Description
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Trinidad Robusto Extra Review
So here I was sitting onâa stretch of sand that 99 percent of the people in Hawaii have no idea exists. Itâs a small pocket of coast on the western edge of Cuba, far enough away from the tourist traps that you hear nothing but the Caribbean slapping rhythmically against limestone and ââat odd intervals â a rustling palm frond. The sun was beginning that slowâsink, heavy and approaching, toward the horizon, turning the sky with it into bruised purple and gold. I was in pensive mode, of the sort you only really fall into when alone with yourâthoughts like that.
Product Specifications
| Attribute | Detail |
|---|---|
| Product Name | Trinidad Robustos Extra |
| Origin | Cuba |
| Factory | El Laguito |
| Vitola | Dobles Pt (or Doble (T)) |
| Length | 155mm (6 1/8 inches) |
| Ring Gauge | 50 |
| Wrapper | Cuba (Vuelta Abajo) |
| Binder | Cuba (Vuelta Abajo) |
| Filler | Cuba (Vuelta Abajo) |
| Strength | medium |
I rummaged in a small, battered travel bag to get myâlighter when my hand came into contact with an old leather wallet that I hadnât used for several years. Buried inside, wasâa grainy Polaroid from 2004. Itâwas a picture of me and an old friend, huddled in the corner of a darkly lit lounge in Cuba with clouds of smoke wrapping around our faces. I was smokingâa cigar in the photo, an impossibly large Trinidad Robusto Extra, held in my younger hand.
That was when theyâoriginally went on sale, before vanishing into the “discontinued” vaults in 2012. In looking at that photo, I could almost taste the salt air andârich heady tobacco from twenty years ago. I was saddened, but not only forâthe youth in the photo â also about that smoke. You ever get aâflavor profile seared into your memory so hard that just an image can take you there?
Over the years I searched Eruope and the MiddleâEast for boxes of those original Robusto Extras in musty humidors, often to no avail or else finding sticks that had long ago lost their soul.
But things change. The world spins, and sometimes some of the things we miss actually come backâaround. That smoke? The
Trinidad Robusto Extra
is officially back to making a return in the rotation, andâI finally got mine â a 2024 relaunch â to see if it matches up against the ghost in my wallet.
The Specs
Product Name
Trinidad Robusto Extra
Vitola de Galera
Dobles (Doble)
Wrapper/Binder/Filler
Vuelta Abajo, Cuba (Puro)
Construction: The El Laguito Touch
I haveâto say, thereâs something right about a cigar coming out of the El Laguito factory.
The same place where they roll Cohibas, in fact, and you can feel the muscle memoryâof the rollers there. This isn’t a small stick. Clocking in at 155âmm with a 50 ring gauge, itâs got some weight to it. Heavy in the hand, it feels like a tool madeâfor a purpose, but as slick as an alley cat when youâre done with it.
It has the trademark Trinidad pigtail cap: small, tidy andâneatly wound. Iâve always thought that the pigtail was an elegant touch; it is asâif the cigar were donning a tuxedo. The color is a lovely Colorado reddish-brown, oilyâand devoid of any obtrusive veins. When I had the pack filled with gearâand all cinched down, it felt as well balanced from foot to head as a backpack can feel.
No soft spots, no lumps. I bypassed the cutter and simply tugged the pigtail free with myâteeth, a bit of a backwoods maneuver, but it worked. Pre-light drawâwas perfect. I was smacked with a combination of hay, dry cedar and some faint sweetness that reminded me a little ofâdried apricots.
It wasâlight but held a little resistance, enough for me to feel the burn wouldnât be running away from me. Chapterâ1 Soft Opening
Theâfirst couple seconds say it all. With the Robusto Extra it isnât immediatelyâtrying to punch you in the teeth. Itâs polite.
The first few puffs produce a dense white smoke that is full of a very evidentâcedar smell. I immediately picked up that the “Trinidad funk” (the floral, lightly brinyâand earthy profile) was there. A medium-bodied opener, itâs extremely creamyâon the palate. (The texture here is that of a well-made latte, where theâfoam leaves just enough veneer on your tongue when you take a sip.)
In about an inch there was aâlittle nuttiness creeping in â think toasted almonds or cashews. Itâs not offensive spice; itâgives off more of a warm sensation at the back of the throat.
That burn line was straight enough that I never had to touch it up, and thank goodness for that, because when youâre dropping this kinda cash on a stick of tobacco,âyou really donât wanta be playing surgeon with your zippo every five minutes. The ash was pale gray in color, joining together for an inch and three quarters before I voluntarily jostledâit off. Itâs well summarized,âvery polite, very âdiplomatic,â which makes sense when you remember the brandâs history. TheâSecond Third: Catching the Groove
Then, once I reached theâmiddle of the cigar, the body was elevated.
We opened from a mediumâstraight to solid medium-full. And this is where theâreal complexity began to rear its ugly head. The cedar was still central,âbut the creaminess moved aside a bit for a stronger roasted coffee note. It wasn’t bitter, though.
What I smelled was more like the odor of beans being freshly ground in a fancyâshop. I began toâdetect some more understated baking spices â perhaps a bit of nutmeg or cinnamon especially on the retrohale. You do kind of have to smoke this one through yourânose a touch, if you want the full story. Puff and dump,âyouâre missing half the story.
There is a sort of floral aspect that tends to peek through occasionally, almost in the sense ofâhoneysuckle that keeps deeper wood notes in check. Itâs a balanced experience. Nothing is fightingâto be dominant; everything simply cooperates. I leaned back and watched itâcurl up to the sky, and for a moment, I was in that 2004 Polaroid.
Itâs got that great Cuban âtwangâ that is veryâhard to find outside a cuban stick. The Third Act of aâHeavy Hitter
By the time I reached a couple ofâlast inches, the cigar had dropped all pretense at being well-behaved. The strength wasâdefinitely at a good medium-full by now. The flavors darkened.
The roasted coffee became black, and the spice intensifiedââ more of a tongue-tingling black pepper. But even at its most intense here,âit never got ho or âmushy.â The buildâheld all the way down to the nub. The cedar was still present, but it seemed moreâlike charred oak. It was followed by an accompanying sweetness, reminiscent of molasses or dark chocolate that toned down theâpepper.
Itâs a long enoughâsmoke â I clocked it at roughly 80 minutes â and by the end I felt like Iâd traveled somewhere. Itâs a rich, satisfying conclusion.
I smoked it all the way to my fingers feeling a little warm, and even then I wasnât quite ready to letâgo. Itâs aââfinger burnerâ for certain. Pairing Recommendations
You donât want to combine this with anything that isâgoing to compete against the subtleties.
I would try to avoid themânasty, peaty, heavy Islay scotches. Theyâll just bully the tobacco. Rather, Iâd headâto either:
Aged Rum:
Havana Club 7Orâeven an Especial. Natural sugar in the rum is a nice contrast to cedar andâcream.
Andâthereâs a reason itâs a classic. Black Coffe
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