavor changes to “notes of black coffee and a smokiness with a nutty flavor.” Ricky marked the departure of pepper, leaving leather and wood. Cigarfan picked up on Matt’s coffee flavors as well, with scattered shots of cocoa.

Lucky7\'s Ambassador Natural Ash

Both Ricky and lucky7 experienced burn defects at various times: in the first third lucky7 resorted to the torch to remedy a canoe, and in the mid-section Ricky’s Ambassador “started to have major burn issues; hard to keep lit. Very little smoke.” Matt and cigarfan reported no problems with their samples.

Ambassador Maduro Foot
The last third becomes predictably more intense. Flavors of “very heavy leather” and burnt wood take the spotlight, and the stick ends with a peppery bang. Both Ricky and cigarfan found increasing bitterness, while Matt lamented that “it’s lost it chewiness 😦 but that’s ok. A great finish from a great cigar.”

Maduro

The maduro Ambassador is easily distinguished from the natural, and is in fact the darkest maduro we’ve encountered in the series so far. The roll is a bit lumpy, but firm, and like many in the series this cigar has a slight box press.

Ambassador Maduro with quarter for comparison
The prelight draw on the maduro Ambassador is firm to tight — this seems to be a characteristic of the size — but as with the natural this results in a slow cool burn. Other prelight traits were typical of Padron maduros: earthy sweet tobacco with remnants of fermentation, namely barnyard scents and a hint of ammonia.

It opens up with a little bite, but soon settles into a flavor that was unanimously described as chocolate. Side dishes included leather, according to Ricky, and notes of toasted wood. Cigarfan found that sweet hazelnut quality that occurs frequently in Padron maduros (especially the small ring gauges) and described the aroma as having a coffee liqueur-like quality.

Again, our reviewers were unanimous in their selection of a descriptor for the second third: creamy. (We are giving Ricky credit for saying it was “very smooth on the palate.”) A complex brew of other flavors were mentioned as well: coffee, raisin and spice, leather, wood, and even toasted marshmallows.

At this point the cigar was medium bodied, but as Matt pointed out, it was fairly mild in strength. The creaminess of the smoke is quite full and the aroma is impressive, or as lucky7 says, “some kind of excellent.” In many ways this lonsdale smokes like a much larger and refined cigar.

Lucky7's Ambassador Maduro Ash

The body builds in the final section of the stick, approaching full at the nub. There are no striking developments in the last stage, just continuing wood and leather flavors with sweet overtones. The sweetness subsides towards the nub and is replaced by predictably burnt and bitter flavors. Despite this, Ricky said, “I nubbed this one till my fingers burned.

The wrapper on this cigar really runs the show: a fantastically rich aroma and a creamy smoke that coats the mouth in chocolate and woody goodness — exactly what we’re looking for from a Padron maduro.

Conclusion

Matt's Review PairBoth lucky7 and cigarfan were impressed by the natural Ambassador, but they were blown away by the maduro. It’s hard to believe a cigar this good is available at such a reasonable price. Matt, on the other hand, preferred the natural wrapper:

I have always enjoyed Padron maduros more than the naturals, but that wasn’t the case this time. The maduro was a good smoke with decent complexity and enjoyable flavors but it just didn’t do as much for me as the Ambassador natural… the natural was an excellent smoke, the maduro was merely ok.

The only real issues with this cigar were construction related, in particular a tough draw that we all had to fight with to some degree. This is a common problem with small ring gauge cigars, but then again, 42 is not all that small. Despite this, the Padron Ambassador will find a spot in our daily rotations. At a box price around $2.50 per stick, it’s almost unquestionable.

Thanks to Ricky and Matt for giving us a hand with this review. You can find Ricky directing his forces at Cigar Command with reviews and news of the good fight against the enemies of tobacco, and Matt’s Cigar Journal has just celebrated its Third Anniversary. Congratulations Matt!

… cigarfan & lucky7

Padron Series 5000 (Comparison Review)

Padron Series 5000 - Natural and Maduro

Skip the fluff and jump straight to the review!

Cigar Stats
Brand Owner: Padron Cigars, Inc. – Miami, FL (website)
(distributor operates under the name Piloto Cigars, Inc.)
Factory: Tabacos Cubanica, S.A. – Esteli, Nicaragua
Factory: Tabacos Centroamericanos, S.A. – Danli, Honduras
Model/Vitola: Padron Series 5000 (Natural and Maduro)
Size: 5.5 x 56 (robusto)
Wrapper: Nicaragua
Filler & Binder: Nicaragua
Body: Medium to Full
Strength: Medium to Full
Average Retail: $6.77 USD
Cigar Insider/Aficionado Ratings: Consistently high 80s to low 90s

Fourteen other vitola sizes are available in the traditional Padron Series along with one which was recently discontinued.

Frontmark

Length x Ring

Shape

2000

5.0 x 50

robusto

3000

5.5 x 52

robusto

4000

6.5 x 54

toro

5000

5.5 x 56

robusto

6000

5.5 x 52

torpedo

7000

6.25 x 60

toro

Ambassador

6.875 x 42

lonsdale

Chicos

5.5 x 36

discontinued

Churchill

6.875 x 46

churchill

Corticos

4.25 x 35

short panatela

Delicias

4.875 x 46

corona extra

Executive

7.5 x 50

double corona

Londres

5.5 x 42

corona

Magnum

9.0 x 50

giant

Palmas

6.25 x 42

long corona

Panetela

6.875 x 36

panetela

All sizes come in lacquered cedar boxes of 26, packaged with cellophane sleeves on individual cigars. Many vendors list a box size of 25. I am not entirely sure why that is. It may be that Padron changed the box count since the initial release. The Corticos are the exception packaged in boxes of 30 or tins of 6.

