Description
BolĂvar New Gold Medal Review
Last Tuesday, I was sitting on a milk crate in myâgarage with the ghostsof unfinished projects all around me. Thereâs a smell garages have, when you havenât really lived in them for two years â musty with the stench of old sawdust and spilledâmotor oil and cold concrete. There was a 1974 Honda CB750âI had been eying under a tarp since my daughter was born. Sheâs starting middle school now.
Product Specifications
| Attribute | Detail |
|---|---|
| Product Name | Bolivar New Gold Medal |
| Origin | Cuba |
| Factory | Partagas |
| Vitola | Partagas 15 |
| Length | 165mm (6.5 inches) |
| Ring Gauge | 48 |
| Wrapper | Cuba (Vuelta Abajo) |
| Binder | Cuba (Vuelta Abajo) |
| Filler | Cuba (Vuelta Abajo) |
| Strength | full |
Construction: The Gold Standard?
Iâve got totell you, the first thingâthat doesnât come out â itâs not tobacco, itâs theater. Thisâthing is lined in gold foil like halfway. And it has that more professional, chocolatierâbar or regal bar feel to it as well. On the2023âs new one â which I have ââitâs indeed embossed right into thefoil;â Itâs a nice touch, though Iâve alwaysâfound the foil a bit fussy.
Youâhave to slide it off, or peel it back, and I always think Iâm going to nick thewrapper underneat h with my fingernail. After Iâd removed the foil, the leaf beneath was an old-school Cuban Colorado âânutty brown with a mellow oil sheen that caught the garageâs lowlight. This is not the svelteâ42 ring gauge Lonsdale of yesteryear. Theânew size is 48 ring gauge.
Inâmy hands, it seemed firmer, âmore contemporary.â I have always been a fan of the Lonsdale, but there’s something about 48âgauge when I know i’m gonna be sitting that just feels right. Itâsâbig without being so large that you feel likeblasting your teeth against a flashlight. I gave the cap a quick snip. The coldâdraw was a tick snug â classic Cuba, no?
And Iâve learned not to panicâwhen a Cuban hasa steady stick. Usually when the heat smacks, theâgymculture cools. Off the footâit was barnyard and cedar. No chemicalârudeness: Just fermentedtobacco, thanks.
It had the smell of a library, ifâthe library books were made out of dried leaves. Solid. The First Third: The Reacquaintance
Itâs a trip, to slamâone after years away.
If I were shaking handsâwith a long-lost friend in a new city, the balance of that first draw would provide an equivalent. Itâs as BolĂvarish as they come â earthy, raw, direct â but it did not punch meinâthe throat. I remember the old BolĂvars as these massiveâpowerhouses that would leave you reeling if you hadnât eaten a rump steak first. This one?
Itâs more polite. First fewâsips wasall cedar and a very specific âtoastyâ note. You know when you toast bread aâtiny stepbeyond golden, but it smells amazing? That, and a bite ofâblack pepper on the back end ofthe tongue.
Good smokeâand though quite firm, it drew. I sat there on my milk crate, exhaling clouds up to the rafters, watchingâsmoke snake around an old ladder. The âCuban twangâ was there â that somewhat acidic, citrusty thing youâjust donât really find in Nicaraguan orDominican leaf. Itâs a vibe, man.
It really is. The SecondâThird-The Sweet Spot. AND YOUâRE SO BEAUTIFUL TOO! Theâstick hit its stride around 20 minutes in.
Thatâs where the New GoldMedal thing was starting to findâits footing. It left to pepper, and thiscream âalmost buttersââfeeling took off. Then Iâstarted to taste somebrown sugar. It wasnât like having a lollipop or whatever; not like that, it waslike the smell ofâa bakery three blocks away.
It was humble, hugging the ground behind a denseâwall of cedarand earth. The burn line was one of the cleanest I hadâever seen. (Even though my garage is aârefrigerator,I didnât have to go back over these!) The ash was burning gray, holding to the cigar for an inch and a half before I grew restless and flicked itâoff into an old coffee can I used as an ashtray. Medium and theâintensity did not change medium. I was not dizzy, whichâwas just as well; the last thing I wanted to do upon returning indoors was stumble headfirst into a lawnmower.
It felt balanced. Itâwere as if someone who had that roll in the first place gave afuck about passing flavors. The Final Third:The Long Farewell
As I approached the final couple ofâinches, lo and behold! that âBolĂvarâ identity had returned (somewhat) authoritatively.
The earthiness turnedâa bit darker, evolving from âgardensoilâ to âespresso grounds.â It starts to heatâup but itâs still silky. Iâve had cigars that become, by the end,âa bitter dead thing; this one remainedfairly clean. The cedar came more to the forefront and I picked up a little bitâmore of that, andthe brown sugar note turned into more of a toasted-nuts flavor. I found myself slowing down.
I didn’t want to finish it. Not simply because theâcigar was good, but also because when that cigar was over, I had to come back inand be a âgrown-upâ again. Smoked it all the way downâuntil my finger tips were getting warmI nubbed that bitch. It wasnt harsh, butfirm and warm withâa nice finish and follow through on the palate.
Andit seemedâa nice ending to a story I didnât know I was telling. Pairing Recommendations
I didnât want to freak out while I was outside inthe garage, so I calmedâmy mind with only a thermos of black coffee.
Honestly? It was perfect. The bitterness of the coffee cut the creaminess ofthe cigar andâextracted that brown sugar note. Instead, Iâd hit a boozy rum number â say, Havana Clubâ7.
You want to pairâit with somethingthat has a bit of molasses sweetness to play with the earthy BolĂvar backdrop. If youâre a scotch guy, maybe try to avoid the superâpeaty stuff; it might bury those delicate cedar notes. Good, well-balanced bourbon wouldâbe fine too. Buthonestly, the only thing this slim stick needs to go from quotidian to showstopping isâa fine espresso.
The Verdict
Cigar Started the Buzz?
Is the BolĂvar New Gold Medal âthe biggestâ cigarâever? I don’t know. I donât like the soundsâof wordslike that. What I can tell you is that itâs a way biggerâexperience.
Itâs got the history, itâs got that flashy gold foil if you need to get fancy, and itâs got a flavor profile that wink-winks complexity without being overlyâexhausting.
Itâs a medium-boded cigar that looks like it mightâbe an easy fit. And if youâre a history buff, youâll appreciateâthe Vuelta Abajo tobacco and classic construction.
Ifâyou smoke occasionally, the strengthisnât too intense. Stepping up toa 48 ring gauge from theâoriginal 42 was a good move by Habanos S.A., freeing up the flavors and also inncreasing its impact in-hand. Sitting alone in the dark, with a whiff ofâthe New Gold Medal hanging moistly in the air, I felt like Iâd missed this. It was not onlyâthe tobacco, but beingcompelled to waitfor it.
A 6â1/2in cigarshould notbe hurried. It demandsâ90 minutes of your life in return for an alibi to remain sedentary. For a stonybrookâlike me, man that hadn’t slept in years, that was the entire value of te LEDHFUCKIN price tag. If youâfind a box at La Casa del Habano, get em.
Now itâs âyeah,theyâre here all year,â and yet âBolĂvar Gold Medalsâ are BolĂvar Gold Medals, and there will always beâa special place in my heart for them. Even if youâre puffing itâoutside on a milk crate in a dirty garage, this oneâll make you feel like king of your own little concrete empire. Solid. Truly solid.














