
Trinidad Vigia
Description
I was on aβbit of sand that hadnβt yet been taken over by tourists, some littleblank place along the south coast where, rather than coming in, the tide sighs. The sun was sinking slowly, orange into the Caribbean and I just hadβthis burden, dessert-heavy cloying bittersweet weight inside my chest. You know that feeling? Like, youβre in the perfect place where you should be, and yet at theβsametime, you canβt stay.
Product Specifications
| Attribute | Detail |
|---|---|
| Product Name | Trinidad Vigia |
| Origin | Cuba |
| Factory | Pinar del Rio City |
| Vitola | Petit Robusto (Torres) |
| Length | 110mm (4 3/8 inches) |
| Ring Gauge | 54 |
| Wrapper | Cuban |
| Binder | Cuban |
| Filler | Cuban (Vuelta Abajo) |
| Strength | Medium β Full |
My old man always said the best shit in lifeβis the stuff you canβt hold on to,fucking feeling every bit of that as I dug through the side pocket in my travel humidor. I thought I was out. I’d been on the road for three weeks, zigzagging from one dusty country town to the next, and between here andβthere Ismoked my last decent cigar two days back in a smoky tavern down in Santiago. But my fingers there grasped something thickand short>Β and capped off with that unmistakeable pigtailKellogg>I hitβon it!
An old one, walled off behind a cedar panel I hadnβt realized I stillβhad it. It was a Trinidad Vigia. I sat there with the breeze on me and Gazed atβthis petite beauty. It was like receiving a present fromβhimself in the past.
I had noβgreat gimcrack torch, only a saved cedar spill, a well-battered boxof matches. I took my time. When you have an experience like thisat this point in your life, youβdonβt rush it. You let the world wait.
That smoke? The
Trinidad Vigia
wasβexactly what the doctor ordered. The Specs
But before I got down deep in theβweeds of how this thing burned, letβs talk about what we have to work with.
This is not your classic long-and-leanβsmoke. Itβs going toβbe widein the shoulders. Specification
Details
ProductβType
Cigar (Hand-made)
|
Factory Name
| El Laguito, Cuba|
Vitolade Galera
Ayones (Petit Robusto)
Size
Light to Medium
Wrapper/Binder/Filler
Cuba (Vuelta Abajo)
\
Time to Smoke
—
Make: The ElLaguito Touch
For people in the know about Cuban heritage, you are awareβof El Laguito. Itβs the temple of rolling.
The Vigia is a creation of the same hallowedhalls where they once used to roll sticks not for anyone but Fidel and his innerβcircle. For years Trinidad was theββhidden,β diplomatic-gift brand β the smoke you couldnβt get for love or money. Theyβdidnβt even go commercialuntil β98. Youcan tell that historyβholding thisVigia.
Itβs a 54βring gauge, huge for a cigar that is four and change inches long. It feels nice and meaty in the hand β not plastic toy feeling, but closerβto a precision tool. Mine under the hood was justβan incredibly oily, medium-russet Colorado hue andβthatβ trademark Trinidad pig-tail/crown cap adorned the noggin of the cigar. I gave it a gentle squeeze.
It was extremely hard, not soft at all theres alwaysthat chance with the cuban stuffβthese days. Prelightβdraw was a dream. So I got loads of hay and when itβwas yeasty hay, like wandering near a bakery at four in the morning. There wasβa hint of chocolate, as well β dark chocolate, notthe sweetened variety.
I snipped theβcap, toasted the foot with my matches and first clouds of blue smoke streaked off out toward the ocean. CHAPTER I:βWALKING IN THE COUNTRY!*\
As with any baby, the earliest sucklings are the closestβto true. With the Vigia, itβs not trying to beatβyou down. Itβs polite.
The breadiness I received on the cold draw waswhat reallyβset that retrohale profile. Itβs the sweet note of a toasted almond that sits in the middle of yourβtongue.
I did notice a tiny bit of earthiness, but itβwasnβtβdirtβ earth; it was sun-warmed dirt. It even had a certain lightness in its step, despiteβthe thick ring gauge. From the girth, youβd expect it to be a little bit ofβa heavy hitterβ but ohhow she keeps on cruising that light-to-medium lane. I slouched overβa log, the mist hanging in the damp air.
Itβsmoked good, big, thick and creamyplumes of fermenting tobacco and old times. TheβMiddle Third When the Salt Strikes the Water
I’d got it half-way, stuck and suddenly there was a movement of someβkind. Because, youβsee β this iswhere the Vigia excels. That sourdough note I mentioned?
It intensified. Butβthen something interesting happened: A weird saltiness started to seep in. Now, that might have been the sea breeze on my lips, butβI donβt think so. I have smoked them inβmy home study and the result is the same.
It has that savory, mineralβnote, itβs perfect where their against this developing coffee bean flavor. (And it isnβt a βdark roastβ bitterness; rather, think of a smoooooth, medium-roastβespresso with an oaky finish. Strength bumpedβto justa tick up that solid medium range. I evenβstarted to taste a little blackpepper on the retrohale. It burned but itwasnβt a burn β just about asβmuch of a tickle to remind you youβre smoking something with real Cuban bones.
It lit easily though, all the way around and burned pretty nice and almost straight (I only had to touch it upβonce when we got wind off the surf (every shooter hates that causeletβs face itshooting at all is difficult). Act Three: The Bitter and the Sweet
By the time I worked my way down to that final inch and a half, there was no sun left; all there was on the horizon now was aβpurple bruise. TheVigia was heating up, but in only theβright way. The flavors tightened.
The nutty edge softened and what remainedβwas a darker, cocoa powder thing. The finish is remarkably broad andβhits with burst of citrus. It was not like squeezing a lemon, more grating theβskin of an orange.β It cut through the heavier oakβand minerality notes, giving a nice clean finish to the cigar. I smoked it to the nub, burning myβfingertips.
I didn’t want to let it go. Seemed like the perfectexclamation point for a day that had leaned on the heart strings quiteβa lot. Pairing: What to Drink
When you’re on a beach, thatβsβthe environment you want to be like.
I just happened toβhave brought a flask of aged rum, nothing fancy, but one that had enough caramel notes for the Vigiaβsoak. What do you have for breakfast when youβre at home?If I were at home, either a flat white orβa very clean Highland scotch. Both of these elements combine with the slight breadiness and almond notes in this cigar, so you wonβt want toβgo anything too peaty or smoky; it will overpower what makes this cigar, well, this cigar. Itβs a βrefinedββsmoke, so give it a refined companion.
A regular seltzer with lime would also beβreally good to keep that pallette fresh for thosecitrus notes at the end as well. The Verdict
Look, theβTrinidadVigia is not cross-continental flying.
Itβs a short, intense journey. It wasβintroduced to replace the Robusto Extra and the Robusto T from the series, onceHabanos S.A. discontinued them and I must say it does a good job filling that spot. Itβs a modern vitola forthe modern smokerβsomeone who wants the complexity of larger cigars, but doesnβtβhave two hours to cull. So, is it theβworld’s classiest cigar?
Maybe not. But it’s also surprisingly c









