Description
You everâhave one of those nights?When the planets line up just right, and the cards do actually begin to fall your way for once?
Product Specifications
| Attribute | Detail |
|---|---|
| Product Name | Vegas Robaina Unicos |
| Origin | Cuba (Habanos S.A.) |
| Factory | – |
| Vitola | Ănicos (Piramide/Torpedo) |
| Length | Ănicos (Piramide/Torpedo) |
| Ring Gauge | 52 |
| Wrapper | Ănicos (Piramide/Torpedo) |
| Binder | Vuelta Abajo |
| Filler | Vuelta Abajo (Long-filler) |
| Strength | Medium to Full |
But Iâm talking abouta poker night where theâroom is heavy not so much with old felt and lose, but something more classy. It was a week ago last Tuesday, when my buddy Sal â the sort of guy whoâtends to come in with basement shelf fare he snags upon closeout â arrived at my house carrying an afterthetrainrobber looking mug it told all aroundA small while back. He didn’t say a word. Heâsimply deposited a cedar box on the table â you know, one that smells of that unmistakeable old Cuban nose when you barely see its seal.
We were celebrating. Salâs youngest had recently graduated from an Abram Lincolnesque grad school, and this time the stakes were a bitâmore than our usual nickel-and-dime game. I have, for sure, smoked my share of cigarettes and have watched many a man Iâknow try to prove themselves with pretty labels. But when I cracked that lid, Icaught a flash of those colorado-hued wrappersof always rideor die darlings that Id not seen theâlikes of in the flesh for like maybeeeeeee years. It was a box ofâVegasRobaina Unicos. I put my cards down. The game could have been scheduled later;âthe smoke couldnât.
Thereâs just something about resting back, holding a Piramide andâthinking of all the lengths youâve gone to in order to earn your seat at that table. Itâs a shape that demands respect and as I reached in to pull out aâwhole one, feeling its solid weight â well, at that moment I was aware my evening was about to get significantly better. And it wasnât just cards from then on,âbut a little bit of history from the province of Pinar del RĂo. I excised the head, cold-drewâand found that same salty earth on my tongue. I turnedâto Sal. “Fuck the flop,Sal. You already won the night.”
That smoke? The Vegas Robaina Unicos. It’s notâjust a cigarâŠit’s an homage to the man his brother Universal declared had cultivated âthe greatest wrappers on earth.â If youâre going to spend90 minutes of yourâlife on one stick, it had better be one that has a story to tell.
The Specs
Construction: The Hand-Feel
Iâll tell you this, the first thing I noticed aboutthe Unicoswasâtexture. You know, whenâyou rub a piece ofine silk and thereâs just that little bit of grain to i? Thatâs how thisColorado wrapperâsmoked. Itâs smooth, all right, but it has a toothiness that makes youâbelieve it wastouched by people who give a damn. The Piramide shape â some puristsârefer to it as a torpedo (which is not wrong) and a campana or belicoso â but, at the factory, itâs a Ănico — is an artist’s conception. It has a sharp taper and tightlyâwound foot but is not abrick.
Iâve smoked my fair share of Cubans that were rolled by aâguyhis first day on the job,but this one wasnât bad at all. It had good heft in myhand. Nomushy spots, no odd lumps. WhenâI gave it a littlesqueeze, there was the right amount of âgive.â And you know whena cigar isâliving? Thatâs this. So now to the pre-light draw (as it was a teaseâŠquell surprise) lotsha, hay, some salinity and there was incredibly strong floralânote which made me think of a humidor sitting in a room with an abundance of dried wildflowers. Itâsâthe kind of build that makes you want to take it easy with the torch. You donât light the damnâthing merely to have it be lit; youinvite it in â to start.
Flavor Profile: A Three-Act Play
The First Third: The Handshake
When itwas glowing, the first few draws wereâshockingly civilized. I was braced for aâgut punch and received instead a hearty handshake of chocolate and leather. Itâs a deep, rich cocoa not that sugary business but sort of baking-chocolateyouâd stumble upon in an upscaleâpantry by which I mean dark yet mild. After aboutâ10 minutes, a savory clove-like spice started doing pirouettes around the edges. There was no bite;just… there. The smoke output was massive. Iâmâtalking about thick, creamy trails of smoke that sat around the poker table like some sort of low-hangingfog. My chums were quarrelling that they couldn’t see my bluffâand I never fussed about it.
PartII: The Sweet Spot
By the secondâthird, strength was starting to build for me. This is where the Vegas RobainaâDNA really starts to be present. That salty hit Iâd had on the cold draw came back to me in spades, but was up against a lovelyâwarm earthiness. Itâs the smell of summer after a hard rain, onâthe ground. Then,âboom â I have this cashew creaminess.â Itâs weird, right? Youâre smoking tobaccoâand you think your putting in a mouth full of salted nuts. The floral tones ofthe #%âhangover around, keeping everything a little too plop to nevermind. It is, instead, a shifting transition â and if you are not already staring a cyclical soul-sister dish of its elsewhere on the menu tout-de-suite, youâll missâhow smoothly itmoves from note to note. Iâexamined the ash â a fat, light gray spike that hung on for nearly two inches. Solid.
The LastThird: The Big Finish
By the time I reachedthe final couple of inches, the cigar wasâin high gear.â It was certainly toward the âfullâ endâof the scale but never got harsh. The cacao subside to make spacefor a hot cinnamonâspice. Okay,ânow letâs clear something up; this isnât the kind of peppery, bitey spice that makes you feel flames shooting out yourretrohale. Itâs a “warm kitchen” spice. It felt cozy. The creaminess went all the way toâthe end, which Iâm assuming (I didnât measure) was because of high-lip stock-ratio in such a big stick. I smoked it down to,down to the nub,untilâmy very fingerprints started burning. I didn’t want to put it down. Itâs that kind of finish, a crisp nuttiness that makes you just about want another slap right now â even though if your head answers itâwill say âno. â </p>
Pairing: What’s in the Glass?
So I understand it, there would be aâlot of men looking to sip on a heavy bourbon with something so hearty smoking away but, Guess what?
Research says it works with red wine, so who am I toâargue? I was knocking backâa heavy SpanishRioja wine in the poker game. To my surprise, the wineâs tannins made an excellent companion to that leather &âclove in the first third. It cut through theâcreamy priority of that middle third and cleared my palate for a puff.
If you don’t likeâwine then try a good dark rum â something that’s a bit aged.
The Verdict
So, whatâs the bottom line? The Vegas Robaina Unicos is a âspecialoccasionâ stick that makes noâfuss about itself. Itsnamesake is Alejandro Robaina, who was to Cuban tobacco basically whatâGeorge Washington was to your sixth-grade history book. Itâs not the most sexy of names in Habanos it doesnât flautâthe âlook at meâ apparel of a Cohiba but in my book its a much more rewarding smoke.
Itâs a 90-minute commitment. Donât rush it. The perfect smoke in your life whenâyou have time, or when you don’t but you make time. It is uniform,âitdepartmentsright.codorful, and ithassoul. If you can get abox, get it. If aâfriend passes one to you during the poker game, just be sure itâs your turn to get the next round. Youâre getting thegood end.
That night at the poker table I didnât win a lotâof money. Hell, I think Sal fucked me for aboutâfiftylarg. But I didnât feel like a loser as Iâsat with that Unicos nub smoldering in the ashtray and the taste of cashew and cinnamon hanging around on my breath. Not one bit. Solid night. Solid smoke.














