Description
My Own Tasting ofthe Cohiba BehikeâBHK 56
Iâwas digging in my friendâs rusted-out fishing boat glovebox, the
Sea Hag, scabbing for a spare set of pliersor maybea dropped lure ââwhen I glanced down and saw a crumpled-up Polaroid, salt-stained by all the fish caught that summer season. Its edges were bent over and its color that awful washed-out 1990s-yellow shade, despite the fact that I had not ownedâit for very long. Iâm on a pier inHavana, squinting at theâsun, so bright it hurt to open my eyes and I felt like storms never came; that the sky was made of white gold. I have a fish in my hand about which I havenât the slightest idea what itâs called even under pain of death, but implying itself toâthe corner of my mouth like a mini-cannon shell is a cigar.
Product Specifications
| Attribute | Detail |
|---|---|
| Product Name | Cohiba Behike 56 |
| Origin | Cuba |
| Factory | Laguito No.6 |
| Vitola | Laguito No.6 |
| Length | 1 mm / 6.5 inches |
| Ring Gauge | 56 |
| Wrapper | Cuba (Vuelta Abajo) |
| Binder | Cuba (Vuelta Abajo) |
| Filler | Cuba (Vuelta Abajo) |
| Strength | Medium to Full |
That photo was so, like, wow, the humidity andâthese diesel engines and the sense of adventure on that trip. We hadnât just come toâfish; weâd come for the hunt. The strategy in which you walk into a shit-shack in the backâand scream at every clown face for everything that isnât on one of those front shelves. I still remember the guy who sold it to me â a man with hands of leather thatâhad opened up and leaked all night, a man who treated the wooden box as if there was a saintâs bones inside.
He handed meâone, and I could feel the thing. It wasnât just aâwad of tobacco but really a piece of history. To the end ofâthe afternoon I was up ondeck a boat not so disssimilar this. Sea Hag, not even watching the fishinglinesâand thinking nowt of the smoke.
That smoke? The
Cohiba Behike BHK 56. Itâs a cigar with a lotof baggage in these times â namely, the price tag thatâsends my accountant sobbing for his mother and/or that pitchfork-wielding mob Iâm amassing at minimum wage â but each time I spy one all I can think of is that pier and how you feel when you know the world is your oyster. Itâs aâbeast of a stick, and Iâve spent enough time with it over the years to know exactly what it is when the hype fades away and someone touches it.
The Specs
Factory Name
Laguito No. 6
Construction: The Hand-Held Cannon
Let me start byâtelling you that feelinga BHK 56 is pretty special.
Itâsa Double Robusto,âso itâs fat. You everâpick up a cigar that makes you feel like youâre hoisting a fucking piece of heavy machinery? Thatâs this. But itâs notâfor the petite-wristed or weak-carpussed.
Itâs got a presence. The wrapper is anotherâstory â itâs got this golden, oily sheen to it, one which shines and reflects the light like a polished mahogany desk. Itâs slick, almost veinlessâand that classic pigtailcapthatI always feel a tad guilty clipping away. I like to apply cold on it before Ieven bringâa flame to it.
Itâs firm but not tight. Thereâs a very fat pieceâof leaf inthere. The aroma off the foot is all raw uncut barnyardâwet hay, fertile soil and something sweetâway back there like dry raisins. It feels solid.
No softâspots, no masses. It seems like it was built to survive a trek throughâthe jungle (because it was). Laguito No. 6 knows what theyâre doing, and itâs palpable in the weight of thisâthing. The Sweet Introduction: TheFirst Third
I remember puffing on the first few cigaretteon that boat in theâphoto, its motor whirring beneath my feet.
The BHKâ56 isnât awhisperer, itâs an existential statement. Begin your journey withâthe sweet beginning in its first third.
ABV: 11.5 percent FirstâI get smacked with a big whack of maple syrup and cafĂ© latte! It is creamy, dessert-like â butâthereâs a hint of spice that rescues it from being a wall of softness. What I think of is exotic spice: sharp nutmeg, perhaps a distant whisper of cinnamon â not something as inherently suggestive to me as gin can come across, but paired withâallows for an shrewdly clear cedar note. The smoke output is thick.
