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Rocky Patel Fifty

ROCKY PATEL FIFTY
6 1/2 x 52 Toro


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Anyone who knows me knows that I talk a lot of trash. I probably also talk a lot of trash about Rocky Patel. What I cannot, no matter what, deny is his success. The guy is a beast in the industry. He makes a million cigars, sells a million cigars, and makes millions in revenue. No matter what I think or say, people dig Rocky Patel. I recently had the pleasure of attending the CA Big Smoke in Las Vegas, and a lunch hosted by Rocky Patel and family was a part of that trip. As a part of that lunch, we were given a gorgeous box containing four cigars from the Rocky Patel co. world, including this newest cigar, the FIFTY, which is being produced to commemorate Mr. Patel's fiftieth birthday (where the 15th and Decade were made to commemorate years in the industry... no, Rocky has not been in the cigar biz since he was a neonate). According to the info received there, the cigar is made up of Nicaraguan filler, Nicaraguan binder, contained within an Ecuador Habano Oscuro wrapper, all made at Rocky's newest facility, in Nicaragua.

It really is a great looking cigar. The wrapper has a great oil sheen, a dark reddish chocolate brown color, and almost no visible veins. The cigar has a fairly extreme box press to it ("Nimish sat on the mold"). The bands are complex pieces of orange, gold, and silver artwork. It is a fairly firm cigar when squeezed, with no soft spots whatsoever, though just a tiny bit of give to it here and there. The cold aroma from the body of the cigar is just a touch of coffee and wood, while to foot has a touch of burned cedar (that specifically pungent tang), along with some black coffee. The cold draw... WOW. I would almost swear this cigar was in some way infused. It has such a strong milk chocolate flavor to it. It might have just a touch of ammonia to it as well unfortunately. There is something chemical underneath. Hopefully that is just a hint that will fade once lit. The draw itself is a touch firmer than I usually think of Rocky Patel cigars as being. He claims that literally every single cigar they make is draw tested, where most factories only draw test cigars randomly... Who knows, but if true, that is an impressive claim.

Lit at 4:28pm.

The Rocky Patel Fifty lights up easily, and produces a ton of smoke right off the bat, though the burn line almost instantly goes wonky on the underside of the cigar. I kind of attribute this to the box press, which in my experience tends to cause funny burn lines more often than not. Nothing that has any negative effect on smoking experience though. The flavor profile is right away a medium to full bodied, rich, and dark animal. There is a milk chocolate sweetness with a mildly floral perfume to it that dominates, with some wet burnt wood not far behind, and a pretty heavily peppered finish that lingers for a few minutes across the palate.

Interestingly, by about the one inch mark, all of the spice has faded away, and what is left is a sort of syrupy thick, bittersweet, wet, dark wood flavor. The burn line moves very slowly though, which is a plus for anyone who pays MSRP for these cigars ($21.00 for the Toro...). I'm kind of disappointed that things fell off so quickly from a start that was so intense and bold. Hopefully it comes back.

The ash is a little flakey, and falls for the first time at around an inch and a bit. The flavor profile by the two inch range has turned to what I associate with cigars that are just downright too wet from rolling. It is a bitterness that I associate with my job (in a pharmaceutical compounding lab, where I often get tiny particles of substances like quinine in my mouth, which for those who are unaware, is palate-ruiningly bitter) actually. It is not that great bitterness you get from coffee, it is not a coffee flavor... it is a wet, green flavor, and it has taken over this cigar that started with such great promise. It is a damned shame, but for science, I smoke on!

I am happy to report that the intensity of the bitterness fades past the halfway mark, and things take a turn towards dark coffee and that same old burnt, wet wood. So the transitional complexity comes just from the arrival and departure of a horrible bitterness, but at least it includes a departure. At this point, flavors are just what I think of a solid, core Nicaraguan tobacco flavors. Earthy, dirty, and dark. The hot finish has made a return of sorts... in a slow, mellow heat that lingers after each draw.

And things really don't change again, at all, through the end. This cigar was a bit of a roller coaster, and unfortunately, I can't report that it was one of the great thrill rides of my cigar smoking experience... it was more like jumping off the top of the highest point of a roller coaster with no bungee cord or anything to pull you back up. It started wonderfully, big, strong, concentrated, bold flavors, complexity and exciting... and then it quickly turned into a soft, bitter, muddy mess, and stayed that way for an hour and a half.

Ended at 6:10pm, and honestly, for $21.00 I will be passing on these in the future. I still have another single in the humidor that will smoke at some time in the future, just to make sure this wasn't some fluke. I feel like I gave this cigar a fair shot, especially since I will admit that I am no Rocky Patel fan... It just did not deliver what it promises. In the future when I want to spend more than twenty dollars on a box pressed Nicaraguan toro, there is a cigar with a hammer on the band that will be getting my hard earned dollars.

