The Padron Series Roundup

Padron Series Band

Cigar Stats
Brand Owner: Padron Cigars, Inc. - Miami, FL (website)
(distributor operates under the name Piloto Cigars, Inc.)
Factory: Tabacos Cubanica, S.A. - Esteli, Nicaragua
Factory: Tabacos Centroamericanos, S.A. - Danli, Honduras
Line: Padron Series (the original line)
Wrapper: Natural and Maduro - Nicaragua
Filler & Binder: Nicaragua
Body: Medium to Medium Plus
Strength: Medium to Full
Cigar Insider/Aficionado Ratings: Consistently high 80s to low 90s

Sixteen sizes available in the Padron Series

Frontmark

Length x Ring

Shape

2000

5.0 x 50

robusto

3000

5.5 x 52

robusto

4000

6.5 x 54

toro

5000

5.5 x 56

robusto

6000

5.5 x 52

torpedo

7000

6.25 x 60

toro

Ambassador

6.875 x 42

lonsdale

Chicos

5.5 x 36

corona

Churchill

6.875 x 46

churchill

Corticos

4.25 x 35

short panatela

Delicias

4.875 x 46

corona extra

Executive

7.5 x 50

double corona

Londres

5.5 x 42

corona

Magnum

9.0 x 50

giant

Palmas

6.25 x 42

long corona

Panetela

6.875 x 36

panetela

All sizes come in laquered cedar boxes of 26, packaged with cellophane sleeves on individual cigars. Many vendors list a box size of 25. Not entirely sure why that is. It may be that Padron changed the box count since the initial release (or it may be select vendors have lost a cog “up there” somewhere). The Corticos are the only exception packaged in boxes of 30 or tins of 6.

The Padron Series

As the Padron’s describe it … founded in 1964 and evolving throughout company history, the Padron Series today consists of sixteen medium-to full-bodied, long-filler cigars ranging from cigarillo to the large “A” size. All tobacco in this line is sun-grown habano aged a minimum of two-and-one-half years. Each vitola is available in a natural or maduro wrapper. The Padron Series offers exceptional quality and value.

Padron Series cigars are handmade, in one of two factories, with Cuban seed tobaccos grown entirely in Nicaragua. A true classic and unique-tasting cigar whose outstanding quality absolutely defies its affordable price. These perfectly balanced puros brim with flavor. Their consistency is family tradition which they are committed to maintaining it even if it means limiting production numbers.

The blend in each cigar is the same. The difference is in the size and shape which interestingly yield some distinctly different flavors. Just a note of caution. The Natural and Maduro versions of this line are quite difficult to tell apart visually. Be sure and mark them or store them separately otherwise you may just have to smoke ‘em to tell which is which.

The Keepers of the Flame Padron RoundupJose Padron, Sr.

In the interest of providing a good roadmap to this extensive line of cigars, we are gearing up for what promises to be a challenging project. We have enlisted some of the best reviewers available in the cigar community and, in the coming months, will post a comparison review of the natural and maduro wrapper editions of each vitola in the list above based on a concensus of opinion. When that is done, we will publish a vertical tasting for each wrapper giving cigar shoppers a valuable resource for cigar selection decisions.

Although cigar reviews are very much subjective and based on personal opinion and palates, what better way to level the playing field than to have multiple experts weigh in. We have assembled a cadre of guest reviewers, from the blogroll here on Keepers of the Flame, to assist us in this mammoth project. For each vitola listed above, cigarfan, lucky7 and select guests will sample the smoke and offer their observations. A consolidation of those views will be presented in a consensus review here on Keepers of the Flame. In addition, we will link each review to the vitola listing above for central access.

An impressive list of reviewing talent by anyone’s standard.


99 Cigar Guy

Cigar Command
Ricky

Cigar Inspector
Inspector


Lisa

Matt's Cigar Journal
Matt

Stogie Review
Brian & Walt

The Box Press
Kevin


GeorgeE, JonN & PatrickA

The Velvet Cigar
Ironmeden & Elvis

We are still gathering and distributing the raw materials for the project but look for the comparison reviews to begin in a few weeks. Until then … Disfrute de los Padrons!