I mean, you couldâlose a compact car up in the tail ofclouds this thing produces. Thereâs a little black pepper in theretrohale, but itâsâwell-behaved. Itâdoesnât burn your sinuses, it just lets you know that it is there. Thoseâearthy notes are there, but second banana to the ripe fruit sweetness.
Itâs an busy opening, and I puffed slowly here justâto pull apart all of the nuances. A 56 ring gauge cigar is a cigar thatâyou do not rush; itâs a cigar that you work. TheMiddle Third: Getting Groovy
AsâI progressed toward the middle of that cigar â and by the way, it’s going to take you a good 30-40 minutes before you get there â the sweetness became more muted.
This is where the
Medio Tiempo
leaves really start to talk. For the uninitiated, these are the veryârare leaves that only grow at the top of certain tobacco plants. They get the mostâsun and they have a punch that other sticks donât give you. In the second third, or at least in its middle part ââmy favorite of this cigar â itâs those woody notes that come into their own.
Itâs like walking into an ava-va-voom humidor constructed ofâsweet, fresh Spanish cedar. The earthynesscontinues to get stronger, more reminiscent of muddy dark soilâafter a rain. But then you get these explosions of caramel orâhoney, too. There is something oddly warmabout it in yourâmouth.
The strength picksgo up here, really getting into that medium-to-fullâterritory. I could feel that buzz from a bit of nicotine, little pinch to say âgood morning thisâisnât for the faint of heart!â Itâs a serious commitment. The Final Third: The Nasty Part
And by the time I read through that last third, the sun beaming in my memory (like itdid in that old photo) had alreadyâstarted to set on me
.
That’s where the BHKâ56 comes in. The coffee notes flip the switchâboth from latte light to down and dirty dark espresso. The blackpepper definitely bites back, but it’s tempered by the depth of an almostâbitter cocoa. And the bitterness isnât an unpleasant bitterness; itâs more like the bite of a good pieceof darkâchocolate.
Being able to hearâsomething here is insanely hard. One puffâis all earth and leather, the next a spicy punch. It heats up at the end, but becauseâof that 56 ring it stays bearable longer than a thinner vitola would. Iâm the guy who will smoke these all the way down to nothing, until my fingersare almost on fire. And how do you think Iâpicked up such a habit?
It is difficult to walk away from this one, the flavors shifting until the very lastâmoment. Itâs a 90-minute commitment at least â and if youâre an unhurried pufferâsuch as your humble correspondent, things could just spread out into two full hours of adventure bliss. Pairing: What to Drink?
Youâre looking for something that withstands the BHKâ56 without flattening out as it rolls through soft notes of maple and fruit. For me, Iâm aâsucker for a spicy, aged rum. Something Carribbean thatâsâgot caramel, a hint of vanilla. It bridges thesweetâwith the spicy.
For scotch, something smoky or peaty always worksâfor brussles sprouts â just not too smoky. A decent Highlandâmalt puts me right. The cigar’s cedar and earthwell exhibit the smokinessâof the scotch so nicely. And ifâit is mid-day?
You gotta make it adoppio. Notice how the bitterness of the coffee helps to cleanse your pallet for any rudeâways coming up behindit surrender signs. pagebro. Medio Tiempo
power. The Verdict
Now listen, Iâm not going to standhere and tell you that the price of these things hasnât goneâthrough the roof.
Over the past decade, that cost has escalated to a point where purchasing a box feelsâlike making a down payment on a car. But is it a solid smoke? Absolutely. TheCohiba Behike BHK 56 embodies theâphrase statement cigar.
It is for when you have a win, or are rocking out on the boat with an old picture in one hand and rememberingâwhy you started smoking cigars. Itâs thick; itâs complicated;âitâs as sturdy as an M1 Abrams battletank. Itâs something I canât smoke every day, myWallet would certainly certify that on aâdaily basis, but when I do it reminds me why this is the most sought after line in all of Habanos. These are worth putting your hands on if youâcan -and have a couple of hours to kill.
You just need to settle somewhere comfortable, ideally withâa view anda good drink in hand. Itâs a tripâin a wrapper, and while the photo may fade, the memory of that smoke will not. Final Thought:
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