Description
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Product Specifications
| Attribute | Detail |
|---|---|
| Product Name | H Upmann Petit Corona |
| Origin | Cuba |
| Factory | – |
| Vitola | Petit Corona (Mareva) |
| Length | 5 1/8 inches (129 mm) |
| Ring Gauge | 42 |
| Wrapper | Cuba (Vuelta Abajo) |
| Binder | Cuba (Vuelta Abajo) |
| Filler | Cuba (Vuelta Abajo) |
| Strength | Medium |
I stoodâon a rooftop bar in Madrid, one of those whose wind grabs the underside of your jacket and makes city lights effervesce into spreads like spilled diamonds across dark velvet. It was lateââ both well past 2 a.m., by now â and the air had that bite, so crisp and clean but also unï·sentimental, ofwhen traffic has at last thinned. Iâd just finished a project that was my lunchfor sixâmonths. You know that feeling? Youâknow how good you feel when itâs finally lifted off your shoulder and you can breathe? I felt proud. Not prideâin the cocky sense or anything, just that inwardly beaming pride of having accomplished the thing and done it right.
So I sighed, pressed myself against the rail of its sandstone balustrade, lookedout at the Gran VĂa and fished my little leather travel humidorâfrommy pocket. In theâmood for a double corona, I replied. Iâdidnât want to smoke something that would punchback at me for the next two hours, and need my taxed, undivided mind on a labyrinthine transition every three puffs. I wanted something steady. It did have that feelâof catching up with an old friend, who sometimes needs to chatter and other times just sit quietly beside us. I grabbed for a joy stick that’s been in my rotation since I learned how to lightâthem.
That smoke? The H. Upmann Petit Corona. Thereâs a reason itâsâa classic, and under the Spanish stars that evening, it was exactly what I needed to end an evening.
The Specs
Construction: The Bankerâs Precision
I have always been partial to H. UpmannâsâHistory.
You have Hermann Dietrich Upmann, a German banker who came toâHavanasome few decades before, in the 1840s. He didnât just want to break into theâtobacco business; he wanted a meansofshippingthe finest cigars back to Europe for hisclients. “Banker’s logic” there is toâthis Petit Corona. Itâs not flashy. It lacks a heavy, oilyâwrapper that commands notice. Itâs a plain stick, Colorado-Claro in hue â youâve seenâthis color plenty of times on that well-worn leather satchel.
The number Ihad on thatârooftop was a little bit of abox-press. It is not aâharsh, aggressive press â just that soft squaring off of the corners that slides perfectly into the fingers. The wrapper was silky to theâtouch with very little texture felt and few veins. Thesausage wasnice andâfirm â no soft spots, no lumps â when I picked it up, but I could give it a gentle squeeze. Just a solid, consistent roll. The cap was applied with one of those classic Cuban triple seams, maybe a littleârougher – slightly more overtly agricultural-looking â than had been the case on the higher-end Cohibas. But honestly? I prefer it that way. It feels like something that has a hand on it and not dug out ofâa machine.
I prunedâit with my deepV-cutter. The pre-light wasperfect. This was free and open as the air, dry as a rasher (when it had dried seven days), hay-scented after a week in tobacco house, with a slight mixture of sumach or some other sweet scented herbâ– perhaps coltsfoot. I toasted the foot slowly to watch theâVuelta Abajo tobacco ignite. The foot smelled >âof straightcedar. Solid start.
The Opening Third: AGentle Stirring
First few puffsâare always the “getting-to-know-you” phase. It does not jump out and slap you across the face with pepper in the H.UpmannâPetit Corona. Really, it’s just a friendly handshake of anâopening number. I get so much cedar right out of the gate â really clean, woodyaromaticsâjust sitting meaty on my palate. It was all very soft, spicy especially â not a black pepper burnâbut more of an echo of white pepper that lingered long after the bite.
Sitting on the side of the roadlookingâat the smokein driftedoff into the Madrid night,lifting it up wasso very light. Itâsaâmodest-to-mild smoke now. Itâs accessible. You donât actually have toâbe a veteran of: a thousand cigars to know that this is taking place. Good draw, lots of smoke, thin inâbody but big in flavour. Ten minutes in, the first hotness did usâa solid by chilling out and leaving with a touch of soft floral sweetness. It reminded me of aâwalk in the gardenafter rain, earthy and fresh.
The Second Third: TheSweet Spot
And this is where the H. Upmann startsâto show some of that pedigree. It wasnât until I was halfway through the secondthird that the flavors began toâblend. The warmth of nutty aromas began to creep in â roasted almondsâor hazelnuts, say. Itâs aâŠvery âbrownâ flavor profile, ifthat makesâsense. Everything is warm and toasted.