From the Padron website …..Jose Padron, Sr.

“We deliver only the finest, handmade, complex cigars with the flavor of the Cuban heritage out of which the Padron recipe was born. Our primary mission is the exceptional quality of our product, not the quantity produced. As a vertically integrated, family-owned company, we pay personal attention to every detail throughout all steps of our tobacco growing and cigar manufacturing process. Because we strive to give you, the smoker, the confidence that each cigar is the same … perfect.”

If you are interested in more KOTF info on the Padron Story, you can read it here.

The Keepers of the Flame Padron Series Roundup

Cigarfan & Lucky7

This comparison review is one in a series on the original Padron line of cigars. When we have completed reviews on the entire line, a vertical tasting for each wrapper will be published. Each review will be an amalgam opinion of cigarfan and lucky7 along with that of the guest reviewer(s). Our guest reviewers for this vitola are:

Ironmeden - The Velvet Cigar

Scott - Cigar Command

Padron Series 5000 – Natural and Maduro

Of the three robustos produced for the classic Padron Series (the others are the 3000 and the 2000) the 5000 has the largest ring gauge. While it is dwarfed by the 7000’s ham-fisted 60 ring, the 5000 at 56 still feels “fat” in the hand. 5000 Natural and Maduro - Actual SizeIt still falls within the general dimensions of the “robusto” range, but it’s definitely on the wide side.

Natural

As with many other cigars in the Padron series the natural selection is no looker, but it makes up for its lackluster appearance with decent construction. Ironmeden’s initial assessment of the 5000 natural was that

…the construction of the cigar was solid… with a slight give, but it felt packed. The wrapper was a medium brown in shade which was quite veiney with a blotchy look to the wrapper.

Lucky7 and cigarfan found the cigar to be lumpy and bumpy — large veins in the binder leaf produced small ridges on the surface of the cigar that didn’t detract from its appearance superficially, but were a tactile distraction. Scott didn’t find much to crow about here either:

I am a little less than impressed with the way it looks. There are a few large veins running the length of the stick, and the wrapper is blotted and a little odd looking… I don’t really like the way it looks.

The prelight draw on the 5000 natural varied from “loose” to “very loose” to “too loose.” Cigarfan in particular had issues with the loose draw and suspected that it may have caused the cigar to burn hot and underperform in general. The sticks were all quite firm and did not feel underfilled, so perhaps there was a problem with the bunching.

Most of us found the cold taste unremarkable but pleasant — a simple sweet tobacco flavor, with the standard scents. Scott, on the other hand, had a prelight revelation: coffee, cocoa, chocolate and leather. And that’s before he even lit the cigar!

It took us a while to get the foot toasted and burning properly, but once going it proved to be a little bit rough for the first half-inch or so, gradually mellowing out into a slightly tannic woody flavor. Ironmeden found that “the taste was light and had an enjoyable smoky aroma. There was a bitterness to the cigar for about the first inch highlighted by a woody taste.”

Ironmeden's Famous Reviewing Stand
Ironmeden’s Famous Reviewing Stand

Lucky7 discovered the trademark flavors of the Padron Series: toasted wood and leather, along with “an aroma of strong tea with a twang,” and notes of vanilla, spice and fruit. The flavors that Scott sensed before lighting up returned in the first third as well:

As I lit up this cigar, the experience was much the same as the many other Padrons that I have enjoyed in my smoking career. The flavor was very good, with lots of leather and coffee right off the bat, with the chocolate flavor muted a little bit in the background.

Ironmeden's 5000 Natural - 1st Ash
Ironmeden’s 5000 Natural – 1st Ash

Despite the loose draw the 5000 natural burned well, if not perfectly. The burn line tends to waver a bit, and as Ironmeden noticed, the veiny binder leaf leaves its traces in the ash. Appearances aside, the medium-gray ash holds strong for almost three inches.

Lucky7's 5000 Natural Ash
Lucky7’s 5000 Natural Ash

The 5000 really opened up for Scott and Ironmeden in the mid-section. For Scott, “…the leather flavor faded into the background and the coffee and chocolate flavors made themselves prominently known… I am really enjoying this smoke, and I am usually a Maduro fan.” And Ironmeden went so far as to invoke the holy of holies, the Padron 1964 Anniversary: “The light flavors coming from the cigar were reminiscent of the Padron 1964 cigar…at this point the cigar was still mild and relaxing without the noted bitterness at the start of the cigar.” Lucky7 and cigarfan didn’t find anything quite so superlative, just a short crisp finish with a “note of toasted wood and a hint of pepper.”

The flavor continues to build into the last third, dropping any pretence at sweetness and becoming more serious. Some coffee flavors linger in the background, but the focus turns to burnt wood and char with “major pepper” in the last inch. Ironmeden notes that “just over the halfway point the light flavors seemed to disappear which led to the bitter taste again. This lasted all the way to the end of the cigar.” Scott observed that it was still burning cool for him and the coffee and chocolate flavors were still prominent. And the most telling detail of all: “I puffed all the way down to the nub.”

