Description
I sat on a piece of bleached driftwood on an expanse of beach with no name â at least, not one I could findâahead of time on any map. The sunâwas going through that torturous, heavy sinking into the Caribbean and turning the water into what seemed like liquid copper. I had spent the last 3 weeks in aâboardroom in Panama, working a deal that had more moving parts than my dadâs Swiss watch. When the signaturesâeventually fell on the paper, I didnât feel like partying.â I didnât want a steak dinner. I craved silence, the roar of the tide and a smoke to live beneath theâmoment.
Product Specifications
| Attribute | Detail |
|---|---|
| Product Name | Bolivar Royal Corona |
| Origin | Cuba |
| Factory | Robustos |
| Vitola | Robusto |
| Length | 124 mm (4â inches) |
| Ring Gauge | Robustos |
| Wrapper | Cuba (Vuelta Abajo) |
| Binder | Cuba (Vuelta Abajo) |
| Filler | Cuba (Vuelta Abajo) |
| Strength | Medium |
I reached into my travel humidor, the leather worn supple from years of beingâchucked in carry-ons. My fingers grazed through a few of the lighterâsticks and flashier labels, before resting on something thick and steady. You knowâthat moment when you just have to go where you need? Itâs nothingâto do with the price, or the hype, and everything to do with its character. I needed something earthy. I wanted toâsit on something that felt like the ground I was, to my immense relief, finally standing on after weeks of corporate air. I took one out, a Bolivar RoyalâCorona. I sat there, staring at the band â Simon Bolivarâs no-nonsenseâface returned my gaze â and I thought, Yeah, this is it.
That smoke? At only 4.89 inches long and a thickâ50 ring gauge, the Bolivar Royal Corona packs quite a punch. It is the type of cigar thatâdoesnât ask for your attention; it takes it. Itâs been around since the late sixties, and it has that old-school Cuban soul you wonât get in some of theânewer âboutiqueâ blends. Itâs a Robusto that smokes like a much bigger cigar,âand on that beach as the wind tapered to nothing more than a whisper, it was just what I wanted in terms of company.
The Blueprint
First Impressions & Construction
The Royal Coronaâs wrapper is the firstâthing that grabs your attention. Itâs this golden-brown, Colorado-claroâhue that reminds me of a well-oiled saddle. I have seen some that areâslightly darker, but this one was gray right in the middle of the spectrum. And then thereâs thatâtiny little box-press, which I like. Itâs not harsh edge-wise, but itâs got those softer corners that make it feel lovely between yourâfingers. It does not feel like a mass-producedârod; it feels like something that a human being actually took time to form.
I ran myâthumb along it. There are no veins to be had Very little softâspots. It was strong,âheavy, and meaningful. The weight â around 11 or 12 grams â means that the scale has enoughâheft to let you know thereâs a lot of tobacco in there. I cold drew it after a clean straight cut and got pummeled with some wet dirt, maybe a bit ofâhay. The draw was perfect as I like it: with aâhint of resistance, there was a certain thickness to the smoke, akin to drinking a rich milkshake through straw. You donât want these things to get too loose, or they will burn hot and spoil theâshow.
TheâFirst Third: The Wake-Up Call
I toasted theâfoot with a single-flame torch, holding it there until the entire circumference was glowing red then gave it my first puff. The first cloud of smoke was whispy, dense, white andâhad an aroma reminiscent of a campfire in the woods. This thingâis punchy as hell right out of the gate. And I mean toasted bread and the kind of woodiness that you donât necessarily want toâtaste unless itâs in a brown whiskey, the cedar-wood-ishness, not like light-heady-woods-nature walk. This is like old, seasonedâoak instead.
