Recommended Posts

Posted

An 8-9-8 that comes in boxes of 10…what more could you ask for? Cold draw has wood and a little saltiness, but that’s all I can really make out.

Light-up, on the other hand, has a lot of berry, some cream, and splashes of soda around the palate. The finish, quite a long one, has some nuttiness. Going on, it gets remarkably more rich right away, having a berry compote on toasted rye, with a dash of black pepper. The result is actually something like a Dr Pepper, or his poor imitation, Mr Pibb (“Dude didn’t even get his degree.” RIP Mitch).

IMG_4058.jpeg.23a3b542092c45c61dbceb29ef31a1ca.jpeg

The flavor is excellent, but the burn leaves some to be desired. One side of the cigar seems to be flame-retardant, even though this has been in a dry box for three days. After a touch-up, things are rolling again. I always find that immediately after a touch-up, there is a burst of added flavor, and in my mind I’m thinking that’s the portion of wrapper I’m tasting, that I wasn’t tasting on the previous few draws. If you think wrapper leaf doesn’t matter, and yes I know that exactly none of you think that, just notice the difference after you have to touch up one side of a stick. Big pop in flavor.

Heading into the second third, this is a swirling palate of flavors. Everything from nuts (almond, cashew), to fruits (blueberry, strawberry), to dried fruits (raisins, cranberry), to damp wood and cheesy funk. Other than a honeyed sourdough base, nothing is lasting a particularly long time, but there are also not many elbows. I wouldn’t call them flavor transitions, more like comparing overlapping melodic lines in a Renaissance madrigal that continuously cycle. Interesting blend. And yes… I’m working right now, hence the musical comparison. And no, my students can’t tell a Renaissance madrigal from a Medieval chant. The semester is young, though.

Around the midpoint, the cigar inexplicably goes out. Not that long between draws, and it’s not overly moist, so there’s a ding on construction there. After a relight, there is a bit of a dumb phase, but eventually we seem to be back on track. Flavors turn here to a fruity stout, with a custard finish. Sprinkles of coriander.

Last third gives me dark agave, some citrus and vanilla spice, a little bit more pepper heat, and toasted brioche with fig jam. It also gives me lots of trouble. Had to relight twice more, a definite detriment to the construction. Gets bitter towards the nub. Unfortunately I cant say I enjoyed the latter half of this very much, but I think it’s down to the construction. I do have one more of these, and I’ll give it another go, hoping it comes out better than this one did.

  • Like 2
Posted
On 1/19/2026 at 11:50 AM, Çnote said:

'I refused to put this down to the extent of uncouthly smoking in Jackson's driveway.

…that’s totally acceptable, you were buying Girl Scout cookies off me! 😄

On 1/19/2026 at 11:50 AM, Çnote said:

Who cares about numbers at a certain extent?

8-9-8’s, 8,888 boxes of 10!

  • Haha 1
Posted
17 minutes ago, Capn_Jackson said:

8-9-8’s, 8,888 boxes of 10!

898s in 10s is so silly.

21 minutes ago, Capn_Jackson said:

Looks like mine was a dud. I’ll give it another shot with the other I’ve got. It started off absolutely great, too bad it ended the way it did.

You didn't see me relight this 3 times? I just figured it was wet, I pulled this from a 62% RH Boveda. I didn't get an overwhelming amount of bitterness though. Oh, CC!

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.

Community Software by Invision Power Services, Inc.