… cigarfan & lucky7

Published in: on May 18, 2008 at 12:50 am Comments (0)
Tags: ,

Padron 4000 Natural

Padron 4000 on Box

Skip the fluff and jump straight to the review!

Cigar Stats
Brand Owner: Padron Cigars, Inc. (also operates under the name Piloto Cigars, Inc.) - Miami, FL
Factory: Tabacos Cubanica, S.A. - Esteli, Nicaragua
Factory: Tabacos Centroamericanos, S.A. - Danli, Honduras
Model/Vitola: Padron 4000 Natural
Size: 6.5 x 54 (Corona Gorda)
Wrapper: Nicaragua
Filler & Binder: Nicaragua
Body: Medium to Medium Plus
MSRP: $6.75 USD
Cigar Insider/Aficionado Ratings:

    90 - April 2000
    87 - November 2001 & June 2007
Padron 4000 Open Box

Fourteen other vitolas available in the traditional Padron line

  • Corticos 4.25 x 35 (short panatela)
  • Delicias 4.875 x 46 (corona extra)
  • 2000 5.0 x 50 (robusto)
  • Londres 5.5 x 42 (corona)
  • 3000 5.5 x 52 (robusto)
  • 6000 5.5 x 52 (torpedo)
  • 5000 5.5 x 56 (robusto)
  • Palmas 6.25 x 42 (long corona)
  • 7000 6.25 x 60 (toro)
  • Panetela 6.875 x 36
  • Ambassador 6.875 x 42 (lonsdale)
  • Churchill 6.875 x 46
  • Executive 7.5 x 50 (double corona)
  • Magnum 9.0 x 50 (giant)

All sizes come in lacquered cedar boxes of 26, packaged with cellophane sleeves on individual cigars. Many vendors list a box size of 25. I am not entirely sure why that is. It may be that Padron changed the box count since the initial release. The Corticos are the only exception packaged in boxes of 30
or tins of 6.

The Padron Story

Sometimes a cigar is just a cigar. That should never be said of a Padron. Jose Orlando Padron has put so much into the cigars that bear his name that both have earned the highest respect from those who know them. Both are Cuban to the core as evidenced by the Padron mantra:

Cuba has no boundaries, barriers or politics. At least not the Cuba we know and love. Cuba is in our hearts. It’s a state of mind. The sun on your face. The smoke that tells your nostrils you are home once again. Cuba is Padron Cigars. Wherever you smoke them.

Jose Orlando Padron

Hand-rolled Padron cigars, like the man they’re named after, have roots that reach all the way back to 15th-century Spain. Spanish explorers discovered the Central American tradition of smoking string-tied rolls of select tobacco leaves. In fact, the Spanish word cigarro, from which “cigar” is derived, was probably an adaptation of sik’ar - the Mayan term for smoking. The tobacco and the tradition these explorers subsequently introduced to Spain became widely adopted throughout Europe two centuries later. Cigars found their way to North America with the Connecticut settlement in 1633.

Jose Padron’s personal story ranks up there with some of the great American success stories of all time. The Padron family has been involved in the tobacco industry since the late 1800s, when Jose Orlando’s grandfather, Damaso Padron, emigrated from the Canary Islands to Cuba and began growing tobacco in a small agricultural town called Las Ovas in the province of Piñar del Rio. Born and raised there, Jose was trained at an early age in the ways of tobacco cultivation and the fine art of hand rolling cigars. Just like his father and grandfathers before him.

The political tensions in Cuba following Fidel Castro’s rise and the confiscation of the family’s tobacco plantation in 1961 forced Jose to flee with his wife and young children in tow to the land of his ancestors in Spain. Less than a year later, they came to the U.S. through New York and finally settled in Miami, penniless but full of desire to rebuild their lives and to live in freedom.