5000 Maduro - Wrapper Grain

Maduro

The 5000 Maduro is quite distinct from the Natural, in appearance as well as character. It is several shades darker than the natural and displays all the qualities typical of well fermented tobacco leaf: more oils, prominent grain, and an earthy prelight scent. Scott noted coffee and leather as prelight scents, while Ironmeden found it to have an almost chocolate appearance and remarked, “It looks good enough to eat.”

It’s not quite as lumpy as the natural, and the draw provides more resistance. Once again it takes some a little effort to get this one started, but once going it seems to be a bit smoother than many of the other maduros in the series. While most of the maduros we’ve reviewed so far have opened up with a peppery prelude, the 5000 launches straight into classic maduro flavors: chocolate, coffee, and their familiar sweet overtones.

5000 Maduro - Double Cap

Scott and Ironmeden’s first-third impressions are very similar to their thoughts about the natural, except that Scott found the maduro to be a little harsher. Lucky7 and cigarfan found the flavors to be sweet and woody with some cocoa in the mix, and by comparison with other maduros in the line, the 5000 is considerably smoother.

And like the natural, the maduro version builds a nice strong ash and the burn is basically even, with two reviewers reporting a tilting burn toward the end of the cigar.

Lucky7's 5000 Maduro Ash
Lucky7’s 5000 Maduro Ash

The mid-section brings more coffee flavors to the fore while toasted wood continues in the background. The aroma grows a bit sweeter and picks up some char. Scott’s notes:

As I puffed on this cigar, at this point I was about 50 minutes into the enjoyment, and the coffee flavor faded into the background and the leather flavors made themselves prominently known. …I was really enjoying this smoke, and the longer it lasted, the better! The smoke was still very abundant, and began to have a nice sweet smell to it similar to the natural. I am realy enjoying this smoke, more than I enjoyed the natural.

The last third turns up the heat and the flavors become more carbonized — burnt wood, burnt coffee with a sharp sweet tang, and a peppery char that eventually turns bitter. Lucky7 reported that the last third was unusually hot — we’ve had this experience with the smaller ring gauges in this series, but not the larger ones. Scott liked the maduro just as well as the natural — a little more in fact — and “smoked this one to the point where my lips were burning.”

On the other hand, Ironmeden felt the maduro 5000 was a bit of a let down:

The taste from the cigar, like the Natural, was bitter but it was more harsh. The aftertaste in my mouth wasn’t pleasant. Again I noted a chocolate flavor from this cigar. The bitterness lasted through the first 2 inches and at times was quite unbearable. I did start to get the “Padron” flavor but it was so light due to the harshness of the cigar… I was expecting as I went through the cigar that it would ramp up in flavor, but it never did.

Now to make sure I didn’t get a bad cigar I went to two different cigar shops where I purchased a 3000 and 6000 and both of them were not as harsh, but the bitterness was there all the way through both sticks. I think it might just be me, but my palate just didn’t groove with the Maduro wrapper.

Conclusion

Based on our widely varying experiences it is difficult to conclude that the 5000 is better in one particular wrapper; Ironmeden loved the natural and disliked the maduro; cigarfan loved the maduro and disliked the natural. Lucky7 and Scott liked them both, but lucky7 gave a slight edge to the natural and Scott gave a slight edge to the maduro. It’s not easy to find a consensus here.

5000 Maduro with quarter for comparison We can’t reasonably conclude that there are quality control issues at play because both reviewers who had negative reactions went out and bought extra cigars to test them independently, and both came away with the same opinion after smoking cigars from these different boxes. If it isn’t inconsistency, what is it? Operator error, perhaps?

The draw on the natural 5000 was by all accounts extremely loose, and the maduro was only slightly better. We think this may have contributed to the bad experiences because a very loose draw requires a different smoking method, and it could very well be that neither reviewer modified their smoking “style” to compensate for this flaw in the cigar. The result was a hot burn and a bitter taste.

But this is only a theory. At the end of the day, cigar smoking is an art, and the beauty (as well as the bitter) is in the palate of the smoker. Some of us have found a great robusto in the 5000 natural and others in the maduro, and some of us may simply opt for other vitolas — I suspect this is why Padron makes so many of them.

Our thanks to Ironmeden and Scott for participating in the Padron Roundup. This has been a great experience for everyone, and we look forward to more of Scott’s forthright reviews at Cigar Command and the tobacco tales of Ironmeden at The Velvet Cigar.

… cigarfan & lucky7

Padron Series Corticos (Comparison Review)

Padron Series Corticos Natural and Maduro

Skip the fluff and jump straight to the review!

Cigar Stats
Brand Owner: Padron Cigars, Inc. – Miami, FL (website)
(distributor operates under the name Piloto Cigars, Inc.)
Factory: Tabacos Cubanica, S.A. – Esteli, Nicaragua
Factory: Tabacos Centroamericanos, S.A. – Danli, Honduras
Model/Vitola: Padron Series Corticos (Natural and Maduro)
Size: 4.25 x 35 (short panetela)
Wrapper: Nicaragua
Filler & Binder: Nicaragua
Body: Medium to Full
Strength: Medium to Full
Average Retail: $2.11 USD
Cigar Insider/Aficionado Ratings: None listed

Fourteen other vitola sizes are available in the traditional Padron Series along with one which was recently discontinued.

