Tag: Cigar Review


  • The Garcia Ignored for too Long

    My Father La Antiguedad – Bury The Leaf There are cigars that demand your attention from the moment you see the box, the band, or the price tag. Then there are cigars like the My Father La Antiguedad Robusto — the one quietly sitting in the corner while its louder siblings soak up the spotlight…

  • Tacos on a Wednesday?

    Rojas Street Taco Barbacoa – Bury the Leaf The Rojas Street Tacos Barbacoa is the kind of cigar that reminds you consistency still matters. It didn’t rely on gimmicks, dramatic transitions, or some overcomplicated flavor scavenger hunt to justify itself. Instead, it spent the better part of an hour delivering balanced strength, dependable construction, and…

  • Familiar Roads and Unrealistic Expectations

    Perdomo Reserve 10th Anniversary Champagne Epicure – Bury the Leaf The Perdomo Reserve 10th Anniversary Champagne Epicure is exactly what it has always been: smooth, balanced, tremendously well-constructed, and paired almost perfectly with a quiet morning and a strong cup of Cuban coffee. The problem is not the cigar. The problem is the smoker sitting…

  • Spicy Little Raisin

    Liga Privada H99 Papas Fritas – Punch or Propaganda? There are cigars designed for contemplative silence and leather chairs facing rain-covered windows. Then there’s this little bastard. The T99 Papas Fritas is not here to gently escort you through nuanced transition points while somebody in loafers explains the difference between oak and toasted oak. This…

  • Chemistry not Quality

    Arturo Fuente Casa Cuba Devine Inspiration Natural – Bury the Leaf Some cigars fail because they’re poorly made. Others fail because they try too hard to be something they’re not. The Casa Cuba Divine Inspiration suffers from neither problem. This is a thoughtful, intentional cigar built with the kind of pride and consistency you expect…

  • The Crux of the Matter

    Crux Epicure Habano Toro – Bury the Leaf The Crux Epicure Habano Toro managed to pull off something a lot of premium cigars never do: It stayed interesting for over two straight hours without turning into a chore. This wasn’t one of those cigars where the first third does all the heavy lifting before the…

  • To Think, I Only Bought Two

    Don Pepin Garcia Original Toro Gordo – Bury the Leaf The Don Pepin Garcia Original Toro Gordo did something I genuinely didn’t expect: it made me reevaluate cigars in my humidor that cost considerably more money and carry considerably more hype. For over two hours, this cigar delivered sweet tobacco, rye grain, leather, cedar, Garcia…

  • Le Bijou… you are My Father

    Le Bijou 1922 Torpedo – Bury the Leaf Tonight’s smoke was the My Father Le Bijou 1922 Torpedo — a cigar I walked into already wanting to love, which honestly makes this kind of review harder than ripping apart some random gas station yard stick pretending to be premium tobacco. And that’s exactly what made…

  • Steakhouse Smoke and Spice City

    Montecristo Espada Oscuro Guard The Montecristo Espada Oscuro Guard smokes like a heavyweight that somehow still remembers its footwork. This isn’t a cigar chasing elegance or subtle transitions. From the opening draws all the way through the nub, it stays firmly planted in bold, savory territory with enough pepper and body to keep your palate…

  • Let me Patel you a Story about the Disciple

    Rocky Patel Disciple The Rocky Patel Disciple Toro ended up being one of the strangest, most entertaining cigars I’ve smoked in a while — not because it was flawless, but because it refused to stay in one lane long enough for me to comfortably define it. This thing spent over two hours dragging me through…

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