Description
I was standing on the corner of 5th and 42nd, deep intheâbowels of midtown. Theâsun had been setting behind the skyscrapers and that’s why these long, jaggedy shadows crossed the pavement. Cabsâhonked; people barreled past me with that desperate âIâm late for the trainâ energy and the smell of roasted nuts from a street cart vied with exhaust fumes. But I didn’t care. I hung on, leaning against an ice-cold stone pillar for support and a signed contract in the pocketâof my chest. And I had finally closed a deal Iâhad been working on for18 months. I was rattling a bit from getting my juices going, but I began to think about the study itselfâthe smell ofthe worn leatherâand books that smushed cruh-crum lifetime will stink — ”and that one damn drawer in his desk he said I could never even touch until whoevei’ v/as mineâ^”lEed sucli a i>itc fit at die table.,..”‘
Product Specifications
| Attribute | Detail |
|---|---|
| Product Name | Montecristo A |
| Origin | Cuba (Habanos S.A.) |
| Factory | – |
| Vitola | Gran Corona |
| Length | 235 mm (about9 1/4 inches) |
| Ring Gauge | 47 |
| Wrapper | Medium to Full |
| Binder | Medium to Full |
| Filler | Medium to Full |
| Strength | Medium to Full |
I dreamedâof a world where things moved more slowly. The city today? Itâs allânow,â âinstant,â theââten-second clip.â But a win like this? It wasnât of a 10-secondclip. Then there was a party to be had, and that tookâawhile. It had to beâsomething thatwas going to make me sit down and really digest the reality of what weâd just done. I fished intoâmy own satchel, dragged out that skinnycoffin. I had about 2œ hoursâof daylightleft, and I knew exactly what I was going to do with them.
That smoke? The Montecristo A. If youâre notacquainted with this bad boy, itâs likely because youâve never had the time to commit an entire afternoon to aâsinglecigar. Thisâis not your eat that quick puff before dinner kind of thing. This is a marathon. Itâs the Mount Everestâof the Montecristo line and I was ready to summit it once and for all.
Construction: TheGiant in the Box
It’s like drawingâa sword. The Montecristo A is a Gran Corona,âbut at barely over nine inches long it appears as a bĂąton, not a cigar. I held it up to the fugitives of city lightââ it was wrapped in that old stand-by Colorado shade, a shiny reddish brown that looked like nothing so much as burnished teak. It wasnât oily like some of those dark Maduros you see, it was more of an amatte finish, silky to the touch and feltâexpensive under my thumb.
Rolling it under my fingers, Iâcould sense the edges of its mass. Because when youâre smoking a cigar this big, what youâreâreally concerned about is soft spots or âplugsâ that make the draw feel like sucking down a milkshake through a pinhole. But this onefeltâuniform from head to toe. I pickedâup the straight cutter, and nipped thecap. The pre-light draw? This was exactly what I had hoped for: notes of dry cedar followed by a touch of what I refer to as âbarnyardââtheâearthy, hay-like smell that tells you the tobacco spent delicious years aging in VueltaAbajo. It was snugâbut hey what do you expect for a 9 x 47 ring guage cigar? What you donât want on this large of aâstick, is wide open draw or youâll end up burning hot half way through.
Flavor Profile: The Three-Act Play
The First Third: The Awakening
I roasted the foot withâa soft flame lighterI purposely did not flame past the toasted foot. It took a minute to get the whole surface â (itâs a bigâtarget) â glowing. Those initialâpulls were weirdly smooth. Right away I got a mouthful ofâthe all so classic Montecristo cedar. It wasnât exactly aggressive; it was more ofâa friendly push. I had been sitting there on a park bench waiting for the city lights to come alight and theâsmoke had begun to settle. The flavor bloomed, began to hint at something cocoa â not but moreâlike cacao nibs. There was a bit of a tang too â almost dried-fruit-like even ââthat helped balance the wood. The strong is byânow a strong medium. It was a drinkâthat went down smooth, that was sophisticated and didnât bite back.
