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In stock
Montecristo Supremos
$480.00
The Montecristo Supremos EdiciΓ³n Limitada 2019 stands as a testament to the art of Cuban cigar making, embodying the rich tradition and premium quality associated with the Montecristo brand. Crafted with aged tobacco leaves from Cuba's renowned Vuelta Abajo region, this limited edition release offers a unique smoking experience characterized by a blend of spicy, chocolatey, and coffee notes, complemented by hints of leather. Encased in a bright yellow lacquered box, each set contains 25 cigars, making it a prized possession for both collectors and connoisseurs.
| Feature | Detail |
|---|---|
| Length | 130 mm / 5.12 Inch |
| Ring Gauge | 55 |
| Strength | Medium to Full |
| Size | Montesco |
| Wrapper | Habanos |
| Binder | Habanos |
| Filler | Habanos |
| Presentation | Box of 25 cigars |
| Manufacturer | Habanos SA |
| Country of Origin | Cuba |
| Flavors | Spicy, chocolatey, coffee notes, leather |
| Availability | Limited edition, special release |
Description
I am recalling the night at the Hotel Nacionalβin Havana, sitting on the balcony overlooking a hot, swampy evening where lumps of wet air press down like warm quilts you canβt entirely kick free. I was with Mateo, a fellow I hadn’tβseen since my 2015 Habanos Festival. Weβd exchanged emails about tobacco yields and wrapper shades for years, but to see him in the flesh, in front of the MalecΓ³n, as the sun dimmed from orange to fadeout toward our left, everything looked and feltβdifferent. I was intrigued, partially because Mateo always seemed to have something squirreled away inβhis travel humidor that hadnβt yet hit the shelves. He leaned back, the wicker chair creaking under his bulk, and tossed me a twig that seemed wider than any Iβd ever seen wandered around with aβbrown squirrely top cap and white matrix beneath. It was that flowery yellowβand black EdiciΓ³n Limitada band gleaming under the balcony lights.
Product Specifications
| Attribute | Detail |
|---|---|
| Product Name | Montecristo Supremos |
| Origin | Cuba |
| Factory | – |
| Vitola | Montesco (Robusto Extra) |
| Length | 130 mm (5.1 inches) |
| Ring Gauge | 55 |
| Wrapper | 55 |
| Binder | I was in Cuba (Vuelta Abajo – Aged 2βYears) |
| Filler | Cuba (Vuelta Abajo – 2 YearβOld) |
| Strength | Medium |
βYou ever see a Monteβthis thick?β he grinned, raising anβeyebrow with a chuckle. I accepted itβfrom him, feeling the weight. Itβwasnβt just a cigar; it was almost an utterance. We spent three hours sitting there β hardly talking about what once was, mostly just staring at the blue smoke curling into the Cubanβnight. That smoke? The Montecristo Supremos. It changed my mind aboutβthe direction the brand was going.
The Specs
Construction: A Hefty Handful
βI owe: The first thing about the Supremos is the girth. A 55 ring gaugeβon a Montecristo seems nontraditional. Get used to the svelte No. 4 or the old-style No. 2 torpedo, andβthis thing feels like a club in your hand. Itβs the Montesco vitola, the same dimensions they use for the Romeoβy Julieta Wide Churchill, and it is a lot of tobacco to handle. The wrapper on the one Iβsmoked was dark and chocolatey, indicative of EdiciΓ³n Limitada releases as they employ leaves from the highest part of the plant, which are more exposed to sun, and therefore have been aged longer.
Rolling it between my fingers I found not oneβsoft spot. It had a dense feel, and the pack was tight with a little giving thatβmade me think the draw wasnβt going to be a challenge. The cold draw served up a combination of cold honey and some citrus, which was quiteβsurprising based on how dark the leaf was. I gave a straight cut, and immediately the resistance was exactly whereβI like it; not pulling through a straw but enough that you have to work for it just a bit. It felt solid. This is not aβcigar you smoke while occupied with something else. It requires you to pay attention to theβweight.
TheβFirst Third: The Cream and the Crop
When I finally set flame to the foot, those firstβfew puffs were a bonfire cloud of thick white smoke. Iβm talking about the smoke that hangs in the air and makes you feel like youβre in an old noirβfilm. The opening flavours however were classic Montecristo butβpushed up from zero to eleven. Right from theβstart I received a big hit of creaminess, which was followed by an incredibly specific leather note. It wasnβt aggressive, though. For such a medium-to-full Limited Editionβthat opener was unexpectedly accessible.
