Description
CohibaâEsplĂ©ndidos Review: A Storm, A Sailboat and a Churchill
The wind wasnât howling; it was screaming through the riggingâof the 42-foot sloop like a banshee in a snit. We wereâfive miles offshore, the sky bruising purple the way it often does before youâre drenched. I recall theâatmosphere on deck â it was electric. All hands were rushing to shut the hatches tight and the adrenaline was buzzing in my blood when just as the first fat drops of a Caribbean squallâbegan to drum on the teak, we scooted underneath for cover.
Product Specifications
| Attribute | Detail |
|---|---|
| Product Name | Cohiba Esplendidos |
| Origin | Cuba |
| Factory | El Laguito |
| Vitola | Churchill |
| Length | 178mm (7 inches) |
| Ring Gauge | 47 |
| Wrapper | Cuba (Vuelta Abajo) |
| Binder | Cuba (Vuelta Abajo) |
| Filler | Cuba (Vuelta Abajo) |
| Strength | Medium to Full |
There we were, down in the cockpit, with the rain building a gray curtain aroundâthe boat. The worldâwas small, noisy and very much alive. You know thatâfeeling of being completely secure amid full-blown pandemonium? Thatâs when I turned to my travelâhumidor.
I didnât want something quick. I didn’t want a “snack.” I wanted something that wouldnât fade away with the storm, something with backbone toâcompete against the scent of salt spray and ozone. I extracted from my poke a long golden-brown cylinder that hadâbeen waiting for just such a moment. That smoke?
The
Cohiba EsplĂ©ndidos. I haveâhad my fair share of cigars in hushed lounges and wood-lined libraries, but there was something about waiting out a tropical downpour with a Churchill-sized Cuban that just felt correct. It was as if I held aâscrap of Havanaâs soul, while the Atlantic threatened to crash the party. The Specs
Product Name
Cohiba Espléndidos
Wrapper/Binder/Filler
Vuelta Abajo, Cuba
Construction: The El Laguito Touch
Iâgotta tell you, this is an experience to hold the EsplĂ©ndido even before you clip the cap.
This isn’t a small cigar. At seven inches in length and a 47 ring gauge, it has aâcommanding presence. It has a nice heft when you hold it, not in de Blasio-bulky way, but as inâof well-balanced tool. Asâwith each and every good classic, thereâs a reason it is what it is: sturdy vitola and overall classic construction.
Itâs elegant. The wrapper on mine was a very pretty, oily ColoradoâClaro. It had that signature Cuban âsheenâ to it â not shiny like dipped in wax, but aâhealthy toothy glow that tells you the oils are right where they should be. I stroked it with my thumb as the rainâbeat upon the canvas over me.
No soft spots. No hard knots. It was solid, but had a bit ofââgiveâ when youâve squeezed it: that of a quality leather glove. Thatâs the El Laguito factory forâyou.
Theyâre the guys who make the Cohiba line, and itâs obviousâthe rollers there donât rush a thing. I usedâa straight cutter, removing just a sliver from the cap. The cold draw was perfect for what I was looking for, little resistanceâbut very open. As far as flavor was concerned there were hits of sweet hay, dry grassâand just a skosh of what I can only describe as âbarnyardââwhich in the cigar world is extremely high praise.
Thatâs rich, fermented-tobaccoâsmell announcing a deep-dish experience. I reclined, watched aâbolt of lightning strike the horizon and toasted my foot. The First Third: The Awakening
First few puffsâare always the most telling.
It didnât come in guns blazing â full of heavy spice â with theâEsplĂ©ndidos. Instead, it was smooth. Real smooth. And itâs that âthird fermentationâ they do at El Laguito,âaging the seco and ligero leaves in wooden barrels.
You can actuallyâtaste the differnce. Itâs rounding off the sharp areas you would see in a younger or lessârefined sticks. There was cedar right away with aâvery clean, crisp earthiness for the opening profile and I thought it tasted like cedar. Some white pepperâappeared on the retrohale, though it was far from bold.
It was more of aâhint of spice than a fist to the nose. An inch down, a honeyed sweetness beganâto crawl in â imagine putting honey on a toasted sourdough. With the boat swaying back and forth against the anchor rode, there was a thick, billowing plume of white smoke that just hung in the steamyâair of the cockpit like a fog. Solid start.
Second Third: Inâthe Groove
By the time I gotâinto the second third, while it was still happening outside, I had my own little bubble
.
