Description
The basement reeked of moistâconcrete and frantic ambition. Itâwas that kind of night of poker where the stakes were not just the money on the table but also some unspoken pecking order within this club. I was tucked in a backroom of a dry cleanerâs in Queens â donât ask how I got the invite â and it felt dense, secretive, seems from Bovada andâput down around like cheap espresso. Iâd played tight all night, folding pocket pairs that hurt my teeth to fold, waiting simply for “Shaky” Miller toâoverplay his pocket jacks. When that moment arrived, and the riverâcame with my straight, the sound of silence in their room was more deafening than when I pushed the chips into the pot. I didnât gloat. I just picked up the chips, felt the weight of victory, and slipped my hand into anâinner coat pocket. I wanted something to commemorate that, but I didnât have twoâhours to kill watching for sunrise. I wanted something short and punchy and unquestionablyâtop-shelf.
Product Specifications
| Attribute | Detail |
|---|---|
| Product Name | Cohiba Medio Siglo |
| Origin | Cuba (El Laguito Factory) |
| Factory | Medio Siglo (Petit Robusto) |
| Vitola | Medio Siglo (Petit Robusto) |
| Length | 4 Inches (102 mm) |
| Ring Gauge | Cuba (El Laguito Factory) |
| Wrapper | Vuelta Abajo, Cuba |
| Binder | Vuelta Abajo, Cuba |
| Filler | Vuelta Abajo, Cuba |
| Strength | Medium |
I producedâa yellow-and-black tubos. My friends glanced over, eyesâfollowing the holographic band. They knew. You donât show up with one of these to a game unless youâre ready to take everyone elseâsâlunch money away on the field. Iâpopped the cap, palpated a 52 ring gauge between my fingers and lit it up. That smoke? The Cohiba Medio Siglo. Itâs the stogie that communicates youâve arrived, even if youâre sitting in a basementâsurrounded by cans of laundry starch.
The Breakdown: Cohiba Medio Siglo
Construction:âThe âSelection of the Selectionâ
I have held a lot of cigars in the hand,âand there is a particular mano that thrums in holding onto a Cohiba. And that, the philosophy goes, is essentially what embodies the Medio Siglo:âA bit of a hybrid â a âFranken-smokeâ in the best way possible. It has the Siglo VIâs girthâ(that beefy 52 ring gauge) and cuts it down to the length of a Siglo I. It feels weighty in my hand. Itâs short, yeah, but it hasâpresence. Itâs not a âsnackâ smoke;âitâs a compact powerhouse.
On mine, the wrapper was a stunning Colorado shade â tawny and oily, as smooth as theâtop of a desk. I encountered noâaggressive veins and no soft spots. When I gave it a light squeeze, it collapsed in exactlyâthe right amount. Itâs producedâin the El Laguito factory, which is essentially the holy grail of making cigars. They employ the âselection of the selectionâ from the San Juan y MartĂnez and SanâLuis regions. But the big draw forâme is triple fermentation. They take all the seco, ligero and the rare medio tiempo leaves and hang them for an additional turnâin barrels. You can smell that process on theâpre-light draw, in fact. Itâs not just tobacco: Itâs fermented, processed, a littleâsweet.
Cold draw was a combination of hay, cedar and aâstrange but pleasantly enjoyable touch of dried orange peel. The draw was the perfect draw âânot too firm, not like sucking air through a straw. A ho-hum, intentional burn jam that seemed as if it would produceâlots of smoke.
The First Third: The Handshake
It felt likeâa ritual, lighting this thing up in that poker room. The firstâfew puffs were signature Cohiba. Have you everâhad that taste of âCuban twangâ? Itâs a swirl of saltiness, earth, and creaminess that balloons out onto the roofâof your mouth. The MedioâSiglo begins with a medium-bodied introduction. I were immediately hit with a huge amount of cedar andâleather, but it wasnât rough. It was so smooth, I imagine that’sâcourtesy of the extra barrel aging they do at El Laguito.