An inch in and a spicy scent began toβrise. It wasβnot a biting spice, but more the aroma of a kitchen where someone had cracked open a container of peppercorns and cinnamon. There was a coffeeβnote as well β not a bitter espresso, but more like a milky latte with some cocoa powder sprinkled on top. I sawβit was sticking, adhering as if glued by powder to the ground, a pale gray pocked with fine ripples. The rollers at the Montesco factory clearly knew whatβthey were doing with this batch. And the βCuban twangββthat sourdough, metallic zingβwas there on the retrohale but smoothed out by two years of aging that tobacco underwentβbefore it even got to the rolling table.
TheβSecond Third: Tunneling the Earth
Sitting on the balcΓ³n with Mateo, the cigar began to segue, comingβdown more to earth. The cream of the initial experience was sidelined,βand earthiness steered up front. I mean rich, damp soil flavors β theβkind of this-tobacco-comes-from-such-and-such-a-place flavor. The Vuelta Abajo shouldnβt be famous for no reason, and you can really taste the mineral quality of that red Cuban dirtβin the second third of these Supremos.
The cedar also came through aβlot more here. I felt like I was inβa wood-paneled library. Occasionally, a note of sweetness β almost like honey or dried orange peel β wouldβhit that acted as an intermission from the denser leather and earth tones. The strength was definitely building. It was warm and slow in my chest, a simmering heat telling me this wasnβtβthe morning smoke. Itβs somewhere between a βsitβdown and stay a whileβ type of cigar. The burn line was impressively straight, something that, to be honest, tends to beβa toss up with some Cuban releases. Thisβparticular one, though, was playing itself perfectly.
Last Third:βThe Pepper Kick
Once I got down to the lastβcouple of inches, the Supremos decided it was time to show its teeth. The pepper, which had been a wallflower up to thisβpoint, Spang it on down toward the front. There was a black pepper spice on the tongue, but it was nicely balanced out byβsome of that dark cocoa Iβd sampled before. The smoke became even more cloudlike,βthough that hardly seems possible, and the body entered solidly full-bodied territory.
I did not get it to turn bitter on me, which is my gripe with thicker ring gaugesβapproaching the end. Instead, they only grew strongerβat the time. The leather became a charred,βsmokier flavor and the cedar was closer to toasted oak. I smoked it all the way to where myβfingers were scalding and I couldnβt stand letting it go. It had a lingering coffee-meets-spice aftertaste thatβhung around long after Iβd knocked out the final nub into the ashtray. Itβs a winding ride, and byβthe time you get to the end you feel like youβve smoked something significant.
Pairing: What to Drink?
If you are goingβto smoke a Supremos, do not choose something light. A gin and tonic will be trampled all over byβthis cigar. I was drinking a Havana Club 7-Year rum, and the molasses sweetness of the rum was just what I wantedβto counterbalance the earthy, spicy notes of the Montecristo. Even if youβre not a rum person, Iβd bet a heavy peated Scotch would do the trick but honestly?βI think the dark sweetened coffee is where itβs at. The interplay of the cocoaβnotes in the cigar with a good Cuban coffee is something you need experience. It softens the corners of the pepper and extracts that latent creaminess in itsβfirst third.
The Verdict
Now, I know some purists outβthere probably think a 55 ring gauge is βtoo muchβ for a brand like Montecristo, which made its name on more traditional-sized vitolas. βButβIβll tell you, the Supremos works. It isβa heavy hitter, and it manages to maintain its balance. Itβs rich the way youβdβexpect from an EdiciΓ³n Limitada and you can tell that aging really made for a harmonious transition between thirds.
Is it a daily smoke? Not likely, unlessβyou have hours to kill and a very healthy cigar allowance. But for those times when youβreβreminiscing βwith an old friend on a balconyβ or just want to end the week with something that feels special in your hand, this is a pretty good option. It has that classic Cuban taste butβin a modern, bold presentation. Itβs a rich, spicy, cocoa-forward experience that reminds me why I fell in love with Cuban tobacco to beginβwith. If you find a box, grab ’em. Theyβre not making any more of the 2019s, and theyβre only going to getβbetter with a couple more years in the humidor.
Final thought: Itβs a beast,βbut itβs so well mannered. Just be sure youβve eaten a decent meal before you start smoking or it might just blow you out of your wickerβchair.