Jose and Jorge Padron in a tobacco field

For over two and a half years, Jose worked an assortment of odd jobs - anything to keep his family fed. One of those jobs was carpentry. You can read an interesting story in the February 2008 edition of Cigar Aficionado about the “little hammer” gifted to Jose and put to very good use in those early days. He managed to set aside a little cash over time, and on September 8, 1964 he launched Padron Cigars with a meager $600 in savings. Jose put everything he owned into his dream: planting the tobacco seeds he managed to secret away from Cuba. Renting a small warehouse in Little Havana, he and a single employee began producing cigars by day, which Jose then sold at night. In 1965, they sold 66,000 cigars. Today, Padron sells more than that every week. Meanwhile, the Padron grandchildren are being trained in the ways of tobacco cultivation and the fine art of hand rolling cigars. Just like the generations of Padrons before them.

Jose Orlando Padron is the Chairman of Padron Cigars, Inc. and Jorge Luis Padron is the President of the company. They operate two production facilities in Central America. Tabacos Cubanica, S.A. in Esteli, Nicaragua, and Tabacos Centroamericanos, S.A. in Danli, Honduras. The difference between the two factories is size and the functions they perform. The Honduran facility functions strictly as a production plant. The Nicaraguan facilities serve many purposes such as warehousing of raw material, sorting and deveining, and fermentation as well as production. There was a rumor circulating early in 2007 that the Danli operation was closing but I have been unable to corroborate that as fact.

Padron 4000 Box Top

Padron Cigars is one among a handful of companies that control every aspect of the manufacturing process from seed to smoke. Emphasis on quality rather than quantity, is one of the keys to the company’s longevity. Jose says, “We’ve never fallen on the trap like other manufacturers that produce, produce and produce to respond to the growing demand, as if we were making churros.” Production is modest, some four million cigars a year, and Jose has no intention of growing into a cigar giant. He says, “We will follow our family traditions and remain faithful to the course we set years ago, continuing to focus all of our efforts on producing quality and not quantity.” Jorge is quoted as saying, “Our philosophy has always been that it takes years and years to build a strong loyal customer base but it only takes a few bad cigars to lose it. With this in mind, we do not lose sight of what it is that has made Padron successful… our products… not a fancy marketing campaign or story.”

From the Padron website …..
We deliver only the finest, handmade, complex cigars with the flavor of the Cuban heritage out of which the Padron recipe was born. Our primary mission is the exceptional quality of our product, not the quantity produced. As a vertically integrated, family-owned company, we pay personal attention to every detail throughout all steps of our tobacco growing and cigar manufacturing process. Because we strive to give you, the smoker, the confidence that each cigar is the same ….. perfect.

Battling Counterfeits

As with many popular products, counterfeiting for the Padron’s has been an issue. More so with the Anniversary and 1926 lines but they deal with it across the board. In June 1999, the first fake Padron Anniversary cigars surfaced in Nicaragua. In January 2000, police seized more than 3,000 counterfeit Anniversary cigars and 5,000 fake bands from a Los Angeles warehouse. Two months later, a seizure in Miami forced the Padrons to send a letter to retailers warning about the surge in counterfeiting. Undercover agents seized more than $60,000 of fake cigars in a September 2000 raid that took place in New York City.

Padron 4000 Cigar Band

“We have to make it as hard as possible for someone to counterfeit our cigars,” says Jose. “We’ve been working on new ways to make the band more difficult to counterfeit and to make consumers feel more secure that they are getting a genuine Padron.” The company has modified its Anniversary boxes with special engraving on the hinges and tey have added an additional numbered band. Padron representatives inform us there was a system to the numbering to help track possible fakes, but it won’t be revealed to the public. Additional measures to hinder counterfeiters are anticipated. For the traditional Padron line, the signature of Jose O. Padron was added, running at a diagonal across the backside of the cigar band.

Cigar Aficionado has published several articles on the Padron’s troubles with counterfeit cigars. They take counterfeiting very seriously and are doing all they can to combat the problem.

Padron 4000 Cigar Band

The Padron 4000

The Nicaraguan blend in all of the traditional Padron line is the same. The difference is in the size and shape which interestingly yield some distinctly different flavors. All are available in both Natural and Maduro covers. The Padron’s listen carefully to their retailers and consumers. As I understand it, the 4000 (and the 5000) released late in 2000 was due directly to customer feedback and requests for larger ring gauge cigars and the 6000 in answer to requests for a torpedo shape. All tobacco used in the line is sun-grown habano, aged for a minimum of two and one-half years.

