Description
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Product Specifications
| Attribute | Detail |
|---|---|
| Product Name | Montecristo No. 3 |
| Origin | Cuba (Habanos S.A.) |
| Factory | – |
| Vitola | Corona |
| Length | 142mm (5 5/8″) |
| Ring Gauge | 42 |
| Wrapper | 100% Cuban (Vuelta Abajo) |
| Binder | 100% Cuban (Vuelta Abajo) |
| Filler | 100% Cuban (Vuelta Abajo) |
| Strength | Medium to Full |
A few yearsâago I was seated on a rooftop bar in Madrid, the sort of place where they have an elevator that feels like a rickety time machine and gin tonics priced above what my first car cost.
The sun was that low, reluctant dip toward the horizon â the kind that turned the skyline a bruised purple and warmâorange. You know that feeling? When street noise starts registering as nothing more than a low-frequency hum and youâre suddenly acutely aware of the passage ofâtime? I was in a thoughtful mood, considering how little after all of our lives we spend chasing the ânewâ and the âbold,â while much of what really matters is right there in front of us,âwearing a plain brown label.
I openedâmy travel humidor. I didnât want a monster. Iâdidnât want a double corona that takes two hours to smoke, or some boutique band with a trendy-looking band that resembles a heavy metal album cover. Iâlonged for something that felt like an old friend. I wanted a smoke that knew its place and didnâtâhave shout. That smoke? The Montecristo No. 3.
The Specs
Before getting to the weeds about how this thing actually smokes, letâsâtake a gander at the vitals. This isnât a smokeâfor those who are fans of the flashlight-in-the-mouth. Itâs a classic, straight-up Corona.
Construction and Feel
I have toâadmit, there is something about a 42 ring gauge that just feels perfect in the hand. Itâs elegant. Itâs notâmaking you look like yourâe trying so hard. When Iâtook the No. 3 out of my case, the first thing that struck me was the wrapper. It was not the oily man-show version;âit was that matte, Colorado-claro tan of well-ageing leather. It felt solid. Not hardâsolid, but well-packed solid. You can tell these are hand-rolled by folksâwho have been doing it since before I was born.
I gentlyâsqueezed it. I got a little bit of give, that nice âcushiony feelingââthat told me airflow should not become an issue. These guys are aged for two full yearsâbefore they ever see shelf-time, and it shows. There is no such thingâas a âgreenâ smell to it. Rather, the pre-light smell I got was a an old cedar, barnyard and a hint of sweetness that remindedâme of dried hay. I clipped the cap straight, my preferred wayâto open a Corona (some people prefer an angled cut), and found the cold draw to be perfect. Loose but not too loose,ânot milkshake-through-a-straw suction. Just a perfect, slight resistance.
The First Third: The Greeting
On that rooftop, as the sun finally dipped below the horizon,âI toasted the foot. First few puffs ofâa Montecristo No. 3 are always surprising when you haven’t had one in a while. It doesn’t start shy. I took a hit and boom, theâfirst thing that came to me was toasted tobacco with a very clear honey-like sweetness. Itâs not, however, a sugary sweetness â more likeâthat deep, floral honey you sometimes find at farmer’s markets.
There was a little bit of white pepper on the retrohale, enough to let me know it had some âpunchâ as the old-timers alwaysâsay.
The smokeâhad become intense and velvety. I hate thin smoke. IfâIâm going to smoke a cigar, then I want to take in the full experience. This was a No. 3 and it had a luxurious density to itâthat coated the palate. It had a thickness, too: I felt likeâI was chewing on the flavor rather than simply inhaling it. After about ten minutes, the pepper calmed down a bit and more of that classic Montecristo profile can be foundââ there were notes of toast and something earthy.
The Second Third: SweetâSpot
When I was an inch andâa half in, the city lights were starting to twinkle below me. Here isâwhere the No. 3 really gets going. The honey tones of the opening were back in theâwings, and the main act burst forth: creamy coffee, cocoa. I mean, thatâfancy, dark chocolate cocoa powder â bittersweet and fragrant.
I detected aâvanilla note edging in, too. It went so well with the coffee flavors that instead of a cup to dip my skimp into, I felt almostâlike I was eating a birthday latte. The good thing about thisâparticular section of the smoke is that it puffs the same. Itâs not a “fussy” cigar. it stays lit, the ash hangs on forâa good inch, maybe more (a pretty light grey I might add), and flavor just gets stronger. Itâs richer than refined here,âif that makes any sense. Itâs not trying to be delicate, itâs all about that full Cuban body that madeâthe brand famous in 1935. You can taste the Vuelta Abajo soil â that mineral,âsalty, âtwangyâ character that you just canât find anywhere else.
The Last Third: The Fireâand the Punch
When I got to my last third,âit really mellowed out. The strength of the cigarâhad begun to make itself known. According to Habanos, the strengthâlevel is a 4 out of 5 and you definitely feel that toward the end. The cocoa and vanillaâwere gone now, making way for a much more powerful cedar and spicy twang that jolted my palate to attention.
It didâget hotter, though not âbitterâ hot. Itâwas more a focused intensity. You really get the âfire and punchâ that people talk about with the numberedâseries here. Itâs a masculine smoke â strong, woody, slightlyâpushy. By the half way point I began to slow down, having short pulls trying to cool things off andâin turn left an awesome zinger of a spice on my tongue. I smoked the thing down to theânub, could feel the heat on my fingers. I didn’t want to put it down. There is a kind of brutal honesty at the end of a No. 3; it no longer hidesâbehind sweetness. Itâs merely pure, agedâtobacco doing what it does.
Pairing Recommendations
Now on this rooftop I was drinking a gin and tonic, whichâwasnât bad. Butâif Iâm truthful, it didnât quite work out. There, if youâre smoking a Monte No. 3, you better have something thatâs strongâenough to compete with that medium-to-full body.
I would chooseâa Havana Club 7 Year Old rum. The molasses and oak notes in the rum would pair very well with theâflavors of cocoa and vanilla in the second third. Ifâyouâre not a drinker, an inespresso (black and strong) is in order. The bitterness ofâthe coffee cuts through that silken smoke and demands attention to that honey sweetness in the early going. If itâs late at night and you want something stronger, it might beâa peated Scotch, though watch out for the smoke of the whisky drowning out any light cedar notes in your cigar.
The Verdict
You ever purchase something because itâs a âclassicâ and then comeâto the realization that in fact itâs just old? The Montecristo No. 3 is notâthat. Itâs aâclassic because it holds up. Itâs the cigar that set the âparejoâ shape as a gold standard, makingâus forget about those strange-looking perfectos of Victorian times. Itâs tasteful, itâs dependable and has enough backbone to keep an experiencedâsmoker interested for the full hour it takes to work its way down.
Is it the mostâcomplicated cigar Iâve smoked? No. But Iâm notâalways in the mood for a puzzle. Sometimes I just want a goodass smoke that reminds me of knowingâmy way around Cuba. The two year mellowing process really serves this one well –âthere’s a smoothness to the strength that you don’t always find with younger Cubas.
If you want something jokeyâto wave around at a party while being oversized, look elsewhere. But if youâre sitting on a rooftop with the sun going down, and you want a companion with more fun than civility in it,âthe No. 3 is your play. Itâs a smoke that is âfire and punchâ inâa fancy Corona body. Solid. Truly solid.
Final Thought:âIf you find a box of these thatâs been sitting for another year or two in some store, Iâd snag it. Theyâre only improved with additional rest, but right outâof the gate are what a Cuban cigar should be.














