Inconsistent Cigar Experience
CharlieCordus
Posts: 84 ✭✭
in Cigar 101
I've been reintroduced to cigar smoking for about a year now so I still consider myself very much a noobie. I have found many cigars that I have liked alot only to try another from the same batch and have a very different taste. I try to do all the basics with humidity and aging. Have others here had similar experiences?
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What kinds of cigars are you smoking?
Here's a partial list of what I've tried:
5 vegas
Fuente
padron
padilla
my father
nub
Man o' War
gurkha
diesel unlimited
cusano
cohiba
then some cc's:
Behike
RyJ short churchills
Montecristo #2
ramon allones
hoyo de monterray no. 2
PSD 4
lusitania's
trinidad Robusto T
h. upmann mag50
For the CCs, they've been known to be inconsistent from box to box as the guys south of Miami don't bother trying to blend them to consistency from harvest to harvest or even from vitola to vitola.
I do agree that different foods, time of day and severe changes in weather, alergies and humidity can make a cigar taste/burn very differently from the last one you had.
From my experience the mind is a VERY powerful thing; if you buy a cuban Cohiba often times simply the mystique and hype/myth makes the mind already looking for things to love about it, and even if it isn't truly a "great" cigar or experience the bias so to speak of a cuban MAKES people love them.
Also in a different aside, I do have to back-up Wayne on this. It has been documented for a very long time now that SOME (not all of course), but some factories in Cuba HAVE had problems with consistency for several reasons. Because of the politics in Cuba after Fidel Castro took over he stripped all tobacco farmers on their land and took it under government control. Due to this, there was very little lack of incentive to do better than they had to to get by. Also, it has been documented that they have been known to rush several of the processes including the growth period, and the fermentation. But the single "biggest" problem that has been documented is that they do not always leave the land to rest after the growing season to replenish to nutrients in the soil.
All of what I have said in this post can be found in several different books, and other very reputable resources, but the most recent one that I read and found this in was "Nat Sherman's: A Passion for Cigars" and I don't believe that any BOTL/SOTL will argue that Nat and his son Joel Sherman talk out of their a$$. Just my two cents, and I am CERTAINLY NOT trying to make anyone look bad or say that one person is right or wrong. --Brett
EDIT: added line breaks and corrected a handful of spelling errors.