Description
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Itâwas the silence I remember most of all. If youâve ever spent a week on a ranch out in the Hill Country,âyouâd know the sort of hush Iâm talking about. Itâs not justâthe lack of sound; itâs this tangible, heavy thing that gets into your bones.â I sat on theâedge of a weather-beaten porch, my boots kicked off, and watched the sun slowly retreat in bloody shades behind a line of scrub oaks. It was peaceful.
Product Specifications
| Attribute | Detail |
|---|---|
| Product Name | Montecristo Double Corona Limited Edition 2001 |
| Origin | Cuba |
| Factory | El Laguito |
| Vitola | Prominentes |
| Length | 1 mm (7 5/8 inches) |
| Ring Gauge | 49 |
| Wrapper | Cuba (Vuelta Abajo) |
| Binder | Cuba (Vuelta Abajo) |
| Filler | Cuba (Vuelta Abajo) |
| Strength | Medium |
Too peaceful, maybe. Iâhadnât smoked a cigar in five years. Not a puff. Iâd stepped away from the hobby for whatâfelt like good reasons at the time â health, money, changing a pace that was beginning to feel like a treadmill â but really I just wanted to prove to myself I could.
Iâd kept my humidors, though. I couldnât bear to let theâcollection go. They sat in my study like tiny wooden coffins, filled with the ghosts ofâmy past indulgences. But that nightâon the ranch, something changed.
The air wasâdry and smelt of cedar and dust, my hands were empty. I fished out of the travel humidor I had thrown in on a lark and pulled forth aâstick that I hadnât laid eyes on in 10 years. I rolled it between myâfingers, testing the tiny softness of the tobacco. I wasnât certain I even knew howâto do this correctly anymore.
I snippedâthe cap, lit the foot with a match and watched the flame dance beneath it. That first draw? It wasn’t just a smoke. It was a homecoming.
I sat for hours, two at least, soaked in the stars poking holes within the dark;âa reminder of what Iâve been missing. That smoke? The
Montecristo Double Corona EdiciĂłnâLimitada 2. It was some way toâend a fast.
The Specs
Before I dive into the weeds and get all up in this thingâs smoke, letâsâbreak down the vitals.
This isn’t a small cigar. If youâre after a quick hit whileâwaiting for a cab, look elsewhere. This is a commitment. Attribute
Details
Vitola de Galera
Prominentes
Binder/Filler
Cuban
Weight
17.86g
Release Year
2 (Available through 2002)
Construction and Pre-light
The Montecristo Double Corona EL 2 isâa cigar in color.
Itâs gotâthis deep, chestnut brown wrapper that looks like a well-oiled saddle. It has a bitâof marbling to it â darker streaks swirling into lighter ones â that makes it look rugged, natural. Itâs not that overly processed,âgeneric look you see on some modern sticks. It looks as if it sprang up from the dirt,âwhich, of course, it did.
Feels solid in theâhand. (Atâ7 5/8 inches, that is a long way to go. It has a smooth, almost oilyâtexture for being more than 2 decades old. I didnât see too many soft spots, though the foot seemedâa little tight. Thatâsâthe deal with these older Cubans; sometimes construction can be a bit of gamble but this one seemed good.
I had a straightâcut and took a cold draw. It was slightly firm â whatâI like to call a âcool draw.â It didnâtâfeel blocked, just a little stiff. The taste onâthe lips was just all molasses and dry earth, a bit of vanilla that lingered toward the back of my throat. I have to say, theâsmell from the unlit wrapper would almost make me forget why Iâd quit in the first place.
The First Third: The Awakening
To light a Robusto takes a few seconds, but lighting a Double Coronaâis an event
.
You can’t rush it. It took me a good minute just to toast that foot, ensuring that every part of that 49-ring gauge was glowingâevenly. As soon as I inhaled that first real puff, the roomâ(or front porch) was filled with a draftsman shop of thick, white smoke. The firstâflavors were downright mellow.
You would think a cigar with this kind of ageâand “Limited Edition” footprint would kick in the door but it kind of just leaned against the frame. I pickedâup a ton of cedar from the get-go. It wasâa dry one, clean and high. Beneath that was a sweetness ââthe molasses Iâd caught on my nose before â and a little of black coffee.
Not an indulgent, sweet latte, mindâyou: More like a diner cup of coffee youâd let sit on the table for 10 minutes. Aâbit bitter, a bit sour, but honest. The power wasâat the top end of mild to medium. It didnât leave myâhead spinning, though that was probably for the best â I hadnât had nicotine in my system for years.