Just a note of caution. The Natural and Maduro versions of the 4000 are quite difficult to tell apart visually. I have to put them in separate humidors so I don’t get them confused (not that confusing me is so difficult to do).

Bottom line up front …..
For a line of cigars that gets such little attention, the traditional Padron is a quality cigar at quite the affordable price. Rich and flavorful, it makes for an easy smoke anytime. This is regular “everyday” rotation stuff for me! As George E from the Stogie Guys says, “If your Padron smoking experiences haven’t included this line, you should change that. Soon.”

Padron 4000 Wrapper

Pre-light
The 4000 feels quite fat in the hand but nicely balanced. It is well packed with no soft spots but just a bit lumpy. The Colorado brown wrapper has a very dull sheen and a few darker brown spots mottled in. There are a few minor veins but they are pretty small. Aroma from the wrap is a very faint barnyard and from the foot, sweet tobacco. The head is slightly flattened with a single cap which I found unusual since they are hyped as “the heritage of Cuba.” Isn’t that where the triple-cap is tradition?

Padron 4000 Head Anomaly

The Padrons claim to fame is quality and consistency but on the smokes I had for this review, one had a double cap and the other two had single caps. Not really consistent or Cubanesque IMO. One had a spot where the wrapper was not very well smoothed at the head (pictured above). None of these things caused anything but visual distraction.

After the clip, a very nice pre-light draw leaves a touch of sweetness on the lips. Now I’m ready!

Padron 4000

The Smoking Experience
The toasting and light come off without a hitch. Very nice aroma for standers by. First couple pulls are a bit raspy, then settles in to a smooth raisiny tobacco flavor with a little twang on the nose. As the stick warms, the core of earthy sweet tobacco continues and yields notes of toasted cedar, leather and spice. Not allot of pepper here. Not allot of flavor complexity either but there is enough rich flavor and aroma to keep me puffing. At the halfway mark, flavors take on a little darker complexion of the same core with the addition of some light coffee bean. The aroma is not unlike the flavor profile and has a slight “twang” to it all the way to the nub.

The 4000 carries a moderate finish with a sweet raisiny edge. Maybe gets a little longer in the last third.

Padron 4000 Ash

Ash is medium gray and held to about 2 inches. Burn is good with no corrections required. Draw was fantastic throughout. Smoke is cool and lots of it.

Although the first couple tugs may have you wondering, what have I got myself into, I’d say this cigar starts in the medium column and only edges past medium-plus right at the nub. No real nicotine kick that I could detect.

Smoketime was about 80 minutes.

My take …..
Consistently tasty and aromatic at an affordable price. Fits me like a glove. I like these gars and plan to experiment with the other sizes to see what they are like. I am a “robusto” kinda guy and the 4000 is a pretty big stick for me!

MSRP is $6.75 per stick. Online they run between $4.75-$6.00 a stick when you purchase a box. Best online price at the moment is the members price at Little Anthony’s Cigar Store. They run 108.45/26 or $4.17 per stick. An incredible price for this premium cigar. You cannot get the members price until you have an order from the site under your belt. They send you the members login (user/pswd) with your first order. I can vouch for the vendor. Quite the conscientious group down there at LA’s.

Smoke Til You're Green Like it … Yes
Smoke Til You're Green Buy it again … Yes
Smoke Til You're Green Recommend it … Yes

What others are saying about the traditional Padron line …..

3 June 1999 thru 31 December 2007
Famous Smoke Shop Reviews - Padron

28 August 2000
7 reviewers - Cigar Weekly Magazine
CW Review: Padron 2000

22 November 2005
fletchman - Cigarzilla
Padron 3000 Maduro

5 January 2006
Matt’s Cigar Journal
Padron #5000 Maduro

23 April 2006
cigarfan - Keepers of the Flame
Padron 5000

18 June 2006
Walt - Stogie Review
Padron - Delicias

9 December 2006
Walt - Stogie Review
Padron Londres

21 December 2006
Kyle Hammond - Club Stogie
Padron 4000

23 March 2007
cigarfan - Keepers of the Flame
Padron Panatela

8 June 2007
Brian - Stogie Review
Padron Londres Maduro

17 August thru 28 October 2007
Cigar Inspector
Padron

3 January 2008
George E - The Stogie Guys
Padron 5000 Maduro

As of 4 January 2008
Top 25 Cigar Ratings (26 reviews)
Padron 4000 Natural
Average Rating 7.72 out of 10