Frontmark

Length x Ring

Shape

2000

5.0 x 50

robusto

3000

5.5 x 52

robusto

4000

6.5 x 54

toro

5000

5.5 x 56

robusto

6000

5.5 x 52

torpedo

7000

6.25 x 60

toro

Ambassador

6.875 x 42

lonsdale

Chicos

5.5 x 36

discontinued

Churchill

6.875 x 46

churchill

Corticos

4.25 x 35

short panetela

Delicias

4.875 x 46

corona extra

Executive

7.5 x 50

double corona

Londres

5.5 x 42

corona

Magnum

9.0 x 50

giant

Palmas

6.25 x 42

long corona

Panetela

6.875 x 36

panetela

All sizes come in lacquered cedar boxes of 26, packaged with cellophane sleeves on individual cigars. Many vendors list a box size of 25. I am not entirely sure why that is. It may be that Padron changed the box count since the initial release. The Corticos are the exception packaged in boxes of 30 or tins of 6.

From the Padron website …..Jose Padron, Sr.

“We deliver only the finest, handmade, complex cigars with the flavor of the Cuban heritage out of which the Padron recipe was born. Our primary mission is the exceptional quality of our product, not the quantity produced. As a vertically integrated, family-owned company, we pay personal attention to every detail throughout all steps of our tobacco growing and cigar manufacturing process. Because we strive to give you, the smoker, the confidence that each cigar is the same ….. perfect.”

If you are interested in more KOTF info on the Padron Story, you can read it here.

The Keepers of the Flame Padron Series Roundup

Cigarfan & Lucky7

This comparison review is one in a series on the original Padron line of cigars. When we have completed reviews on the entire line, a vertical tasting for each wrapper will be published. Each review will be an amalgam opinion of cigarfan and lucky7 along with that of the guest reviewer(s). Our guest reviewer for this vitola is:

Elvis - The Velvet Cigar

Padron Series Corticos – Natural and Maduro

Corticos are the smallest cigars made in the classic Padron series. They are a bit too large to be called cigarillos, which usually have a ring gauge under 30, but by comparison with the rest of the cigars in this series they are certainly the babies of the family. I’ve asked some of my Spanish speaking compadres what “cortico” means and so far nobody has recognized the word. The best we can come up with is a definition for the Portuguese word cortiço, which translates as

an area of urban housing where many people live in conditions of poor hygiene and poverty. Some cortiços can be seen in big Brazilian cities such as São Paulo, Salvador, Rio de Janeiro, and Recife. Corticos differ from favelas in being large houses divided into small rooms, rather than autonomously-built neighborhoods. People who live in corticos are normally families in one very small room who have to share one bathroom and have no privacy.

Elvis, our guest reviewer from the Velvet Cigar, was initially concerned about the small size of this cigar, but he accepted the challenge with good humor:

My assignment was sweet, simple and to the point. “Elvis….” they said, “We want you to smoke the Padron Corticos in both the Natural and Maduro wrappers and let us know what you think.” Well, ok, I thought….hell, for a free cigar I’ll smoke just about anyhing, especially with the name Padron attached to it. But when I got the samples, I must admit I was a bit put off. I thought they wanted me to smoke a CIGAR, not a cigarette!

After all, the Corticos measures just a measely 4.5×35. Did they think I was a rookie here? Yes, I’ve only smoked for about the last 8 years or so, but damn, I think my tolerance and love of a good thick, manly strong cigar is up there with the best of them!

I thought about going back to Mission Control and telling them I wasn’t the best man for the job. I don’t ever smoke Cigarellos or even Lonsdales or really anything smaller than a Toro size. But then again, there might just be a time when I am in desperate need of a quick smoke and this could be just the one…after all, it is a Padron. OK, dammit, I’ll do it!

Natural

Corticos Natural and Maduro - Actual SizeThe natural Corticos is easily distinguished from the maduro — the wrapper is a much lighter shade, milk chocolate in color with a yellowish hue. The wrapper itself is fairly smooth and uniform in color; the only defect is the cap, which is applied a bit carelessly and leaves the head appearing wrinkled. The prelight scent is typical of the Padron series — earthy, sweet tobacco.

What Elvis writes about lighting up the maduro version is just as true of the natural:

Time to light up. Just used a simple guillotine cut on it…it was really too small I though to attempt a punch or V cut. I wetted down the freshly cut end and took a wooden match to it. It lit up perfectly…quickly and evenly. Ahhh…already a plus to smoking a small cigar…no time wasted trying to get the whole thing lit. Take that you 60-gauge monsters! (See my humidor for Edge Battalion and MX2 Gordo…now jealous of this little stick).

The flavor profile here is quite similar to other natural wrapped cigars in the series: it starts up with a little pepper and settles into base flavors of leather and toasted wood. There are some sweet notes that gradually dissipate.

In the mid-section we found a bit of cocoa along with the woody flavors and leathery aroma. The burn tends to tilt a little, but rotating the cigar seems to remedy this slight annoyance. For such a small cigar it pumps out a nice volume of smoke, but it has to be smoked rather slowly, “sipped” as lucky7 says, or else it grows hot and prematurely acrid. As hard as it may be to believe, the Corticos can last up to 50 minutes if smoked in this way (and they kinda have to be.)