The burn line was aâbit wavy, but zero issues getting through this cigar without needing to touch it up. It was as if the cigar had just hit the snooze button after anâtwenty-year nap and finally decided to stretch its legs. The Second Third: Settling In
The Montecristo tookâuntil about a half hour in before it really started to settle into its rhythm
.
The cedar remained,âbut receded behind the more robust earthiness. If youâve ever strolled through a forest immediately after rain,âthatâs the flavor I mean. It is damp, it’s richâand itâs very “Cuban.â
The coffee notes had deepened a shade to something closer to dark chocolate â no, not in the sweet confines of sugar but those 80% percent cacao brown bars that can leave your tongue with just a little bit ofâdryness. There was also a woody note which reminded me of the oakâtrees near the ranch.
Itâs a very grounded profile. There was no âzingââor hot pepper â just a muted, slow progression of flavors that I thought were quite intentional. The draw remained tight. I had to double-puff a few timesâto get the density of smoke I sought, but my WPPC never got hot.
Such is the beauty of a Prominente; there is so much tobacco there that theâsmoke remains cool even when you’re working for it. The ashâwas pale grey coloured and hung on for an inch and a half before I tapped it off into the dirt. I looked at the second band, “EdiciĂłn Limitada 2,” and it cameâback to me that this was indeed the year that Habanos first started to put an actual date on the EL bands. “Now they’re fancy,âbefore they were just plain. Itâs a coolâlittle piece of history to chew on.
Final Third: Longâfarewell
When I got into the last two inches, the cigarâfinally became a grumpy old man
.
Strength ticked up toâa solid medium. Whatever sweetness I tasted before in theâfirst third was now a distant memory with something to the effect of burnt toast and bitter chocolate taking its place.
Itâwas harsh, but effective. It was savory and heavy. There was a bit of leather about it too, which seemed to somehow suitâmy surroundings. The flavor became very concentrated.
Because draw was still aâlittle tight, every puff seemed to pull the very life of out that 20 year old tobacco. It was a bit salty at the very end and I got toâfeel nicotine catch up with me at last. I smoked it down toâwhere my fingers were getting hot. I didn’t want to put it down.
There is an element of melancholy to finishing a cigar likeâthis. And you know youâre probablyânever going to have another one from that vintage, in that situation, again. I letâit smolder in the ashtray, smoke snaking into the Texas night. Pairing Recommendations
If youâre going to hang with this cigar for 90 to 1 minutes, you want a companion thatâs not going to cause too much trouble asâit chatters away at your senses.
Coffee:
Blackâamericano or a straightforward French press. The acid in the coffee really takes outâthat tobacco of taste of the montecristo. Donât sweeten itââ this blast of bitterness should be bitter. Bourbon:
Something thatâs been around the block a few times and is not tooârye spicy.
A wheated bourbon â Weller ifâpossible, or even a regular Makerâs Mark. The caramel notes inâthe whiskey work nicely with the cedar and vanilla you experience in the first half of this cigar. Rum:
If you want to go traditional, a Cuban rumâsuch as Havana Club 7 Year is whatâll do it. It extracts the molassesâand cocoa in the body of the smoke.
Water:
Honestly? If you are at a ranch, what youâreally want is just a cold glass of well water. It keepsâthe palate clean so you can taste what you paid for. The Verdict
Is this the best thingâIâve ever smoked, Montecristo Double Corona EdiciĂłn Limitada 2001?
No. Iâve had sticks that drawâbetter and have more complexity going for them. Butâthatâs not really the point of a cigar of this sort. This is a time capsule.
Itâs a relic of a time when the EdiciĂłn Limitada program was still inâits infancy and the tobacco had a different soul at that time for what is being produced out of those factories today. The building was âCuban-solidâ â meaning that it was a little bit temperamentalâbut live-with-able. The flavor profile was consistent,âearthy and satisfyingly deep, just what we enjoy in a classic wood-forward smoke.
Itâs not aââflavor bombâ thatâs going to sock you in the mouth with every puff. Instead, itâs a long, easy conversation with an oldâfriend who doesnât feel obligated to fill every silence with chatter. If by some chance you come acrossâone languishing in a dusty corner of a humidor or at an estate sale, pick it up. Itâs a sliceâof history that ought to be smoked slowly on a quiet porch, somewhere.
Itâs a lesson that sometimes stepping back â even forâfive years!â only makes coming back all the sweeter. Final Thoughts:
A strong, reliable and iconoclasticâsmoke.
Itâs notâfor the impatient, and itâs not for those who like a spice rack in their mouth. Itâs for the man with two hours to kill and aâlot of thinking to think. It worked forâme, and it worked well. Rating:
Solid.
Very solid.












