Description
The Long Shadowâof Havana: An Evening with the Cohiba Siglo V
I remember the moistureâmore than anything. It wasnât quite that sticky, oppressive heat you often get in theâStates in August. It was different. It was as if theâMediterranean had wrapped itself around me â a warm, wet blanket that smelled of salt spray, diesel exhaust and ancient limestone.
Product Specifications
| Attribute | Detail |
|---|---|
| Product Name | Cohiba Siglo V |
| Origin | Cuba |
| Factory | Dalias |
| Vitola | Lonsdale |
| Length | 170mm (6.6 inches) |
| Ring Gauge | 43 |
| Wrapper | Cuba (Vuelta Abajo) |
| Binder | Cuba (Vuelta Abajo) |
| Filler | Cuba (Vuelta Abajo) |
| Strength | Medium |
I sat on the balcony of Havanaâs Hotel Nacional and gazed at waves in the Atlantic as they rolled over a stoneâjetty into the MalecĂłn. It was our tenth anniversary. My wife had given up and goneâinside out of the wind, but I was still outside. I needed a moment.
I needed to be with my thoughts and a glass of seven-year-old Havana Club that was going down very well, thankâyou. I dug in to myâtravel humidor and pulled a stick I had been saving for just this sort of quiet. It wasânot a short, stocky trend-chaser. It was long and thin, and lookedâlike it belonged in a black-and-white movie.
Iâhave always found that some cigars are for parties, and some are best enjoyed in conversation, but a fewâvery fewâare for contemplation. I snipped the tip, felt the spongy tobacco yield underneath my fingersâand realised that I was not just holding a handful of leaves. I had 30 yearsââworth of history, and a hell of a lot to live up to. That smoke?
The
Cohiba Siglo V. And I have to say, itâs not a bad wayâto celebrate 10 years of marriage. The Specs
But before I go any further withâhow this thing actually treated me on that balcony, letâs take a look at what weâre working with.
This isnât an everyday smoke like your Robustos or Coronas; itâs a Dalias, and as such, should be given someâmeasure of respect even before you strike a match. Attribute
Details
Product Name
Cohiba Siglo V (Linea 1492)
First Impressions:âLook and feel
Iâve reviewed a lot of cigars for Nada Worry, but thereâs just something right about a 170mm stick with a 43âring gauge. Itâs elegant. Itâdoesnât feel like a club in your hand; it feels like a conductorâs baton.
The wrapper on this particular Siglo V was a gorgeous Colorado leafâa reddish brown that appearedâoily enough to leave fingerprints. I ran my thumb the length of it and it was smooth except for a few thin veins that told me this was a natural product, hand rolled at ElâLaguito. You everâfeel how some cigars are âcrunchyâ? This wasn’t that.
It had a supple, firm give. I drew theâair through it before lighting, and I could swear it tasted of barnyard. Not inâa bad way, but that classic Cuban hay and sweet raisin. It was clean.
Theâdraw was exactly where I wanted it â not too loose like a straw but with enough resistance that I knew I was going to have to work for it just a little bit. And I spent a solid five minutes smellingâthe foot of this before even broaching fire. Itâs the ritual,âright? Twenty minutes, and flipped on the cedar spill.
The first third blazed incredibly burning, signaling the age of the leaf in a swirl of citrus and honey.
Iâve heard people around town talking about our old el perfecto sweet grass, but the Siglo Vâs version of it? Itâs refined stuff, barely above a whisper. Despite the sweet citrus sunshine and the honeyâs bear hug, the retrohale saw notes of macadamia nuts and an infinitely delicate kiss of white pepper on the tail end. It was the perfect reminder of the reason they created this line in the first place.
As you must know, the Linea 1 was born in â92, created around the time this damned cigar washed up on these shores. With Davidoff halting production of their chateau series in Cuba, it left a gaping hole in the market as a notch above their standard fare â they werenât trying to reinvent the wheel, but you could halfway tell they were shooting for more sophistication than brutishness. I sipped my coffee in the delicate morning breeze, watching the smoke trails wisp into the ocean, and I felt like I knew something none of the hundreds of people babbling in my skull did. There was this intriguing ginger tone that arrived right about theâmidway point.
Itâadded a little âzingâ that kept my palate from getting bored. It held together well, withâa nice light grey ash that lasted an inch and a half before finally dropping off in to the thick glass ashtray. I realized thatâthe potency was sitting directly at medium. It didnât make my head swim, I know that, butâit certainly let me know I was smoking a high-quality Cuban.
Andâthe balance was what struck me so much. Nothing was fighting for attention. They were just chilling, hangingâout together â the cedar and earth, that last bit of vanilla sweetness â perfectly happy. I’ve heard guys liken this to theâPartagĂĄs 8-9-8, and I understand why – but there’s some small difference, something softer or I dunno, “cleaner” about the Siglo V.
Itâhas a deeper, richer quality that is more intentional. It’s the “special of the special” tobacco, as they say, and you can taste that added fermentation which El Laguito makes is worthâmore than just bragging about in a brochure. The Last Third: The EpicâShowdown
WhenâI was down to the last two inches, the sun had set and the lights of Havana twinkled in the distance.
This is where most cigars fall apartâthey get hot, they grow bitter or they simply lose their senseâof self. Not this one. The Siglo V wantedâto go out in a bang. The flavors deepened significantly.
That creamyâmocha morphed into a black, roasted coffee bean. I began to get this kind of savoryârichness that I can only describe as decadent red meat â salty, savory and deep. There was a bit of cinnamon and more ofâthat cedar, but the sweetness from the tobacco itself is what shined. It never got harsh.
I smoked it down to my fingers feeling like they were on fire and I still didnât want to put itâdown. Itâs a 90âto 100-minute investment, and I loved it every second of it. Pairing: What to Drink?
Before long, I was drinking HavanaâClub 7-Year, which is the local favorite for a reason. The molasses sweetnessâfrom the rum and the honey and cedar of the Siglo V just go together famously, but if I were sitting at home in my library? Iâd likely grab a Highland Scotch â something with some heather and honey,âperhaps a Dalwhinnie 15. You donât want anything too peaty; youâll smother out the faint citrus inâthat first third.
Ifâyouâre a coffee drinker, a good old cafĂ© con leche is never a bad choice. The milk is creamy likeâthe smoke. Alexis Simplyâdonât go acidic with anything. This cigar is about balance, and you donât wantâyour drink drowning out the conversation.
The Verdict
So, is hunting down the Cohiba SigloâV worth it?
Because letâs face it: Itâs not easy finding these things anymore, and the price tag isâsure to make your wallet flinch. Hereâs how I feel about it: If youâre in the market for a “powerhouse” cigar toâsmoke on the golf course or when youâre out someplace loud and you have other things going through your head, donât waste your time. Youâll miss everything that isâspecial about this stick. But if youâre in the mood to party, or evenâjust to sit still for an hour and a half, itâs a master class in blending.
It is elegant, complicated without being confusing and has aâway of slowing time. Iâve smoked quite a lot of the Siglo line, and while the Siglo VI is hailed because itâs gotâheavy rams (hardly), Iâd say that the real connoisseurâs choice in size would be the Siglo V. That Dalias vitola allows the flavor just that muchâmore bang for its buck. Itâs a gentlemanâs smoke.
Itâs refined. Itâs the sort of cigar that makes you happy to have endured 10 years of marriage â or whatever else,âfor that matter. I finally went back inside that evening, the smell of cedar and honey on my shirt, feeling aâwhole lot better about the world than when I sat down. Thatâs what goodâcigars do.
And the Siglo V? Itâs a very, very good cigar. Solid.