The last section is a little rough. Cigarfan found it almost impossible to keep this little guy smoking cool in the last two inches, resulting in a bitter, hot taste. Lucky7 found coffee bean and cocoa flavors to the end, with a little char and pepper on the aftertaste.

Lucky7's Corticos Natural - 1st Ash

Elvis found the same little kick that he found with the maduro,

…with a slightly longer finish that stays burning the back of your throat a bit. The Natural also seems to smoke a little more quickly and the wrapper doesn’t seem to be as thick. All in all this Natural wrappered Corticos is also a nice little taste of a larger cigar experience when you don’t quite have the time to suck down a more traditional, larger cigar.

Maduro

The wrapper on this maduro is surprisingly oily and has the same grain that you can sometimes find on the standard and large size maduros in this line. We agree with Elvis when he says,

I was immediately impressed by the Corticos wrapper. It was toothy, dark and really nice looking. I guess I always assumed that a tiny cigar would be made with less expensive tobaccos. But from the look of it, this wrapper could be the same darn thing they put on the Padron 1964’s! Next, I noticed a very strong, alluring aroma from the unlit cigar that was dead on to a Hershey’s Special Dark candy bar. It was chocolate up and down but with the complex bitterness thrown into the mix that really reminded me of this little treat of a candy bar I occasionally buy and keep in the fridge to nibble on.

The maduro is softer, sweeter, and perhaps simply more flavorful than the natural. It starts up a touch harsh, but then it evens out and presents all the sweet barbeque flavors that you’d expect from the larger class maduros. Corticos Maduro with quarter for comparisonThe core flavors are similar to the natural version: wood and leather (especially on the nose) but the maduro is accompanied by a wonderful sweet char.

The flavor intensifies in the mid-section and the flavor slides to the bitter side of bittersweet. The finish is fairly short and there isn’t much room for development here, but overall this is a nice little stogie up until the last third. If you try to smoke this cigar at a “normal” pace, it will heat up and get downright nasty. Once again, it’s sippin’ time in the final stretch.

Elvis’s impression of the maduro Corticos:

From the very first puff I was really blown away. There was no working my way into this cigar to find the true flavor. It was there from first fire. A very sharp taste of earthy espresso and the aforementioned bitter chocolate. Sharp is really the best word here even if you don’t agree with my flavor profiles…it’s got a sharp bite to it that you get when you take in a puff and then it’s gone. It’s a crisp and clean burst of flavor that nails your tastebuds and then just cuts out. There’s none of the lingering throat burning issues you might have from a similar larger cigar that can be annoying with flavors this big. What’s more is that I got nearly 45-minutes out of this little guy. I did smoke it slow making notes as I went along, but I was pleasantly surprised that this wasn’t a 15 minute cigar.

Corticos Maduro Tin

Conclusion

Overall we preferred the Corticos in the maduro wrapper over the natural. The natural is no slouch, but the maduro brings with it a little more richness and smokes a little bit smoother. They both resemble other cigars in the line, but you have to take care not to hotbox these little fellers. As lucky7 says,

If you are a manly-man, you can probably nub these guys but for the rest of us I think it is safe to say, 2/3 is enough. I like full bodied but not hot nasty char/pepper and bitterness.

Elvis believes that Padron’s Corticos is a good example of why the trend in cigar size is turning to narrow ring gauges:

I have blogged in the past (at www.velvetcigar.net) that I honestly think the next wave in cigars today will be smaller, skinnier sticks. With so much emphasis on the wrapper and all the major makers trying to invent the next new thing in creative wrappers, it only makes sense that having a cigar with less filler would intensify the flavor of that outer shell. This point is definitely proven with the Padron Corticos. Same overall flavors as the 4000, 5000 or 6000 but delivered much quicker in a little stronger setting.

And if you need one last reason to pick up a tin of Corticos on your next outing to the cigar shop, there’s the price: at around two bucks a pop, they’re hard to beat. Just remember, don’t underestimate these short panatelas because they’re small. Smoke them sloooowly, make them last, and they will reward you with all of the flavor you would expect from larger size Padrons.

Thanks to Elvis for his lively and entertaining take on the the modest but full-flavored Corticos. You can keep track of his adventures by checking into The Velvet Cigar, where he and Ironmeden always have something new and interesting up their sleeves.

… cigarfan & lucky7

Padron Series 6000 (Comparison Review)

Padron Series 6000 - Natural and Maduro

Skip the fluff and jump straight to the review!

Cigar Stats
Brand Owner: Padron Cigars, Inc. – Miami, FL (website)
(distributor operates under the name Piloto Cigars, Inc.)
Factory: Tabacos Cubanica, S.A. – Esteli, Nicaragua
Factory: Tabacos Centroamericanos, S.A. – Danli, Honduras
Model/Vitola: Padron Series 6000 (Natural and Maduro)
Size: 5.5 x 52 (torpedo)
Wrapper: Nicaragua
Filler & Binder: Nicaragua
Body: Medium to Full
Strength: Medium to Full
Average Retail: $7.23 USD
Cigar Insider/Aficionado Ratings: Low 90s

Fourteen other vitola sizes are available in the traditional Padron Series along with one which was recently discontinued.

