What are the best cigars for A beginner with simple taste?
RBeckom
Posts: 2,191 ✭✭✭
As I sample more brands I find that my taste buds are finding greater flavor and more taste from each cigar I smoke. So my question is this. Will cigars I revisit still taste the same or will it be A completely different experience? Any comments will be greatly appreciated.
0
Comments
"If you do not read the newspapers you're uninformed. If you do read the newspapers, you're misinformed." -- Mark Twain
Anyway, from my experience (which ain't much) cigars have tasted differently to me after some time, but more importantly, the flavors in those cigars which I like or don't like have changed over time. i.e. I seem to go through a cycle of having specific flavors that I prefer, so when I'm digging on sweet coffee cocoa flavors I'm in a maduro phase and don't really want anything leathery or spicy. But after a while I'll move into a habano phase (leather/spicy/straightforward tobacco flavors). So for me it's not as much that the cigar flavor changes for me (which it does to a degree), it's more that the flavors in those cigars that I enjoy change. So in that sense, I'd say yes - revisiting cigars after a while could be a completely different experience. If that makes any sense at all...
"Any cigar smoker is friend, because I know how he feels." Alfred de Musset
"A fine cigar is just like a woman. If you don't light it up just right and suck on it with a certain frequency, it will go out on you." Unknown
“A pipe is to the troubled soul what caresses of a mother are for her suffering child.” Indian Proverb
"Any cigar smoker is friend, because I know how he feels." Alfred de Musset
"A fine cigar is just like a woman. If you don't light it up just right and suck on it with a certain frequency, it will go out on you." Unknown
“A pipe is to the troubled soul what caresses of a mother are for her suffering child.” Indian Proverb
+1 to all of these