Description
I miss the saltâair most of all. It was chewy thick, clinging to my skin as I sat on a strip of sand thatâdidnât seem to possess any name â or at least, not one recorded on any map I felt the need to consult. I was about three miles out ofâa small fishing town in the Caribbeans; one of those where clocks donât just run slow but stop working all together. Iâd had a big, heavy, leather-bound travel humidor in my lap which hadâonce belonged to my grandfather.
Product Specifications
| Attribute | Detail |
|---|---|
| Product Name | Cohiba Piramides Limited Edition 2001 |
| Origin | Cuba |
| Factory | El Credito |
| Vitola | Piramides |
| Length | 1 mm (6 1/8 inches) |
| Ring Gauge | 52 |
| Wrapper | Cuba (Vuelta Abajo) |
| Binder | Cuba (Vuelta Abajo) |
| Filler | Cuba (Vuelta Abajo) |
| Strength | medium |
He had left it to me with a note that read, âFor when you get whatâtime is for.â
My grandfather was a man who did not measure his life by years, but moments ofâstillness. He didnât care much for parties, but he was a bit of a party animal â the solitaryâkind. The kind of pride that comes with reflecting on your thoughts and realizingâyouâve actually gotten somewhere. Iâd just left behind a chapterâof my life that had been nothing but noise, and standing on that deserted beach I felt the silence for the first time.
I opened the humidor and there it was, resting in a cedar sleeve: a dark, tapered beauty with twoâbands. One was the iconic yellowâand black of Cohiba; the other a gold and black âEdiciĂłn Limitada 2.â
I knew what it was. Or I guess, more accuratelyâ(slight spoiler alert) that I knew the myth of it. This was no mere cigar; here was a time capsule from the dawn of the century, a postergirl remnants of thatâold El Laguito Mathusalem, lying in clarity for more than two decades.
I took it out, weighedâit in my hand and understood what my grandfather was talking about. Thisâis not the kind of thing you smoke hurry up. You smoke it because you have finally won the privilege toâquit. The Transition: That smoke?
Cohiba PirĂĄmidesâEdiciĂłn Limitada 2. I gotta tell youâholding a cigar older than a few of the guys working in my local lounge is quite intimidating. You start thinking about the hands thatârolled it back in 2, the soil in Vuelta Abajo and how this stick survived twenty-some odd years of humidity fluctuations and travel to end up here on a beach with me. Itâs a PirĂĄmides â a torpedo for those not fluent in factory lingo ââand one with some undeniable presence.
Cigar Specifications
Product Name
Cohiba PirĂĄmides EdiciĂłn Limitada 2
Factory Vitola
PirĂĄmides
Common Name
Torpedo
Construction: The Feel of a Relic That zirconia and its brethren haveâto be laid into a foundation with holes in it makes them seem at odds with the very concept of cybernetic replacement.
I stared at the wrapper forâquite a while before I even considered reaching for my cutter. It’s a Maduro, but notâone of those pitch-black paint-looking Maduros you get on some modern NCs (non-Cubans). This was a rich, mottled chocolate brown, like an old leather chair thatâs beenâwell sunned. Thereâs a minuscule toothiness to it, a little fine grit that lets you know the leaf had personality before beingâcomet-tail-fermented into submission.
Itâs not âsilkyâ the way a Connecticut shade is; itâs rough-hewn,âbut polished. Solid. The roll was firm â perhaps a bit too firm, which is the classic Cuban crapshoot â but it felt consistentâfrom foot to pointed head. No soft spots, no lumps.
I gave it a gentleâsqueeze, and it had just enough give, like good steak. And the cap was dead on, a sharply pointedâlid that seemed poised to focus those flavors in one narrow beam directly at the center of my mouth. It was really in the pre-light draw that it showedâits age though. I lopped just a smidgen off the head â I favor a narrow apertureâon a torpedo to keep the smoke dense â and pulled.
It was not the standard hay andâbarnyard of young Cubans. It was deeper. I was getting notes of old books, dried raisins and some weirdly specific smell that I could only describe as the scentâof damp cedar. Itâwas earthy, though â in a good way.
It had a bit of a tight draw,âbut I thought once it heated up the leaves would loosen and breathe. Iâsmelled the foot for about 5 minutes. If youâre going to smoke of piece of history, it is always best to getâyour moneyâs worth before even lighting the match. Flavor Profile: AâThree-Act Play on the Beach
TheâFirst Third: A Creamy Awakening
Lightingâthis baby up was a ceremony.
I used wooden matches and allowed the sulfur to burnâoff before introducing flame at the foot. I didnât want any butane or chemicals to mess upâtwenty years of aging. The opening puffs wereâexceptionally mellow. Youâd think a âMedium to Fullâ cigar would burst the door down, but this one sort of justâleaned up against the frame and nodded.