Frontmark

Length x Ring

Shape

2000

5.0 x 50

robusto

3000

5.5 x 52

robusto

4000

6.5 x 54

toro

5000

5.5 x 56

robusto

6000

5.5 x 52

torpedo

7000

6.25 x 60

toro

Ambassador

6.875 x 42

lonsdale

Chicos

5.5 x 36

discontinued

Churchill

6.875 x 46

churchill

Corticos

4.25 x 35

short panatela

Delicias

4.875 x 46

corona extra

Executive

7.5 x 50

double corona

Londres

5.5 x 42

corona

Magnum

9.0 x 50

giant

Palmas

6.25 x 42

long corona

Panetela

6.875 x 36

panetela

All sizes come in lacquered cedar boxes of 26, packaged with cellophane sleeves on individual cigars. Many vendors list a box size of 25. I am not entirely sure why that is. It may be that Padron changed the box count since the initial release. The Corticos are the exception packaged in boxes of 30 or tins of 6.

From the Padron website …..Jose Padron, Sr.

“We deliver only the finest, handmade, complex cigars with the flavor of the Cuban heritage out of which the Padron recipe was born. Our primary mission is the exceptional quality of our product, not the quantity produced. As a vertically integrated, family-owned company, we pay personal attention to every detail throughout all steps of our tobacco growing and cigar manufacturing process. Because we strive to give you, the smoker, the confidence that each cigar is the same ….. perfect.”

If you are interested in more KOTF info on the Padron Story, you can read it here.

The Keepers of the Flame Padron Series Roundup

Cigarfan & Lucky7

This comparison review is one in a series on the original Padron line of cigars. When we have completed reviews on the entire line, a vertical tasting for each wrapper will be published. Each review will be an amalgam opinion of cigarfan and lucky7 along with that of the guest reviewer(s). Our guest reviewer for this vitola is:

PatrickA - The Stogie Guys

Padron Series 6000 – Natural and Maduro

Patrick's 6000 Natural and Maduro - Actual SizeThe Padron 6000 is the sole figurado produced for the classic Padron Series. Upon its release in 2004 it was hailed as an outstanding addition, garnering scores of 90 for the natural and 91 for the maduro from Cigar Insider. Patrick notes that “some cigar enthusiasts consider the the 6000 to be the elite vitola of the main line Padrons.” So it was with some excitement that we readied our cutters and prepared to examine the 6000 for ourselves.

Both of these cigars have impressively pointed torpedo heads. As lucky7 says, “put a little crook in it and add a brim, voila… the sorting hat from Harry Potter.” And again the wrapper colors are almost indistinguishable — sitting side by side the natural is just a few shades lighter than the maduro, and the maduro glistens with a bit more oil.

Natural

Both of these cigars seem to be constructed more carefully than others in the line. The wrappers are cleaner and more uniform in color. In the case of the natural, there a few protruding veins but they are fairly discreet. The roll is firm and even with a slight box press.

6000 Natural - Wrapper Grain

The prelight characteristics are similar to other naturals in the line: an earthy hay-like scent from the wrapper and sweet tobacco with a hint of fruit from the foot. Cigarfan detected a touch of ammonia from one sample.

6000 Natural FootLike all torpedos this is a cigar that graduates in size from a point at the head to a sizable surface area at the foot — in this case a 52 ring gauge that takes some time to light properly. It opens up with the peppery spice we’ve come to expect from this series, but within a few minutes this calms and presents an easygoing, medium-bodied smoke with a woody foundation. Patrick reported some saltiness as well:

The flavor is a bit spicy at the outset with an arid, woodsy body. Where the Maduro has sweetness, the Natural has salt — a biting dryness that increases with the frequency of each puff. Careful smokers will notice a backdrop of cinnamon.

As the 6000 gathers speed it presents more flavors of cocoa and coffee. Cigarfan welcomed the return of an acidic tang that was present in the 7000 and Magnum naturals (but curiously not the 3000 or the smaller vitolas.) The woody foundation persists and the aroma is distinctly leathery.

Lucky7's 6000 Natural 1st Ash

As the barrel of the cigar shortens it leaves behind a somewhat mushy, slightly flaky ash, though as Patrick notes, “it wasn’t an encumbrance (even though I expect better for the price.)” He also remarks on an uneven burn that requires corrections and “a tendency for the burn to extinguish itself” down the final stretch.

The end game of the 6000 Natural is intensified by the structure of the torpedo: the flavors become concentrated as the ring gauge narrows. In this case, there are some notes of caramel, but they are brief and scattered as the flavors turn ashy and bitter.

cigarfan wraps the day with a 6000 Natural as the California wildfires blaze
Cigarfan wraps his day with a 6000 Natural as
California wildfires blaze in the distance

Maduro

The maduro 6000 is equally well constructed and is unusually attractive for the classic Padron series. As Patrick tells it,

6000 Natural with quarter for comparisonThe beautifully-constructed head clips neatly to reveal a clear pre-light draw. I found plenty of sweet cocoa flavors off the foot — very similar to the aroma of Swiss Miss. There are a few veins, some noticeable seams, and a less-than-perfectly packed cross section at the foot, but this nonetheless has the feel of a finely-built cigar.

The maduro smokes a little more aggressively than the natural, jumping off with a peppery bite. After an inch or so this settles and a familiar base of leather and toasted wood comes to the fore. The aroma is sweet and slightly musty.