Ever smokeâsomething with a “thin” feeling? This isn’t that. The mouthfeel is chewy. Around the 10-minute mark, you can feel it really workingâits earthy core. Itâs what Iâd describe as a very âCubanâ earthiness, musky andâinky. I sat there in the sand,âand the salt air combined with that toasted bread flavor, I gotta say it was dynamite. The burn was straight and onâpoint, and the ash was a medium shade of grey, holding for about an inch before I tapped it loose. I didnât want it falling into my lap while I was unwinding. ~1718, from “The Roman life, in the Days of Cicero, originally meant A Manly Association” byâElizur Wright
TheâSecond Third: In the Groove
Beginningâthe middle portion of the cigar, it didnât tamp down in strength but it smoothed out. On theâfirst few puffs, these were ârougherâ edges that moved into something very complex. This is where the Bolivarâtruly displays its lineage. I began to get more distinct notes of nutmeg and an extremely slight,âdry cocoa. It was not candy-bar sweet,âbut instead as sweet as raw cacao nibs.
Thereâs a coffee thing going onâhere, too. Twoâshots from the Lucaffe espresso machine, today with rich crema at perfect volume â not a latte â thick and dark and slightly bitter, but so rich. What kind of surprised me was the cedar note stayed more in the background and it was being usedâas a base for everything else. I did a couple of retrohales and man, thatâs whereâthe spice lives. Itâs notâa black pepper burn, but rather a warm, tingly feeling that lets you know this is a full-bodied stick. Itâs got guts. I was leaning back against the driftwood andâwatching the smoke blow out to sea, just letting the flavors develop. Reflectiveâpuffing, for sure.
The Final Third: The BigâFinish
Withâthe last couple of inches remaining, the cigar was in transition once more. The earth andâleather were the stars. If you have a tasteâfor a cigar that goes out with a whimper, try something else. TheâRoyal Corona ends on a high. I detected hints of chocolate and, bizarre as itâsounds, a bit of honey sweetness that emerged amid the spice. It was a welcome offset to the white pepper aftertaste that beganâto float on my tongue.
It remained cool all the wayâdown to the nub. Iâve had Robustos thatâturn bitter and hot after the first band, but this one kept its cool. I think thatâsâwhy it has such a cult following. Itâs consistent. Itâsâheavy, but it doesnât goopy. I sat thereâuntil my fingers felt warm, not wanting to release the moment. Theâdeal I had just closed felt like a million miles away. It was only that last dash of spiceâand the disappearance, at long last, of the sun.
Pairing Thoughts
Now, I wasâat a beach, so my choices were limited to what Iâd brought. I had a hip flask of Havana Club 7-Year-Old, and letâme tell you, it was pure simpatico. The Bolivar is earthy, sweet andâjust a bit spicy, but the rumâs sweetness cuts right through its profile. If I were at home, Iâd possibly have thatâwith a really dark roast coffee or a peaty Scotchâsomething strong enough to stand up to the strength of the cigar. This isn’t the sort of drink you want to accompany with aâlight beer or delicate wine; the Bolivar will take those for a walk. You want something thatâcan compete with it.
The Verdict
Let me beâclear â Iâm not telling you this is the âbestâ cigar in the world because thatâs a bunch of crap. What I will say is that the Bolivar Royal Corona is a classicâfor good reason. Itâs been kicking since â69,âand in 2005 the Cigar Aficionado guys deemed it ânumero uno.â That doesn’t happen by accident. Itâs a cigar for people who like the tasteâof tobacco. Itâs not attempting to playâthe âcreamyâ or âmildâ game. It is both brash and pungent, with a personalityâthatâs hard to miss.
Is it for a beginner? Probably not. It may be a little heavy for anyone accustomed to lighter, Connecticut-wrappedâcigarillos. But if youâre a guy whoâs been around the block and likes a Robusto that really like thisâis a full meal, hereâs your smoke. Every time I spark up one, I know what toâexpect. Like an old friendâwho doesnât pull any punches ⊠no frills, no bullshit just a damn good smoke.
And when I rose from that driftwood, testing the sand off my pants,âI felt centered. The Royal Coronaâhad performed its task. It provided me withâ45 minutes of focus, and a flavor profile that felt as rugged as the coastline did. If you find yourself in a situation where you want to mark an event, or if you just need to remind yourself of what makes Cuban tobacco so lovable,âpick up one of these. You won’t regret it.
