Top 25 Cigar Ratings (41 reviews)
Padron 4000 Maduro
Average Rating 8.46 out of 10

Date Unknown
ProCigars
Padron Cigar Reviews
(a good baseline for all traditional Padron vitolas)

Publications

July/August 1997
Jim Daniels - Cigar Aficionado
The Padron Family: A Nicaraguan Legacy
Seeds of Survival
Despite Wars in Nicaragua and Bombings in Miami, Jose Padron Has Built a Thriving Cigar Business

7 June 1999
David Savona - Cigar Aficionado
Fake Padrons Spotted in Nicaragua

5 September 2000
David Savona - Cigar Aficionado
Fake Padrons Seized In New York

2 March 2001
Mike Marsh - Cigar Aficionado
Padron Adds Second Band To Anniversary Line

April 2001
Top25Cigar Interviews
Jorge and Orlando Padron Interview with Top25Cigar

10 December 2001
Jordan Russin - Cigar Aficionado
Padron Cigar Counterfeiters Sued for $146,000

November/December 2002
CA Staff - Cigar Aficionado
Movers and Shakers II

12 March 2003
Rob Shibata - Top25Cigar.com
Saturday Morning with the Padrons

1 June 2004
David Savona - Cigar Aficionado
Q&A: An Interview With Jorge Padron

13 December 2004
Daniel Shoer-Roth of the Miami Herald - Havana Journal
Little Havana Padron Cigar History
(Padron’s Little Havana Factory is Bombed!)

27 October 2005
Rob Shibata - Top25Cigar.com
Visit The New Padron Cigar Offices

Winter 2005
thecigarWRAPPER.com
Padron Cigars

15 February 2006
James Suckling - Cigar Aficionado
An Interview With Jose Orlando Padron, Chairman, Padron Cigars, Inc.

18 October 2007
David Savona - Cigar Aficionado
Smoking a New Padron (Padron Reserva de la Famila No. 44)
(only available at special Padron cigar dinners - &!@#^&*^$!@#)

RTDA 2007
Video - 0:40 seconds
Jorge Padron
(I think he was really taken with the lady interviewer; watch his eyes; wonder if they hooked up?)

Date Unknown
Cigar Nexus
An Interview with Jose Padron Sr., Padron Cigars - Part 1

Date Unknown
Cigar Nexus
An Interview with Jose Padron Sr., Padron Cigars - Part 2

Why even Rush Limbaugh recommends Padron Cigars!


… lucky7

“It has always been my rule never to smoke when asleep,
and never to refrain when awake.” (Mark Twain)

Published in: on January 16, 2008 at 7:52 am Comments (7)
Tags: ,

Padron Panatela

cnv0325.jpg

A panatela is a long, thin, and currently unfashionable cigar. The latin root of the term is “pan” which means bread. Panatela is a diminutive form of the word; in Italian it means a small loaf, or a thin biscuit. In Spanish it can also mean pound cake, which might cause some confusion if you’re looking for cigars in a Spanish bakery. In this case you may want to document your experience for a future BBC comedy sketch.

Panatelas can be from about 5 1/2 to 7 inches in length with a ring gauge from 34 to 38, sort of like a thin lonsdale. It is one of the historically “standard” sizes but in recent years it has become increasingly rarer due to the trend toward larger ring gauges. The long thin aspect lends it an elegant appearance which according to some people makes it more attractive to female smokers. That sounds to me like a stereotype, so I’m not going to give it too much weight; on the other hand I’m sure there are guys out there who would feel a little uncomfortable smoking this in the pub. I can hear the Virginia Slim jokes already.

The thin ring gauge makes this a difficult cigar to roll: the most common problem is a tough draw because there are so few leaves to work with. Aside from the annoyance of a bad draw, a tight roll will result in a bitter and tarry smoke. On the other hand, if the roller overcompensates and rolls the cigar too loosely, the burn will be too hot and the flavor unbalanced.

