Description
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Cohiba Majestuosos 1966 Review
The engine of the
El Cazador
has aârhythm, in fact, a kind of thumping rhythm that sounds like a heartbeat if you listen long enough. Itâs a 32-foot sportfisher my grandfather purchased a long time ago when theâworld seemed wide and not so full. This past Tuesday I was out past the breakwater, salt spray onâmy face and a whiff of diesel and brine in my lungs. I hadnât taken her out since the old manâdied, and there was a heavy absence in the cabin.
Product Specifications
| Attribute | Detail |
|---|---|
| Product Name | Cohiba Majestuosos 1966 |
| Origin | Cuba |
| Factory | n/a |
| Vitola | Majestuosos 1966 |
| Length | 150 mm (5 9/10 inches) |
| Ring Gauge | 58 |
| Wrapper | Cuba (Vuelta Abajo) |
| Binder | Cuba (Vuelta Abajo) |
| Filler | Cuba (Vuelta Abajo) |
| Strength | full |
He didnât have much in the way of money for me â the boat was his real wealth â but heâleft me a key to a small climate-controlled locker at his club. Hidden within it, like a state secret, was one of those lacquered humidors whose appearance is that of highâend furniture rather than a box for tobacco. The cigar was the CohibaâMajestuosos 1966. He had once told me, over a much more modest smoke, that some things were meant forââthe big quiet.
Sitting out there on the deck, the sun beginning to burn throughâmorning mist, coastlines all smeared into grey smudges, I realized Iâd found my big quiet. I lowered myself onto the bait well, feeling the wood ofâthe boat buzz beneath my boots and pulled out the cigar. You know youâve got a story theâmoment you hold something, right? This wasnât just a cigar; it was a meaty, golden-brown weight in my hand that felt like it should be in a museum, or better yet, clenched between the teeth of someone who hadâseen everything there was to see.
I uncapped it,âfelt the wind change and struck a match. That smoke? The Cohiba Majestuosos 1966. And boy, do we needâto talk about it.
The Specs
Attribute
Details
Product Type
Cigar (Cuban)
Vitola de Galera
Majestuosos
Construction: A Hefty Handful
The first thing youâll notice when removing this stickâfrom its holster is the sheer girth of the thing.
A 58 ring gauge is no joke. Itâs heavy and sturdyââ it practically feels like a piece of history. When I held it,âonline photo be damned, it felt solid or firm (without having a death grip) that didn’t make me feel uncomfortable. Youâcan see this thing was rolled by someone who wasnât in a rush.
Theâwrapper is a gorgeously oily Colorado shade, minimal veins, and has that sheen that glimmers like polished mahogany. Iâve never seen the “Majestuosos” vitola outside of this 50th anniversaryâedition. Itâsânot something you see on the Cuban portfolio every day. I mustâve sat there for at least five minutes, turningâit over, seeing how the light hit the gold bands.
Letâs go back a step before I even let the flameâtouch my foot with tongue aroundened lips and take a cold draw. AndâI have to tell you it was like standing in a fruit market of Havana. I encountered some clear peach and mango notesâhere, undergirded by a bizarrely pleasant cherry liqueur sweetness. There was a little bit of dry raisin in there, perhaps, like an ancient boxâof Sun-Maids youâd discover stashed in the back of the pantry.
It was a complex before it everâcaught fire. Flavor Profile: The Three Acts
The FirstâThird: Welcome Sweetresses
Lighting up a 58-gaugeâcigar while the boat is in motion takes a bit of finesse and three torch flames, but when I got it glowing, those first few puffs opened my eyes.
It began with a hugeâblast of cedar and leatherâclassic Cohiba but turned to eleven. Theâcreamy quality was what threw me. And it wasnât just smoke; it was thick,âlike heavy cream on the tongue. I picked up on some of those rum-like notes I had been smelling on the cold draw, with an undercurrent of graham crackerâthat made it feel very âdessert-adjacent.â It wasâa medium bodied start, very easy and approachable but you could sense the power beneath itâs like feeling a shark rub against the side of your hull.
The SecondâThird: The Spice and the Change
The Majestuosos began to show its teeth as I cruised farther out east into theâAtlantic. The creaminess played second fiddle, with theâcoffee bean notes coming to take center stage. It meatier, if thatâmakes sense. It was savory in a way that made meâthink of roasted nuts.
But the piece de resistance wasâthat retrohale. I inhaled a wisp of smoke through the nose and â bam ââlime zest. It was bright, citrusey, followed immediately with an herbal noteâI can only place as fresh oregano, or maybe even a little paprika. It didnât have that burning Nicaraguan pepper-bombâheat; this was complex, tingly spice.
The robustnessâwas turned up to here, stepping squarely into full-bodied territory. I was sitting back, lettingâthe boat drift, just trying to keep up with the flavor shifts. ROUNDâTHREE: THE HEAVYWEIGHTS
When I reached the nub, the cigarâwas still running on all cylinders. The rightâone did, and it felt like I was drinking a freshly-swept floor.Haarrr.rn But the blackoutâs espresso notes turned heavy and oily as they pigwrestled with said noticeable nutmeg flavor that clung to the back of my palate.
The finishâwas long â I mean 30 seconds at least where the flavor just sat there, lingering to remind what I was smoking. Oddly enough the strength actually felt LESS for SOME reason at the very end, dropping backâdown again to medium-plus. It never became bitter or hot, which is a testimony to the qualityâof that Vuelta Abajo leaf. I smoked it down the nub,âuntil it was heating up my fingertips and the bands were ages away.
The Pairing: What to Sip?
Now, normally, when Iâm on the water I am a coffee guy (completeâwith my boat lunchbox that has âGo Awayâ written on it), but for a cigar of this magnitude, I had gone into my grandfatherâs special stash before setting sail. Iâpossessed a flask of (something) dark/ syrupy / aged Cuban rum. The rumishâsweetness was a perfect complement to the cedar and espresso notes that ran through the Majestuosos. If not, a very strong, black Cuban espresso with a splash of brown sugar might do theâtrick.
Youâwant something with guts to stand up to that 58 ring gauge, or the cigar will walk all over your drink. The Verdict
I smoked my fair share of cigars in all shapes and sizes, fromâfloor-sweepings in Vegas to some of the rarest sticks in London, but Iâm telling you: The Cohiba Majestuosos 1966 is on another level.
Itâs not a âquick smoke while youâmow the lawnâ scene. This is a two-hour commitment. Itâs a cigar thatâforces you to sit, shut up and pay attention. Is it for everyone?
Probably not. size, alone will scare people off and the flavor profile is so busy it mightâoverpower the novice. âIt gives a relatively seasoned smoker from any country an opportunity to enjoy theâquality of what Habanos S.A. can put out when it really wants to show off.â Itâs an appropriate salutation to the brandâsâ50 years.
I threw the nub into the boatâs wake and watched it bob away, feeling aâlittle closer to the old man. He knew what he was doing whenâhe left this one for me. Itâs a strong, pungent smoke that doesnât haveâto
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