The initial flavor was buttery. I mean, seriously buttery. It made me thinkâof shortbread cookies or the heavy cream you sometimes see in glass bottles. There was just a hint of that Cohiba grassiness, though it hadâtransformed into something more like dried herbs.
An inch or so down, a vanilla note began to poke through, blending with aâmild toasted nuttiness. Theâsmoke was white and voluminous, hovering in the humid beach air like a low cloud. At thisâstage it wasnât spicy in the least â entirely silky, rich and shockingly well-mannered.
2> The SecondâPart: The Wood and the Honey
As I made myâway to the center of the stick, the flavors began to deepen. It was still cream, but beingâovertaken by a dense aged wood profile â imagine cedar on steroids, but not that sharp fresh kind.
It was more akin to one of your old humidor thatâs beenâseasoned for decades. Then came the sweetness. It was not a sugaryâsweetness; if anything, it tasted more like manuka honey or perhaps butterscotch. I mean, the intricacyâhere was simply something else.
Each puff seemed to provide a subtlyânew nuance. One moment Iâd get a hit of cocoa, and then next, itâwould switch back to that earthy, mineral taste that only comes from Vuelta Abajo tobacco. The strength began to rampâup here too. I could feel it in my chest â a warm,âvibrating buzz that told me this cigar had plenty of life left in her.
The burn was a tiny bit wavy â likely from the sea breeze â but I never had to touch itâup. The ash was a quite handsomeâsalt-and-pepper grey, nearly holding on to two inches before I decided to knock it off into some sand. Its context:âThe Dark Evolution
WhenâI got to the last third, the beach was slowly darkening.
The sun was a bruised purple on the horizon, and Pirate Assistant Navy Director PirĂĄmidesâwas getting down to business. The sweetnessâreceded and the leather became much richer along with a trace of black pepper on the retrohale. It wasn’t harsh, though. Thatâs the magic of the triple fermentation and the two decades of rest â all that âbiteâ hadâbeen filed down into a silky, velvet finish.
The second thirdâs cocoa jumped darker, bitter chocolate levelâ85%âcacao.
There was a hint of roasted espresso beansâon the finish. I smoked it down to where Iâcould barely hold the nub, and still it didnât get hot or harsh. It items died down, but then it did not return with a vengeance. It just remained consistent, and then eventually diminishedâinto the slow fade out of nothingness that left me feeling super mellow.
I felt as if Iâd just conversedâlong and deeply with my grandfather, without receiving a single word from him. Solid experience. Truly. Pairing: What toâDrink with a Ghost
When you smoke somethingâthis rare and aged, thereâs no reason to drink something thatâs going to compete with the tobacco.â I had in my pack a tiny flaskâof Havana Club 15-Year-Old Rum.
Itâs got that dark sugar and oak profile that plays well with the Maduro wrapper but doesnâtâtoo agro. The sweet rum brought outâthe honey flavour in the cigar deliciously. If youâre not a rum person, Iâdâgenuinely offer up a glass of vintage Port or even just an incredibly good turn at black coffee. Youâre looking for something with a touch ofâbody but also plenty of acidity to rinse the palate between those rich puffs.
Skip the peaty scotches, or boozy IPAs; theyâll merely stomp all over those delicate vanilla andâbutterscotch notes that make this Cohiba so special. Youâre hereâfor the cigar; youâre not interested in alcohol. Conclusion: The Verdict
ShouldâI go on a quest for the Cohiba PirĂĄmides EdiciĂłn Limitada 2001?
Listen, if youâre the kind of person who just needs a âstrong smokeâ to suck at whileâyouâre out on the links? This will only be wastingâyour time and money. But if you appreciate the art, the lore and a hell of a lot of patience to get an ancient cigar to this level of vintage then itâs a masterclass inâwhat Cuban tobacco can be. Itâs not a âpowerhouseâ per se, in the nicotine department at least, but it isâfull-bodied as far as presence goes.
Itâs refined, smooth, and has a flavor trajectory that is to beer what a well-crafted pieceâof music is to pop. Itâs a âmuseum-qualityâ smoke, as some might say, but cigars are not made toâbe admired in a glass case. They’re meant to be burned. Sitting there on that beach, watchingâthe last bit of light fade away, I understood: My grandfather had been right.
There are some things that arenât for everyâday. Theyâre for the times when you finally sit still and you justâare. I wasânot only smoking a great cigar, I had 90 minutes of pure tranquility. And as far as Iâm concerned, thatâsâa solid hit.
Final Thoughts:
If you ever do, please buyâa box.
Don’t think twice. Then just beâsure you have a quiet room and a good friend (if even only in spirit), with no other place to go. Youâll thank me later.














