Go Back   Cigar Weekly Community Forums and Discussion Groups > Smoking Post > Cigar Reviews

Cigar Reviews This room is for organized blind reviews, individual reviews by CW Members and reviews entered into the database that the Editors feel are particularly well done.

 
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
Prev Previous Post   Next Post Next
Old 03-12-2008, 10:55 PM   #1
Black Plague
Herf Meister
 
Black Plague's Avatar
 
Join Date: Nov 2003
Location: Southern Indiana
Posts: 7,650
Forgotten Favorites I: LGC Wavell Maduro

Talked about for a while, decided I'd finally freaking do it.

Last year, I renounced Cuban snobbery. I finally came full circle and realized that, while Cuban cigars are great, Honduras, Nicaragua, and the Dominican Republic are also producing excellent cigars. Going back and looking at all the brands I'd formerly ignored, I started to think about all the cigars I loved back in the day. Specifically, all the cigars I loved that nobody every talks about anymore.

What happened with those cigars? Did our tastes change? Did they change?

I thought a great way to start this off would be with a cigar that people were prepared to kill for during the 90's cigar boom: the La Gloria Cubana Wavell Maduro.

La Gloria Cubana
Wavell Maduro
5 x 50
Produced in the Dominican Republic and Miami, USA
Connecticut Broadleaf Wrapper, Nicaraguan Binder, Dominican and Nicaraguan Filler


Prelight: Box-pressed, hinting that it was most likely produced in the DR, as most Miami-rolled LGCs are round (the box-pressing reduces transit damage). The wrapper was a dark French roast color, nearly oscuro. It looked absolutely great, evenly-colored with hardly a visible vein the whole length. The texture was rough and sandpapery. The filler leaf bulged slightly from the foot.

Beverage: Just water.

Flavor: Toasted the foot and started to draw. From the start, bitter and not very pleasant. Finish was dark coffee grounds, a tad vegetal, with some notes of dry dark earth and varnished wood. One inch in, it got a little better, but was still sour and acidic. It did pick up some chocolate and some woody herbal notes. The smell wasn't much better, having a burnt and ammoniac aroma to it. Halfway through, much the same. Still very woody, herbal, developing a mild black pepper flavor and a touch of licorice. It remained much the same until the end.

Construction: The burn was decent, needing a few corrections. The draw was good and the ash a solid-structured gray-white.

Summary: I have to admit I've never been much of a fan of maduros. To me, they seem to all have that woody flavor that dominates the flavor profile. The overall expression of this Wavell was that it showed promise, but I believe that El Credito may be selling them much too young. The piece of Connecticut Broadleaf that this was wrapped was obviously extremely high-quality, and my fingers and lips didn't turn black, so I'm sure it is naturally that incredibly even color and not "painted."

Many have voiced the opinion that they just aren't as good as they used to be. I believe it may be due to the pressure of becoming a national brand (since General Cigar/Swedish Match distribute them) and having less time to age tobacco before rolling it up and shipping out to tobaconnists. These could become great quality smokes (worthy of the reputation they held during the Boom) if anyone is patient enough to lay them down for a year or two.

If there's a cigar you'd like me to cover for this new series, just shoot me a PM.
Black Plague is offline   Reply With Quote
 

Bookmarks

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump


All times are GMT -8. The time now is 01:19 AM.