• Hi Guest - Come check out all of the new CP Merch Shop! Now you can support CigarPass buy purchasing hats, apparel, and more...
    Click here to visit! here...

ISOM Dunhill Mojito review

moki

el Presidente
Joined
Dec 16, 2003
Messages
9,415
isom_dunhill_mojito.jpg


Though my experience with Cuban Dunhills is nonexistent, and my experience with 20 year old cigars in general is limited, I've been looking forward to sparking up this mid-1980's Cuban Dunhill Mojito. The Mojito is a corona sized cigar, and this one obviously has been well taken care of over the years, it's in perfect shape, with grayish brown wrapper that looks a bit like elephant hide. If there were brown elephants.

I decided to pair this delicate little beauty with a vintage 2004 Gatorade "Frost"; it's my little way of flipping pretension the bird. The foot has a very pleasant but mild smell to it, but I didn't dawdle long before sparking it up. This poor cigar has waited 20 years for someone to send it from purgatory to the big humidor in the sky. I was going to make this as quick and humane as possible.

A little v-cut and torching later, and I was puffing away. I've read a Cigar Aficionado review on this cigar, just to get an idea what I was in for, and it stated that it was "delicately mild" -- I beg to differ.

Despite being 20 years old, this cigar packs quite a bit of flavor; I'm actually rather surprised by how flavorful it is. It has that trademark Cuban flavor: the little twang of spice as you exhale, but it is more rounded and mellow.

There are quite a few flavors going on here: a bit of black pepper spice, nutmeg, with deeper leather undertones, and an oddly sweet aftertaste that leaves you licking your lips. I even tasted hints of Madagascar vanilla... just kidding. There were hints of cocoa and dark bitter-sweet chocolate, though, as the cigar burned down to the halfway point.

While this Mojito is certainly no powerhouse in terms of strong flavors, it certainly isn't mild either. I'd call it a solid medium bodied cigar that should be savored as it is smoked, not just because of its relative scarcity, but because of the many wonderful flavors it has hidden in its leaves.

Everyone it seems gets all worked up over older, rare Cuban Dunhills and Davidoffs. This wasn't a mind-altering, life-changing cigar, but rather an extremely pleasant, interesting, and complex medium-bodied cigar. I'd liken it to a relaxing fall afternoon in the hammock, with the temperature just right so you are neither hot nor cold, and everything in the world just sort of nicely ties itself together as you rock back and forth. A pleasant, harmonious experience, as rare as a quiet fall afternoon to yourself.
 
Great review Moki.
Sounds like another very well aged and deeeeeeelish cigar.
 
Fixed the picture link... sorry about that fellas...
 
So did it compliment or detract from the the Frost? Were the flavors better or worse after having a drink?


I love it when you call me pretentious :0
 
AVB said:
So did it compliment or detract from the the Frost? Were the flavors better or worse after having a drink?


I love it when you call me pretentious :0
I think I should have aged the Frost in the frigador a bit longer... let the flavors mellow, and marry with the skim milk a bit. The Frost was a tad overpowering.
 
Hmmm.... Dunhill...

As I have been quoted in the past... I would happily sell Moki's first born for a box of well-kept Dunhills...

Nice review... and ya gotta love it that AVB is what passes for pretentious around here. How does CP keep the jerks away? (I mean - aside from me... but there's a bad apple in every bunch... :D )

- Oak
 
The 04' Frost is superb w/ true potential to be phenomenal.

The nose of this particular vintage is light and easily distinguished. W/ a slight tang and hints of tastes you will never find in the natural world, I dream of the day the 04' has reached maturity. This particular ade' I have found to be quite light on the tongue w/ a short (but distinct) finish.

92 w/ unlimited potential.
 
Top