Description
Iâwas in the garage last Tuesday, crouching over a 1 Honda CB that has given me none but trouble. The scent ofâgasoline and old shop rags is typically my happy place, but that afternoon I was so Goddamn frustrated. I had oil stains on my hands, and I was approximately two minutesâfrom throwing a wrench against the wall. It was then that the old man cameâin.
Product Specifications
| Attribute | Detail |
|---|---|
| Product Name | Partagas Salomones |
| Origin | Cuba |
| Factory | PartagĂĄs |
| Vitola | Salomon |
| Length | 184mm (7 1/4 inches) |
| Ring Gauge | 57 |
| Wrapper | Cuba (Vuelta Abajo) |
| Binder | Cuba (Vuelta Abajo) |
| Filler | Cuba (Vuelta Abajo) |
| Strength | Full |
He didnât talk much â he never does whenâIâm in the middle of a fix â but he put a little slide-lid cedar box on my workbench, next to a stack of rusty bolts. âFoundâthis in the back of the cabinet,â he said. âFigured youâcould use a distraction.â
I dried myâhands on a towel and cracked open the box.
Inside was a smokeâs beast, aâdouble-tapered monster which appeared that it should have been sitting in a museum as opposed to my cluttered workspace. I was, to say the least,âinquisitive. I should never have been scared; Iâve smoked plentyâof cigars in delivery rooms and all the various hospital rooms to which work or life has sent me over the years. âThis is bound to be an experience as mundane as it is extraordinary, trust me,â I told myself. Iâput the wrench down, grabbed a stool and resolved that the bike could wait.
I had toâcheck this thing out. That smoke? The
PartagĂĄs Salomones. Itâs not something you can just âhaveâ whenever you feelâlike it.
Itâs an event. I spend the next two-plus hours discovering just why this stick has the repâit does among the fellas who know what a La Casa del Habano shelf smells like. The Specs
Wrapper/Binder/Filler
Vuelta Abajo, Cuba (Full Strength)
Construction: A Handful of History
The weight was the first thing that struck me marocanmeverâsince I lifted it.
Itâs got some heft to it. The Salomon shape â double perfecto,âif you must make things formal â is a bit of a lost art. Itâs tapered atâeach end, so whoever rolled this ((the person.
torcedor) would have to be at hisâbest. You canât justâslap these together.
The Bad Miraculous, Holding it on my garage surrounded by half-built projects, I felt aâstrange reverence for the craftsmanship. Itâs smooth, with a wrapper that resembles burnished leather and just a couple of veins to tell you itâsâan all-natural product. I gave it a gentle squeeze. It felt firm, no soft spots and thatâs a good thing because with a cigar thisâlarge, if the draw is bad it can ruin your whole afternoon.
The aromaâof the foot was light â largely clean tobacco with a hint of something sweet, dried hay. Straight cutter onâthe head, not taking too much off. You want to hold onto that taper so it willâsit properly in your mouth. The pre-light draw is a little tight (which I expect for that small ânippleâ on the foot) but I can feelâthat air pass once I get it fired up.
The FirstâThird: The Slow-Motion Furnace
To light aâSalomon is something of a ritual. You have to be patient. I took a single-flame torch and veryâcarefully toasted that little point at the bottom. It was tight on the first few puffs once it caught, but as the burn line developed further into the wider part of the bulb, the draw opened upânicely.
I have to say, theâsmoke began so much smaller than I thought it would. I thought I was going to get punched in the gut straight off the bat, and instead I got thisâmellow young leather thing. I definitely tastedâa little salt on my lips, which I often attribute to very good Cuban leaf and some grassy almost floral quality (). It wasnât aggressive.
It was as if theâcigar only just met me, shook my hand and then set down to work. An inch or so in, a soft earthiness started sneaking up on me, as did a woody sweetness that approachedâthe cedar box it was sold to me in. The smoke was dense, and white,âhovering in the still air of the garage like low-cloud cover. Thatâwas a strong opening number, very polished for something that appears so daunting.
TheâSecond Third â The PartagĂĄs Growl
Halfway through the second third and boy didâthis cigar wake up.
Hereâis where the âPartagĂĄsâ character began to come through, for real. If the first third was polite conversation, then the secondâthird was deep and gravelly monologue.
The body of theâcigar went to the next level â starting medium, it was now just a hair over full. I began to encounter these dense, roasted nutâflavors â kind of like cashews that overstayed their welcome in the oven. Then came the espresso. It was not a sour coffee, but somethingâcloser to a strong, dark crema.
There was somethingâon the back of my tongue, I realized â a cedar note that hung around long after I had put down each bite and then arrived out of nowhere and dissipated with a bit of spice. This was not a stingy pepper, but one that was cinnamon-blackâpeppery. It felt complex. Just when I thought I had the flavorânailed, something else would pop up.
Theâleathery notes from the opening lingered as a base, but they turned darker and more intense. I just leaned against the back of my workbench,âand for several moments I didnât think at all about the carburetor. Itâs a full attention kindâof thing, not something you absentmindedly puff on while your mind is elsewhere. The LastâThird: The Brute
Asâi entered the final third the Salomones stopped being accommodating.
This where the strength of it really came intoâplay. I could taste the nicotine, and the flavors were veryâstrong. The woodiness became dry, almost charred oak,âand those creamy black pepper I got at first? It leapfrogged to the head of theâline.
That was a hot finish but not âyoung-hotââor âharsh-hot.â Just hot, full stop. The smoke remained creamy, and that I believe is the sign of a good-aged stickâ(I even suspect this bringing in my dadâs humidor for at least a couple of years). This part might a be little tooâmuch for you if arenât accustomed to full bodied Cubans. Itâs got a “growl” to it.
I practically had to do fewerâpuffs just so as not to get overheated. Itâs a lot of work just to get to this point â Iâmâprobably two hours in, at least â but the result is this huge, earthy and peppery crescendo that leaves no question about where this tobacco was grown. I smoked it down until I could barely hold the nub withoutâmy fingers getting burned. I didn’t want to let it go.
Pairing: What to Drink?
In the garage, I wasâbarely staying hydrated by sipping cold water to keep my palate clean, but if I were doing this “right”, I would stick with something that has a little structure to it. A dark, bottom shelf Cuban rumâbut not oneâthatâs too sweet to balance out all of that spice in the final third.
If coffeeâs your thing, a double espresso or even a very robust cafĂ© Cubano will stand up toâit. (By that and gnashing of teeth.) Iâdâstay away from anything delicate, like a light beer or a white wine; the PartagĂĄs Salomones would steamroll right over them. You want something that can go toe-to-toe withâit. The Verdict
Isâthis the PartagĂĄs Salomones for everyone?
Honestly, no. Itâs a huge time investment and it has a priceâtag/rarity (LCDH exclusive) that makes it a âspecial occasionâ smoke. âBut howdy, if youâve got the time and canâfind one, itâs quite an experience.â Itâsânot just a cigar but a history lesson of the PartagĂĄs factory. It has thatâold-school Cuban soul that you just don’t see from every vitola. I returnedâto the house afterward smelling of a campfire and feeling totally at ease.
The motorcycle was still broken, and my hands were still dirty; but Iâd got theâcobwebs out of my head. Now and then, a gift like that may be precisely whatâyou need in order to hit the reset button. Itâsâa good, complex and thoroughly enjoyable smoke that reinforces why I not only love cigars, but also the activity surrounding them in the first place. If you spot a box of 10 at aâLa Casa del Habano donât hesitate.
Just grab them. Youâll be thanking me in much more tense times â hiding out inâyour very own version of my garage.