After about ten minutes, a delicate not of freshâfruit began to shimmy on the sidelines. It was not âfruityâ in the dessert sense, but more like a lingering whisperâbehind apricot or white grape. It cut theârich and earthy underpinning.â Smoke Production The great amount of smoke produced for such a tiny stick startledâme. Fat, white clouds that cocktail-hangered theâsteamy air made our poker game feel even more cinematic and cloaked in mystery. I have to admit, thatâburn was razor-sharp. Not once did I have to reapply it, even when I wasâbusy handling my winnings.
TheâSecond Third: The Work Begins
As I transitioned into the midpoint of the cigar, the flavors roundedâand darkened a bit.
The fruitiness was gone, replacedâby a run of rich coffee bean roast. Andâthere was a clear nuttiness â think toasted almonds. And here isâwhere 52 ring gauge starts to really come into its own. The denser cross-section means thereâs moreâtobacco in the smoke, which stays relatively cool and allows the delicate notes of cocoa and sweet spice to emerge without being burned.
I detected a touch of black pepperâon the retrohale. It wasnât a âpepper bombâ byâany stretch, but it lent the experience a nice little kick in the pants. It kept me focused. The force remained very much in the middleâof it, which I liked. These shorter, fatter vitolas can often get sassyâin the middle, but not the Medio Siglo. It is an elegant blend, obviouslyâcrafted in celebration of the brandâs 50th anniversary in 2016. Thisâis as if they took all the lessons of half a century and squished them down into this 4-inch frame.
The FinalâThird: The Closing Arguments
By an inch andâa half, the poker game had finished. The losers were downing drinks, and I wasânursing the nub of this Cohiba. The flavor profile kicked up here bigâtime. The cedar turned into âtoasted woodâ and the spice shifted from the back of throat toâthe tip of tongue. There was a thick creamy, butteryâaftertaste that remained on the palate long after each draw.
Typically, withâa Petit Robusto the head goes hot and bitter. Not here. I smoked it to its sting-the-fingertips-down nub, and it remained flavorful allâthe way through. The âmedio tiempoâ leaves âârare leaves from the top of the plant â really rear their head in the final act. They add a depthâof flavor that seems âold world.â Itâs a rich, savory conclusion that immediatelyâfelt like the exclamation point on my evening. I setâit down in the ashtray and let it burn itself out, fully satisfied.
Pairing: What to Drink?
Down in that basement, drinking a lukewarm espresso from a paper cup, andâlet me tell you? It worked. The coffeeâs bitterness wentâright through the creamy cigar. But if I were at home, Iâd pour myself a glassâof Havana Club 7-Year-Old rum. You want somethingâwith a little bit of sweetness, and oak to match the cigarâs profile. If youâre not a spirits person, a heavy-bodied ginger ale or a stout beer would also stand up toâthe Medio Sigloâs complexity. Not anything peaty or smoky â like an Islay Scotch â which will shamelessly shoved those delicate fruitâand almond notes to the corner.
The Verdict
So isâCohiba Medio Siglo worth hunting for? This is myâview: Itâs a specialized tool for a particular job. If you have two hours and a cozy leather chair, you may want something like aâSiglo VI or a Churchill. But if youâre there to be there, or youâve just have anâhour before the world starts screaming at you again, this is it. Itâs compact luxury. Itâs all the prestige and taste of the flagship Cohibaâline condensed into a size that can be smoked in a busy life.
It isnât a âbudgetâ smoke and does not attempt toâbe. Itâs a statement piece. Itâs consistent, itâs well-made,âand it gives you a flavor experience most full-sized cigars canât rival. To me, it will always be the âPoker Nightâ cigarâthat one thatâI smoke when all is lost and Iâm the only man left standing. Solid. Truly solid.
Final Thoughts: Buy it if you see aâbox. Ifâyou find one, hold on to it. Just be sure you have a good reason to light it, because such a goodâsmoke deserves an accompanying story.


