Comments

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    Shaun.Harrison87Shaun.Harrison87 Posts: 1,971
    The best RPs I have had have all had serious age(1+years) on them, hopefully this follows the same trend
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    The_KidThe_Kid Posts: 7,869 ✭✭✭
    Nice review..Thank You. I have a question about the box press, In your experience do you feel that cigars are box pressed to improve the draw?
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    docbp87docbp87 Posts: 3,521
    Shaun.Harrison87:
    serious age(1+years)
    One year is barely age in my opinion... A year is rest.
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    Shaun.Harrison87Shaun.Harrison87 Posts: 1,971
    docbp87:
    Shaun.Harrison87:
    serious age(1+years)
    One year is barely age in my opinion... A year is rest.
    Since I've only been a serious aficionado for 6 months, a year seems like a lifetime.
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    kaspera79kaspera79 Posts: 7,257 ✭✭✭
    I think that the second RP50 will be pleasing once you age ( over a year) it, If I had one I wouldn't even think about it for at least that long.
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    docbp87docbp87 Posts: 3,521
    Shaun.Harrison87:
    docbp87:
    Shaun.Harrison87:
    serious age(1+years)
    One year is barely age in my opinion... A year is rest.
    Since I've only been a serious aficionado for 6 months, a year seems like a lifetime.
    Sorry if my response seemed snobby or snippy, didn't mean for it to, though now that I look at it, it seems that way. I do think these need rest, to get rid of that chemical bitterness, but even so, I just don't see the potential.
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    Shaun.Harrison87Shaun.Harrison87 Posts: 1,971
    docbp87:
    Shaun.Harrison87:
    docbp87:
    Shaun.Harrison87:
    serious age(1+years)
    One year is barely age in my opinion... A year is rest.
    Since I've only been a serious aficionado for 6 months, a year seems like a lifetime.
    Sorry if my response seemed snobby or snippy, didn't mean for it to, though now that I look at it, it seems that way. I do think these need rest, to get rid of that chemical bitterness, but even so, I just don't see the potential.
    No worries Doc. It's a nice looking cigar, they all can't be great though.
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    phobicsquirrelphobicsquirrel Posts: 7,347 ✭✭✭
    I always though 3 plus years or so was aging.. eh.

    Nice write up. I wasn't planning on trying this but I liked reading the review. Sort of what I expected. The only RP I have on hand are the decades 1990's 6x60's. I really like those.
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    ENFIDLENFIDL Posts: 5,836
    Nice review. I can't really say I'm too surprised with learning as much about Rockys reputation that I have. For that price it seems way off. Hopefully with a year or so on it it will improve but still for $21 it should be great at any point
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    KriegKrieg Posts: 5,188 ✭✭✭
    I saw this over the weekend at the tobacco world anniv party. They were selling them for $20 each/$400 a box. Thought about buying one, but thought $20 for a RP cigar is just way too much. Glad I passed on it. Only a few cigars out there I'd be willing to pay that kind of money for, Padron...AF.. Just don't see RP has the super super premium cigar manufactuer. Don't get me wrong, I like some of his stuff, (bought a box of RP 15th torpedos over the weekend) but not paying that much for a RP cigar. After reading your review, glad I decided against buying it, lol.

    "Long ashes my friends."

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    blurrblurr Posts: 962 ✭✭
    The chemical/bitterness is the reason I am a Rocky hater. After spending good money on vintage 90's & decades & getting that same metallic-chemical bitterness on each RP cigar I smoked I swore myself off RP for the indefinite future. Thats just pure greed putting that on the market when any level of quality control wouldn't allow that out the factory door.
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    Thank you so much for your review... I'm no fan of RP but the Drew Estate is a pretty solid morning smoke—especially with a cup of black coffee. At any rate, despite being underwhelmed, if not, disappointed by the few RP's I have smoked (aside from the Java), I did want to try the fifty. I love Maduro/Oscuro wrappers, Nicaraguan tobacco, and love the feel of boxed pressed cigars... the tastefully designed band and exquisite box adorned in Swarovski Crystals also contributed much to my desire. Each time I'v seen it however, its been 20 plus dollars. The price I do not mind, my favorite cigars are Padron 26 and 64 which I gleefully buy by the box, but I couldn't see myself paying a similar price (per stick) for a RP.
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    dowjr1dowjr1 Posts: 600
    I don't have a lot of RP in the humi but I do have some 90s, 92s, and Patel Bros. All pretty solid in my book. Other than that I don't buy any.
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