Next wasawning moment I had beenâwaiting for: The coffeeand cream. Itâs notâan espresso punch; it is more like a well-made cafĂ© con leche. Thereâs a little bit of creamy-nessâto the smoke here that I didnât have in the first inch. It coats the palate. I can say you, of a 42rg cigar, Iamâreally amazed at complexity that little body is able to house. I was no longer thinkingâabout my job. I havenât even beenâthinking about when thenext deadline would be. I wanted all ofâthat nutty, creamycenter.â
The burn was exceptionally even. I didnât have to even do one touch-up, andâthat says a lot about the construction. The ash was a nice medium gray, holding on to an inch until I gaveâit a flick into the crystal ashtray. Itâs a clean smoke. No bitterness, no harshness. Noâbooming fireworks at all, just a placid, rhythmic rhythm of flavor.
The Third End:Marzipan Finish
As the cherry made itâs way into the band,strengthâkicked up a level to medium in body. The cedar was still the linchpin, butâthe sweetness hadswiveled. It veered from that lightfloral angle and more toward something deeper â brown sugar and bakingâspices. Like, cinnamon and MAYBE a teenthâof nutmeg.
But the real Beastmode on thisstick in the last act â and why Ikeep a box of these suckers layingaroundâin my humidor â is its marzipanfinish. Thereâs something about that weird contrast of sweet almond and biting, bitter herbal flavorthat makesâsweet, smoky almonds just WORK. Itâs sophisticated. Someânotes of the darker were creeping in, too â hints of cocoa and another bit moreof that coffee character â but never did it not maintain balance.
I smoked that thing down to theânub, till my fingers startedgetting too much heat. Itâdidnât actual ever get âmuddyâ even at the very end. The flavors stayed distinct. Iâd say Iâhada good 40 minutes. OK, yes, some people may hurtle through it in 25, but if you take the thing at a leisurely pace, it all but snaps back around and gifts you that fullâ40-minute period of rumination.
Pairing: Keeping it Classic
With that I was on a rooftop in Spain â so was drinking an aged-rum, small (and not sweet) with enough oak to go toe-to-toe withâthe cigarâs cedar. But honestly? This is the âmorningâ or âmid-dayâ smoke forâanyone. A flat white or a regular black coffee is going toâbe stellar alongside this! The richness of the cigar would play nicelyâagainst the bitterness of the coffee.
If youâre going booze free but want something naughtier,âtrywhetting your whistle with a little Sherry (am Amontilladowould be divine). You're looking for something that would compliment but not overpower the toasted almond and marzipan notes while still being in line with the lightly floral firstâthird.
The Aging Factor
I have to include this because itâs relevant: H. Upmann Petit Coronas are notorious for needingâa rest.
Theone I smoked on the roof was about four yearsâold. And if yougo buy a freshâbox and then immediately light one, you might find it slightly ⊠âbrightâ or grassy: not entirely unpleasant, but lacking some of the complexity and nuance of tobacco that has been held for months in your sock drawer. But give them time.
Turns out, fiveâyears is the sweet spot. Thatâs when that little bite of nicotine evaporates andâthat note of nuttiness reallybegins to emerge. If you can wait, and let a box sit in the rear of your humidor for a few years,you’ll get back a rougher cut cigarthan to what Iâmay review here. Itâs the culinary equivalent of a good wine; its edges soften and its core flavorsâmeld more completely as it ages.
The Verdict
The H.Upmann Petit Corona isnât pretending to exchange punches with the biggest smoke in town, and thatâs a good thing ââtheyâre appealing due to this modesty. Itâs notâashow-off âstatementâ cigar that you smoke to impress. Itâs a connoisseurâs cigar. For the guy who enjoys historyâof the Mareva vitola, and wants an effortless but flavorful medium-bodied smoke that plays within a 40-minute timeframe.
Is this the most complicatedCuban toâever be sold? No. But is it consistent? Absolutely. Itâs all that and moreWhat I blew through.180âyears of history baked into any puff. Itâs a puro that takes that premiumVuelta Abajo tobacco and does exactly what it shouldââ give us a balanced, nuanced smoke that doesnât have to scream.
Sitting on that roof, admiring an excellent performanceâwas the perfect thing for me. It demanded nothing of me; it simply asked meâto think and be present. For newbs, a great way to be introduced into the world of CubanâH. Upmann. Itâs the old friend who wonâtâlet you down, if youâve been there before.
Solid. Truly solid.
Final Thoughts: If you come across a box with some dust on it at your local LCDH ⊠buy,âbuy and more purchase. You canthank your future self.
Summary of the Experience
- Body: Light to Medium
- Strength: Medium
- FlavoursCedar, Toasted Almonds, Coffee,Marzipan<\/li>
- Smoking Time: 40 Minutes
- Bestâfor: Late night musingsâor a polite morning breatherâŠ..



