The peppery overtones persist into the middle section as the finish grows moderately. The aroma loses some its earthiness and takes on a beanier character, chocolate or cocoa, while the basic flavor of the cigar remains woody. At this point the smoke is quite creamy and the texture rates a solid medium.

Lucky7's 6000 Maduro Ash

The last stage is marked by increased bitterness, but kept in balance until the end, as Patrick explains:

The first inch is stronger than I expected with heavy, earthy notes of leather and a little black pepper. The pre-light sweetness creeps in shortly thereafter, though, balancing out the flavor. This is where the cigar is at its best. A pleasant sweet vs. bitter interaction characterizes the second third, and the flavor is most enjoyable when bitter isn’t winning out. Look for an increase in sourness is the final third.

Conclusion

While lucky7 preferred the maduro 6000 just slightly over the natural, Patrick came down decisively for the maddie:

Even though both displayed construction flaws that would be better left to cheaper smokes, I enjoyed each experience. There’s no question in my mind, however, that the Maduro is the finer cigar. Its taste is fuller and more complex, with a lingering sweetness that I will certainly seek out again.

Bucking the trend was cigarfan, who appreciated the smoother, slightly more suave character of the natural over the sweetness of the maduro.

A final point is worth making regarding the price of the 6000, which is a bit higher than the rest of the line. While this is a quality cigar — in whichever wrapper you prefer — it’s not wildly different from the rest of the line, but it is considerably more expensive (especially if you’re buying by the stick.)

Lucky7’s take:

The 6000 is a very nice smoking cigar but given the price differential between the 3000 and the 6000, I would go for the 3000 every time…it’s so much cheaper and basically the same smoke. For the torpedo nut, I wouldn’t hesitate to recommend it. For the penny conscious, stick with the 3000.

Thanks to Patrick A for taking the time to participate in the Padron Roundup. Make sure to visit StogieGuys.com for the latest news and reviews from Patrick and the rest of the Stogie Guys. Somehow they manage to publish something new every single day!

… cigarfan & lucky7

Padron Series Londres (Comparison Review)

Padron Series Londres - Natural and Maduro

Skip the fluff and jump straight to the review!

Cigar Stats
Brand Owner: Padron Cigars, Inc. – Miami, FL (website)
(distributor operates under the name Piloto Cigars, Inc.)
Factory: Tabacos Cubanica, S.A. – Esteli, Nicaragua
Factory: Tabacos Centroamericanos, S.A. – Danli, Honduras
Model/Vitola: Padron Series Londres (Natural and Maduro)
Size: 5.5 x 42 (corona)
Wrapper: Nicaragua
Filler & Binder: Nicaragua
Body: Medium to Full
Strength: Medium to Full
Average Retail: $2.65 USD
Cigar Insider/Aficionado Ratings: Consistently high 80s

Fourteen other vitola sizes are available in the traditional Padron Series along with one which was recently discontinued.

Frontmark

Length x Ring

Shape

2000

5.0 x 50

robusto

3000

5.5 x 52

robusto

4000

6.5 x 54

toro

5000

5.5 x 56

robusto

6000

5.5 x 52

torpedo

7000

6.25 x 60

toro

Ambassador

6.875 x 42

lonsdale

Chicos

5.5 x 36

discontinued

Churchill

6.875 x 46

churchill

Corticos

4.25 x 35

short panatela

Delicias

4.875 x 46

corona extra

Executive

7.5 x 50

double corona

Londres

5.5 x 42

corona

Magnum

9.0 x 50

giant

Palmas

6.25 x 42

long corona

Panetela

6.875 x 36

panetela

All sizes come in lacquered cedar boxes of 26, packaged with cellophane sleeves on individual cigars. Many vendors list a box size of 25. I am not entirely sure why that is. It may be that Padron changed the box count since the initial release. The Corticos are the exception packaged in boxes of 30 or tins of 6.

From the Padron website …..Jose Padron, Sr.

“We deliver only the finest, handmade, complex cigars with the flavor of the Cuban heritage out of which the Padron recipe was born. Our primary mission is the exceptional quality of our product, not the quantity produced. As a vertically integrated, family-owned company, we pay personal attention to every detail throughout all steps of our tobacco growing and cigar manufacturing process. Because we strive to give you, the smoker, the confidence that each cigar is the same ….. perfect.”

If you are interested in more KOTF info on the Padron Story, you can read it here.

The Keepers of the Flame Padron Series Roundup

Cigarfan & Lucky7

This comparison review is one in a series on the original Padron line of cigars. When we have completed reviews on the entire line, a vertical tasting for each wrapper will be published. Each review will be an amalgam opinion of cigarfan and lucky7 along with that of the guest reviewer(s). Our guest reviewer for this vitola is:

GeorgeE - The Stogie Guys

Padron Series Londres – Natural and Maduro

Padron Series Londres - Actual SizeThe Londres is the third corona in the classic Padron series, but unlike the others this one is a true corona. While the Palmas is long and slightly underweight and the Delicias is stubby and a little chubby, the Londres fits the corona standard exactly.

Cuba’s La Corona factory was the largest of its kind in the late nineteenth century, and it has been suggested that the name corona was first made popular by the La Corona Coronas made there. As time wore on, the term corona became central to the industry, spawning gran coronas, petit coronas, double coronas, etc., and eventually became the standard against which other vitolas were compared.

