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AâMiami Night’s Tale – A Cohiba Siglo VI Review
I was writing at this dinky hole-in-the-wall bar off Calle Ocho in Miami, that seedy sort of place where the neon sign flashing âOpenâ buzzes a little tooâloudly and the air smells of one part salt spray, another part gasoline, and 40 yearsâ worth of high-grade tobacco. It was a Tuesday, I think. I was on a solo vacation, one of those âfind yourselfâ trips where you endâup re-discovering all the ways you can be alone in a city filled with other humans. The humidity was doing that thingâwhere it stuck to your skin like an old wool blanket, and I was sitting in a cracked leather chair staring at the ceiling fan lazily chopping through the thick atmosphere.
Product Specifications
| Attribute | Detail |
|---|---|
| Product Name | Cohiba Siglo VI |
| Origin | Cuba |
| Factory | El Laguito |
| Vitola | Cañonazo |
| Length | 150 mm (5 7/8 inches) |
| Ring Gauge | 52 |
| Wrapper | Cuba (Vuelta Abajo) |
| Binder | Cuba (Vuelta Abajo) |
| Filler | Cuba (Vuelta Abajo) |
| Strength | medium |
Toâbe truthful, I was a little nostalgic. Miamiâhas a way of doing that to you.) Itâs like a postcard from an alternate reality ofâthe past that never fully existed. I dug into my travel humidor, reaching past some of the shorter sticks Iâd grabbed for short strolls, when Iâcame upon it. The girth.
The smoothness. Iâd been saving this one for a time that felt momentous,âbut sitting there as the world whizzed past my pressed-cheek face in a streaky window, I realized âmomentousâ is just what we call ânowâ when you are actually awake to it. I drew it out, the yellow and black bandâcatching the flickering light. It looked right.
It felt perfectâfor that room, that heat. That smoke? The
Cohiba Siglo VI
. Itâs a beast of a stick, but itâdoesnât scream at you.
Itâjust sit there, weighty and secure, waiting for you to pull yourself together and start it. The
Construction: The El Laguito Touch
Iâve seen a lot of cigarsâin my day, and you can generally tell when something was rolled with just a little bit more care.
The Siglo VI is produced at the El Laguitoâfactory, the same place they made cigars for Castro himself in a custom size back when. You can feel that history when you have itâin your hands. They call the wrapper a âClaro,â andâit is smooth. Not plastic as in a cheap trinket, but like the handle on aâwell-worn silk tie.
There wereâhardly any veins, only a pure leaf of tan that appeared almost edible. It wasâfirm when I gave it a soft squeeze. Not quite softâspots, not precisely hollow points. Itâs a ring gauge of 52, which isâhefty.
When thisâsize was first introduced in 2002, it was a monster. These days weâhave cigars the size of baseball bats, but the Siglo VI remains the âgold standardâ for a 52+ ring gauge cigar. I secured the capâa well done three-slider gladwrapâjobâand pre-lighted. It wasnât wide open; it had that elemental Cuban resistance, as if you were drinking a thick milkshakeâthrough a straw.
I tasted cold hay, a little sweetnessâand something that made me think of an old wooden desk. Solid start. The First Third: The Awakening
I used a softâflame to start it up.
A blasted leaf like this doesnât need to be given aâtriple-jet torch blast, you know; you just gotta wait. The initial few puffs had a goodâstrong punch to them. I thought for sureâit would be creamy from the word go, but instead it slapped me with some hits of white pepper and leather. It wasn’t aggressive, just… present.
It is like a firm handshakeâfrom someone who knows they are more important than you. That beginning heat became muted after aboutâ10 minutes. The amount of smoke was impressive, (largeâwhite clouds, hanging heavy in the hot Miami air like ghosts). I began to getâa honeyed sweetness on the finish.
Itâs a strange feeling, pepper on the tip of your tongue and honey atâthe back of your throat â but it works. The burn line was straight as an arrow, which is great because sometimes these thickerâCubans can have a bit of a wonky nature if the roller wasnât having a great day. This one was behaving. SecondâThird: Sweet Spot
I was loosened up by the time I reached the centerâof that stick.
The nostalgia that Iâd been feelingâearlier began to turn from âsadâ to âgrateful.â That is the power ofâa nice cigar, I suppose. Theâflavor turned a corner here. The pepper all butâdisappeared, overtaken by this amazing creaminess. If youâve everâhad buttered toast with a sprinkle of almond shavings on top, thatâs what I was getting.
It was rich, but not heavy. I even observedâthe âextra fermentationâ they refer to with Cohiba. They make the seco and ligeroâleaves undergo a third fermentation in barrels, and you can truly taste it in how smooth this is. No harshness; no youth (as inâyoung) tobacco bite.
It just glides. I caught the shadow of coffee â not dark-roast but more cafe con leche from one of the standsâoutside. A little vanilla, aâlittle nutty. Itâs complicated, butâit doesnât seem to be working too hard.
Itâs just being a Siglo VI. The Final Third: The Deep End
As I turned onto the finishingâstraight, the power began to increase.
It transitioned from a hearty medium to aânice, solid medium-to-full. The flavors got darker. The cedar emerged, andâthat opening leather note resurfaced but in a lower register â more like an old library book. I also picked up dark chocolateââ the bitter kind, not the candy-bar kind.
Despiteâthat I was getting down to the nub, the smoke remained cool. Thatâs what youâwant in a well-built Cañonazo there. Now, sometimes at the end these kind of asserts can get a little hot and bitter but I was able to smoke this down intoâwhere it was scorching my fingers. The finish was quite long and vegetal, it still had a bit of presence in myâmouth that made me just want to sit there quietly for another twenty minutes after the cigar is finished.
Pairing: What to Drink?
From there Iâwas in Miami, so I did the classic. I had a glass ofâ7-Year-Old Havana Club rum. The rums natural sweetness interacts perfectly with the cedar and spice of theâCohiba. If youâre not a rum person, a double espresso is the bestâcall.
You want something with enough body to hold its own against the cigar but without beingâso boisterous as to drown out those fine honey and almond flavors. Iâve seen people pair âem up with heavy peated scotch even,âbut I think thatâs a mistake. Youâll lose the nuance. Lessâis more, keep it classic.
The Verdict
I must say,âthe Siglo VI is a commitment.
I took a good 90 minutes to make my way throughâit, and thatâs not even rushing. This is not a cigar for the quick break; itâs a cigar forâwhen you have something to think about, or when you want to stop thinking altogether. Is it expensive? Yeah.
Is it hard to find? Sometimes. But when you find a good one, itâs toughâto beat. Itâs not perfectâno cigar is.
The draw was aâhair more snug than I traditionally prefer for the first five minutes, and these need time to age. If you smoke one of these rightâoff the truck, itâs like flushing money down the terlet. Give itâfive years in the humidor and let it calm down, and then it is something special. Sitting in that lounge, watching trafficâinch along on Miami streets, I knew Iâd made t
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