The tastes began to turn from some light, grassy sweetness into something way moreââmeaty.â The medium-to-full territory is where the body of the cigarâprogressed to become. I began to pick up some individual notes:âroasted nuts â peanuts in particular but toasted. There wasâalso a rich, creamy coffee-thread that began to dominate the palate. The thing I really appreciate withâthis Churchill size is that the temperature remains cool.
And since itâs so long a smoke, the cherry spends an awfully long time far from your mouth, in which span of course said bunch is coolingâthat smoke. This allows those delicate notes of cinnamon and leather toâreally shine. The ash was light gray, holding for almost two inches before I gently tapped it into a heavy glassâashtray. The burn was nearly perfect and it didnât need any touch-ups despiteâall the wet salt air that flew around us.
Thatâs aâreflection of the build right there. Wouldnât you know it, but I have an example for you that is perfect for this scenario: You ever have a cigar tunnel on you orâcanoe at the very hint of a breeze? This wasn’t that. It stayed true.
The Final Third: The Crescendo
We turned the final corner, and the rain wasâebbing into a drizzle.
The sky was starting to crack, revealing wedges of orangeâwhere the sun was setting. The EsplĂ©ndidos did the sameâthing â darker, dramatic. The sweetnessâthat was present in the first third came back but it was different.
It was no longer honey;âit was chocolate syrup and cocoa. There is a silkiness to the smoke in the lastâthird of a well-aged Cohiba that I just donât get anywhere else. It spreads over the tongue, but itâsânot greasy. I began toâget some vegetal notes â and not âgreenâ or bitter, but more like rich forest floor after a rain.
Fitting, right? And theâfirepower was ramped up, too. I did getâa bit more of a nicotine kick, though it wasnât dizzying. It wasâsimply a warm, full-bodied finish that took my attention captive.
I smoked it down to the point ofâburning my fingers, unwilling to release the experience. Pairing: What to Drink?
On the boat, Iâd been sipping a local aged rum â nothing fancy, just something withâenough caramel notes to pair well against the cigarâs cedar. But if I were at home? Iâdâopt for a double espresso or perhaps a Highland Scotch. You want something that has enoughâweight to it but doesnât smother the tobaccoâs subtleties.
You might find aâheavily peated Islay too much character-wise; you have smoke of the drink spar with smoke of cigar. The safest, most satisfying bet is probably a nice, balancedâcoffee. Grate forĂ©: The nuttyâmiddle is the perfect bridge to that chocolatey end. A Bit of History
You canât say the EsplĂ©ndidos without saying whereâit comes from.
Cohiba began as this special blend for FidelâCastro in the â60s. For years you couldnât even buy them; they were gifts for diplomats and headsâof state. They wouldnât go commercial until ’82, however the EsplĂ©ndidosâwouldnât appear until 1 as a member of the LĂnea ClĂĄsica. Itâhas since evolved into the brandâs flagship Churchill.
Itâs theâcigar people think of when they think âtop-tier Cuban.â And though the price tag has risen considerably over the years, the process hasnâtâchanged very much. They still have access to the finest leaves from Vuelta Abajo, and theyâre still doing that extra barrel fermentation that imparts a signatureââCohibaâ smoothness. Andâitâs a piece of history that you can hold, and then burn. The Verdict
Soâare the Cohiba EsplĂ©ndidos really worth it?
Now, Iâm notâgoing to tell you itâs the only cigar youâll ever need. But I will say this: Itâs a heavy hitter forâa reason. Itâs a long-haul smoke â you will want about 90 minutes, perhaps two hours if you are a slowâpuffer like me. Itâs not the kind of cigar you burn through inâa hurry.
Itâs a cigar for when the world is screaming for something outside,âbut you donât have to go see it. The construction is there, the flavor profile is complex without being complicated, and the journey from thoseâlight, cedary notes to that deep, chocolatey finish make it all worth it.
It is a good,âwell-made piece of Cuban craftwork that delivers exactly what it tells you. Should you find yourself on a sailboat in the midst of a sea squall ââor simply reclining on your back porch after another long week â itâs one human companion youâll be glad to have with you. Final Thought:
Itâs an elegant, growing experience that makes youâwork for its rewards.
Justâbe sure you have a sharp cutter and two hours to kill. This is one youâll wantâto savor.