The appellation “Londres” can only mean that the corona was as popular in London as it was everywhere else. Maybe this was the perfect size to smoke in the drizzle under the gas lamps of old London, but is it the perfect size in the Padron series for our smokers today?

As our panel found out, maybe not.

Natural

The Natural wrapper imparts a familiar rustic appearance to this cigar: it’s ruddy, bumpy and wrinkled with a slightly grainy texture. George noted an uneven cap that threatened to unravel the cigar upon cutting (he was surprised when it didn’t) and a wrapper “marred by numerous small tears.”

Londres Natural with a vein spike - ouch!

Lucky7 smoked a sample with a special new design feature: a vein spiking through the wrapper right on the edge of the head. Maybe that allows the smoker to gain a tighter purchase on the cigar in a strong wind.

On the bright side, the roll is firm and the draw is free. It produces a nice volume of smoke with ease and exhibits no burn problems. The prelight scent and cold flavors are typical of the line: grassy tobacco with a hint of the pasture.

The Natural Londres fires up quickly and offers a grumpy greeting: lucky7 called the first inch “raspy”, while cigarfan noted a mild bite. The aroma is sweet and somewhat nutty; lucky7 compared it to “strong sweet tea with a twang.” After the peppery and slightly harsh prelude, there are notes of cocoa, coffee, and leather. There is a touch of sweetness on the palate.

The mid-section marks a turning point. The flavors begin to intensify and turn from slightly sweet to slightly bitter. The nose twang starts to wane. It is solidly medium-bodied with a moderately long finish and slightly ashy flavor. It is imperative to smoke this cigar slowly or it will burn hot and get mean.

The final stage of this cigar is bitter and strong and was not met with applause by any of us, least of all George. Cigarfan and lucky7 found some merit in the first two-thirds of the Londres, even if they were not terribly impressed by cigar overall, but George’s opinion speaks for itself:

From the start, the Londres natural was not enjoyable. It was hot, no matter how much time I allowed between puffs. I’m a fairly slow smoker generally and with both of these I made an extra effort to slow down even more. It seemed to make little difference, with the natural burning particularly rapidly.

And while it produced copious amounts of smoke, the taste was acrid and the finish long and sharp… Unlike the maduro, the natural got harsher as I continued to smoke. I continued smoking, occasionally tapping off the gray black ash, and Londres Natural with quarter for comparisonhoped for some positive developments. But at about the two-inch mark I gave up, my taste buds overwhelmed by the bitter taste and disappointment.

Maduro

The maduro Londres rated a little bit above average in appearance for this line. While still roughshod in general, the caps were applied well (with one exception), the roll was firm and without soft spots, and there were no protruding veins. As with the other sizes, the maduro Londres is only a few shades darker than the natural.

The prelight characteristics are similar to the natural version: straightforward tobacco; additionally, George reported a minty prelight scent in both natural and maduro wrappers.

The flavors and smoking characteristics of the maduro were very similar to the natural: a spicy and somewhat harsh introduction followed by a medium-bodied smoke with a foundation of leather and toasted wood. Substitute a slightly heavier dose of chocolate for the natural’s cocoa and it could be the same cigar.

Lucky7's Londres Maduro - 1st Ash

Once again, the Londres tends to get bitter and smoke hot starting in the second third. The aroma is pleasant and the flavor begins to intensify, though perhaps in a way that isn’t entirely laudable.

The last third continues down this precarious road to an inhospitable conclusion: hot and finally acrid. George sums it up:

There was a little spice in the beginning that dropped off after about a half-inch as the bitterness increased. Although I didn’t find the finish particularly dry, I did notice that when I drank a lot of water after about the first third the bitterness seemed to subside somewhat. At that point, the cigar devolved into just a sort of bland, boring smoke with some unpleasant tones.

Of the two, I preferred the maduro Londres, if for no other reason than the bitterness and harsh finish subsided before the end of the cigar.

Conclusion

There is a moment for the Londres after the initial harshness subsides and the subsequent bitterness begins when this is a flavorful corona with all of the traits we expect in a Padron cigar: a rich woody flavor with hints of leather and cocoa or chocolate that goes exactly where you’d expect a Padron to go. The problem with the Londres is that this flavor is only momentary.

Like the Delicias, this cigar can be enjoyed up to a point. As lucky7 puts it,

This is a very straight forward little corona which has some nice flavors in the first half, then turns mediocre over the second. There is some unpleasant bitterness associated with the final third which will definitely turn some folks off. Even with the low price point, I do not consider the Londres the best value.

George concludes with suspicions about the quality standards employed in rolling this cigar:

Though there were many similarities in the natural and maduro, both were sharp and harsh, presenting almost no complexity. Even the taste of the tobacco was unpleasant. It’s hard not to assume Padron rolls this line from leaves that didn’t measure up to the quality standards for any of its other cigars.

As a Padron fan, I find it hard to be so negative about any of their cigars. but having had, probably, six or eight Londres over the past few years, these two reinforced the reactions I’d had before.

We all agreed on one point: while this is an inexpensive cigar, there are better options to choose from in this line.

Thanks to GeorgeE for his candid contribution. To be cruel is to be kind, in this case to our readers and to the cigar consumer at large. Be sure to check in to the Stogie Guys for daily cigar news and George’s always frank and incisive reviews.

… cigarfan & lucky7