I am happy to report that the Padron panatela suffers from neither of these problems. The cigar is actually quite soft to the touch, which I thought might be an indication of a loose roll, but the roll turned out to be perfect. It had an easy draw and an even and fairly slow burn.

It isn’t the prettiest cigar in the world — the wrapper has a few large veins and a variegated black and brown appearance. The color is similar to the finish on my Gibson 335, now that I think of it.

The Padron panatela is typical of Padron’s Thousand series. It’s full flavored from the first draw with a long finish and a slight bite that mellows after the first inch or so. The flavor is predictably woody with some rich coffee bean flavors, graduating after the mid point to a milder roast.

Despite its delicate size factor this is a full-bodied cigar that means business. It is a little tempting to smoke this one too quickly because the small ring gauge results in a smaller volume of smoke, but don’t. Take your time with it and it won’t get hot or bitter.

There isn’t a whole lot of change or complexity in this cigar, aside from the mellowing effect after the first inch or so. The lack of complexity with smaller ring gauge cigars is often due to the fact that fewer leaves can be incorporated in the blend. And while the flavor here doesn’t span the spectrum, the part that it focuses on is quite tasty.

If you like the Padron Thousand series cigars, and you can appreciate the “panatela experience,” you will most likely enjoy this cigar as well. At two to three dollars a throw, it’s worth a try. And if you’re afraid to be seen smoking an overgrown Virginia Slim, you can always herf it up Cigarfan style: by yourself in the back yard, with the dogs. The dogs may laugh at you, but they won’t tell anyone.

Published in: on March 23, 2007 at 3:27 am Comments (0)

Padron 1964 Anniversary Imperiales

cnv0257.jpg
Ask any experienced cigar smoker anywhere in the world what are the best non-Cuban cigars, and inevitably two brands will make every list: Fuente’s OpusX and Padron’s Anniversary line. And if they don’t make the “best” list, they will certainly make the most-hyped list. Unfortunately, they also make the most expensive list.

But for special occasions, only the best will do.

The Anniversary 1964 line celebrates the 30th Anniversary of the Padron cigar company. The Padron family has been in the tobacco farming business since the 1850’s, originally in the famous Vuelta Abajo region of Cuba. Like so many other cigar patriarchs, Jose Orlando Padron came to the United States from Cuba in the early 1960’s with little more than a few dollars and a dream. That dream would germinate in 1964, eventually growing into one of the most successful and highly respected cigar companies in the world.

In speaking of their company, the Padrons are fond of the term “vertically integrated.” By this they mean that their cigars are purely Padron, from bottom to top. They own their own farms, grown their own tobacco, control the fermentation, storage and aging processes, oversee the many stages of rolling the cigars, and finally distribute the cigars themselves. This level of control allows very strict quality management, and quality and consistency is what Padron is all about. Padron makes about 5 million cigars each year, but only about ten percent of those are Anniversary cigars. When a product sells this well at a premium price, it is a mark of honor that Padron does not increase production at the expense of quality. It’s also remarkable that the standard Padron line still sells for less than 5 dollars a stick despite the huge popularity of the brand. That’s integrity.

The Padron 1964 Anniversary, like all Padron cigars, is a Nicaraguan puro. All sun grown tobacco is used. Frequently sun grown tobacco is associated with power, but with the Anniversary it should really suggest great flavor rather than sheer strength. The tobaccos are carefully aged for four years before they are selected for the Anniversary blend.

The Anniversary is square pressed to resemble the Cuban cigars patriarch Jose Orlando remembers smoking in Cuba, the H. Upmann Number 4 in particular. It comes dressed in a double band — the trademark band overlaps a counterfeiting control band bearing a serial number to guarantee authenticity. Yes, this is a highly valued cigar.

At 6 inches in length and a 54 ring gauge, the Imperiales are the toro entry in this line. Padron Anniversary cigars are also available with a maduro wrapper. Aficionados of this dandy cigar often use the acronyms PAN (Padron Anniversary Natural) and PAM (Padron Anniversary Maduro) to refer to the different species.