The Second Half: The Crux oftheâMatter
Forty-five minutesâin, and I was three inches down. This is where the Montecristo A startsâto show its teeth. Flavor turned away from the lightâtasting cedar to something quite a bit darker and more âmasculineâ. I mean leather so thick you can smell it, and roastedâcoffee beans. You ever go in one of thoseâfancy boot stores? Thatâswhat I was smelling. The earthiness intensified to full âcuban thatâwent dirt after rain,â which I love in a Cuban. The voluptuousness of the first two nicotinesweetthird was knocked down a few pegs and a spicy tingles greeted theâretrohale. It wasnât actually pepper, per seâ more a warmâcinnamon or nutmeg flavor. It was developing a full-bodiedâprofile, more into that medium-to-fullrange. I even sort of appreciated that small nicotine kick here, a pleasant âbuzzâ to add to theâone I got from winning at business.
TheLast Third: The Big Finish
By theâtime I hit that last third, the sun was gone and just streetlamps illuminated my smoke clouds. The cigar had evolved again. Now it wasall about intensity. The coffee became more ofâan espresso and the leather was even more pronounced. Thisâwas when I started to get a charred oak note that dominated, and the smoke was far creamier. The smoke started to turn hot, I had to slow down and stop puffing so prematurely in the smoke, butâeverything still tasted clean. It wasn’t the case with this cigar, which was just as smooth and sweet in its last ash-laden 1/3rd as it was at [email protected]Huy $40, but nope. Usually with aâferoooler this big the final third will be acrid (or âtarryâ) but the A held throughout to my surprise and complete delight. Punchy, earthy and finished with a palette kissing toasted nut flavor that hungâaround long on my tongue after I set the nub in the ashtray. II (spent) two hours, twenty minutesâwith thingy and I donât regret asecond.
Pairing:Who Can Match the âAâ?
A Montecristo Aâdoes not do well with a lightbeer or a sweet soda. You need something with legs. BecauseâI was having a party I put in 1.5 oz of a peaty Islay Scotch. The peatâsmoked andleather in the cigaroutfit each other likepair ofbest mates. And, evenâif youâre not a booze person, consider my challenge above: maybe that itâs some kind of motor oil-varnish concoction to be sipped and smoked while Worker fills the room with powder smoke? If not, then whether or not some kind of espressoâperhapsâsomething very dark and black with enough acidity to slice through the richness all that tobacco. I mean, I could have told you to try spicy ginger ale if youâre looking to stay clear-headed, but⊠Naw, Iâm lying: the perfect call for meâis the Scotch because this showâs one of those too. Youwant something that changesâalong with the cigar.
Value/Usage: Who is This For?
Listen, Iâmjust going to tellâyou the truth. TheMontecristo A is noââdailyâ blend. Itâs expensive,âdifficult to get attimes, and a humongous time suck. If you are aââpower smokerâ or only have about 40 minutes after work, donât come around these parts. Youâll ruin halfa beautiful cigar, and that isâsimply a crime.
For the new guyâwho got promoted. Itâs fortheâmom who just ran her first marathon. Itâs the one for the personâwho wants to sit on a porch and watch a sunset and look back in time and forward through it. Itâs a celebratory stick. Itâis also for the collector who appreciates the storied history behind Cubantobacco. Since being put into the range in the late 60s,âthe Monte A has been the benchmark for what is a Gran Corona. Itâs a statement piece.
Conclusion: The Verdict
I have to sayâtheMonetecristo A completely outdid that memory of my dadâs office. It wasnâtâout there trying to impress them with a whole bunch of whacked-out spice or gimicky flavors. It was a decent stickâall around, a very enjoyable smoke that had me interested. Thatâs a cigar that respects you aboutâas much respect as you show it.
So, is this the âmost âcomplexât thingâIâve ever, smoked? Maybe not. But can it be one of the most dependable andâsatisfying too? Absolutely. I was peeled away from the outcries ofâthe city and had two hours to have a little church service on my win! You should own one of these â if you have theâtime, patience and a reason to make merry. Asâlong as you have a comfy chair and nothing else to do. Thatâs not a cigar â thatâs anâoccasion.
Verdict: Solid. Definitely one forâthe ardent smoker with no fear of a long-haul flight.