The construction of this PAN is perfect. An easy draw allows a nice volume of smoke with each pull, and the ash held for as long as I cared to admire it. I had to be careful not to smoke this one too quickly. It’s much milder than I expected, and yet full of delicate flavor, so my natural reaction was to draw on it more often than necessary. Its distinguishing characteristic is superior balance, not strength, so I had to consciously slow down a little when it started to get a bit hot.

A mild but flavorful woody base serves as the 1964’s foundation. Above this floats an elegant aroma that always reminds me of the first days of fall when my neighbors stoke their fireplaces with juniper logs. This is a serene smoke, to be enjoyed without distractions and appreciated like an unexpected holiday.

I wish I could describe with better precision what this cigar tastes like, but in this case my inability might be a good thing. Descriptions of sensual pleasures are often elusive, and always subjective. For various reasons I don’t grade cigars, but I do keep a short list of my favorites, and right now this one is sitting comfortably in the top five.

Published in: on September 27, 2006 at 5:22 pm Comments (4)

Padron 5000

Cnv0152.jpg

This is a fat robusto from Padron; with a ring gauge of 56 it’s a mouthful. The wrapper is rough and the cap especially so. As much as I hate to say anything negative about a Padron, I have to admit that it’s not an attractive cigar. Prelight it has a definite barnyard aroma, more so on the foot than the wrapper; a harbinger of things to come…

The draw on this one is very loose, but at the same time the burn is very slow. After each puff tendrils of smoke waft from the head of the cigar. There’s a huge volume of flavorful smoke from the first draw to the last.

It’s a very well balanced cigar. It starts up with a slight bite and lots of pepper. Soon it drops down a notch and presents a woody profile, with cedar in the spotlight. This is what I love about Padron cigars– they always make me think of the first days of fall when the folks around here start using their fireplaces. Juniper seems to be the log of choice, and while this Padron tends more toward cedar, it’s so aromatic that it could almost be juniper. It smells like a humidor on fire… though that isn’t such a pleasant image, I agree.

After well over an hour I had burned this to the band with only two taps of the ash. There’s a good nicotine kick with this stick, so I had to let it go at that point. But on a different day after a bigger meal I would have probably nubbed it.

The standard Padron series, of which this is one, has been called “a good everyday cigar.” I would go further than that– it’s a great everyday cigar. Maybe not as profound or complex as the Anniversary series, but a well balanced tasty smoke that’s better than most of the Altadis cigars I’ve sampled in the past couple of months. At 5 or 6 USD it’s a little pricier than my average “everyday” cigar, but it’s worth the extra couple bucks.

Published in: on April 23, 2006 at 4:38 am Comments (2)

Padron Serie 1926 Maduro Belicoso

The first post warrants a super premium cigar, which is exactly what this one is. Some preparation is required for this Nicaraguan puro– a substantial meal, for starters. This is a powerful smoke.

It’s pressed and absolutely solid. There was a slight imperfection in the wrapper near the head, but nothing to worry about. (This was a gift. Had I picked it myself I might have selected a different stick from the box.) Having snipped the tip, I applied the torch.

Starts out a little peppery, but quickly calms down to what seems a fairly typical Padron. Now this was a little disappointing– typical is not what I expected from a Serie 1926. But about a third of the way in the flavor began to rise, and by halfway I had ascended to the seventh heaven, where the cigar gods live and look down, laughing at we poor mortals. Yea, through the valley of the shadow of Vueltabajo… Yes, this is the kind of euphoric reverie this cigar can inspire.

The 1926 serie is composed of all sun-grown tobacco, which makes it a rich and powerful smoke. The maduro has an exotic sweetness that rides on top of the strength, lending an additional element to the complexity of the blend. The flavor profile will be familiar to fans of Padron, but it’s a powerhouse. Much stronger than any Padron I’ve had the good fortune to sample.

The only downside to this dark brown bomb of delight is the price. Made in a very limited quantity, and marketed to upscale folks — Robb Report readers, for example– Padron can afford to ask top dollar.
Is it worth it?

I don’t know. I might have to sample a few more to find out. Christmas is only eleven months away…

Published in: on January 8, 2006 at 11:23 pm Comments (2)