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Taste Test Competition

cgarsltd

Member
Joined
Jan 16, 2001
Messages
180
Calling all Taste Testers!

We are looking for entrants for the next Taste Test Challenge, reviews will be published on the site on Friday 23rd May 2003 for one week and the winner will receive:

James's choice aged and rare sampler
Description: A variety of flavours and strengths in this delicious sampler pack containing only the best aged and mature hand made Havanas, includes one each of the following, H. Upmann Petit Upmann 1995, Rafael Gonalzes Lonsdales 1984, El Rey Del Mundo Corona Deluxe 1995, H. Upmann Corona - 1995, Punch Corona 1994, Gispert corona 1985,
Hoyo de Monterrey Corona 1996, Juan Lopez Petit Corona 1997 - includes postage and packaging worldwide
Value: £78.00 approx. $124.02

So to be in with a chance of winning, please send your tasting notes for any cigar of your choosing to sales@cgarsltd.co.uk before this Friday 23rd May 2003.

Take care

Love n Hugz

Laura
C.GARS Ltd
 
*chuckles*

Ya'll know I will have to enter this one. :thumbs:

Sam a.k.a. the Newbie Reviewer
 
You're going down, Sam! :sneaky: Funny thing is, I just ordered one of these. Oh well, can't have too many aged & rare cigars can you?
 
FT I wish you the best of luck my friend...

For those who may not have known or remembered, FT, Muley and I almost got started writing reviews together in a small sorta of pass. Only made a review or two when I ended up leaving. Haven't seen Muley around so assume he has left for at least a spell as well.

So in a wierd sorta way this is like old school for FT and I *grin*

What you say FT shall we post our reviews together here as well for old times sake?

Sam
 
SamGuss said:
FT I wish you the best of luck my friend...

For those who may not have known or remembered, FT, Muley and I almost got started writing reviews together in a small sorta of pass. Only made a review or two when I ended up leaving. Haven't seen Muley around so assume he has left for at least a spell as well.

So in a wierd sorta way this is like old school for FT and I *grin*

What you say FT shall we post our reviews together here as well for old times sake?

Sam
That sounds like fun. Now I just have to find something special to review. Think I'll settle in tonight with a glass of wine and my smoke and watch The Matrix in preparation for going to see Reloaded. And maybe the season finale of 24.

Good luck to you too. Truth be told, I'd be hard pressed to beat one of your reviews. But it'll be fun trying.

PM me when you're ready to post your review.
 
Will do FT.

I'll post a note here tomoorow on what I will review as I will probably smoke it and review it tomorrow night....

Have some new furniture being delivered, a large screen tv... sit back and enjoy a movie and a cigar in my new living room - yeah that's the ticket ;)

And don't sell yourself short, my reviews are probably not in the form they want to see - hell I just refered toa perfecto the other day as a "nipple-ended" cigar :sign:

Sam
 
Allright. The cigar is selected. Smoking it and tasting notes to commence tonight and sent tomorrow.

The cigar will be a revisted one...

The Ashton VSG Spellbound.

Allright FT - bring it! :thumbs:

Sam
 
Did mine last night too. Will write it up this evening.

My cigar? Cuaba Millenium Reserve 2000 Distinguido
 
FatherTiresius said:
Did mine last night too. Will write it up this evening.

My cigar? Cuaba Millenium Reserve 2000 Distinguido
???

Hmmmm.... I might be in trouble going up against a cigar like that... Especially when I have no ISOM's at the moment. (Some on the way though - woohoo!!)

I look forward to reading it and mine will be posted sometime tomorrow/tomorrow night and of course sent in for judging.

Good luck my friend!

Sam
 
FatherTiresius said:
Did mine last night too. Will write it up this evening.

My cigar? Cuaba Millenium Reserve 2000 Distinguido
Can't wait to see this one. I've got mine resting...er trying to...what with all the fondling. :sign:
 
Horse said:
I've got mine resting...er trying to...what with all the fondling. :sign:
uh horse,
did we really need to know that? :p ;) :0
 
Long cynliderical objects and fondling in the same sentance... :0

What is this web community coming to!!

:lookup:

Ok, let me re-phrase that... :sign:

Sam
 
Cuaba Millenium 2000 Distinguido
6 3/8" x 52

Have you ever gotten that feeling just before lighting up a prized cigar that you just know you're in for something special? You know, that tingly anticipation? Sure, sometimes it ends up being a bust. Ahhhh, but when it doesn't.....

A brief wine sidebar.

Any good cigar deserves proper liquid accompaniment. For this one I chose a late harvest Zinfandel from Dashe Cellars, vintage 1997. This varietal used to be the Rodney Dangerfield of wines. No respect. Nowadays, however, a wide variety of different types of wine are made from this grape. There are powerful wines almost like a claret in their backbone. There are fruity wines reminiscent of the Rhones of France. There are earthy versions that remind one of Burgundy. But a dessert Zin was a new one on me. Something told me it was going to be perfect. It turned out to be all of these things and more. Sweetness balanced by acidity and powerful cherry flavors. A port without the fortification.

But I digress. This, after all, is a cigar review, not Wine Enthusiast.

The Distinguido is a throwback. It is made in the old figurado style with a rounded head leading to a tapered body that grows in diameter right up to the perfecto foot. It was quite firm throughout; there were no soft spots to be found. The wrapper was a gorgeous deep brown with a few veins. I'll never know who rolled this cigar but I wish I could shake his hand. It was, in a word, flawless especially given the difficulty in rolling this particular shape.

I settled into the couch and got down to business. The cap cut cleanly. The cross-section thus revealed how tightly this stick was rolled. Draw problems? Not a chance. A pre-light pull offered the perfect amount of resistance and an earthy flavor. It lit quickly - love those perfecto tips - and the first flavors were a powerful melange of leather and nuts (pecans to be exact). As soon as it burned to the wide part of the cigar the taste settled down a bit. The flavors softened but didn't change in character. A woody undercurrent joined the other flavors soon thereafter.

At this point I'm starting to realize that this really is something special. I'm beginning to wonder if a cigar can get any better. The question was soon answered.

The beauty of the cigar wasn't in the flavors it expressed but rather in the way it expressed them. They seemed to play off of one another in an everchanging medley. Like a tapestry made of different threads, the flavors evolved from nuts to cocoa to cedar to spice. In and out the flavors danced and weaved their spell. No one taste ever dominating the others. It never became harsh even to the spicy finish; it remained smooth and creamy throughout.

This fine cigar burned almost ideally too. The final two thirds burned as straight as any cigar I've ever seen. If I had to find a flaw in it it would be that the smoke volume at first was a bit disappointing. But, again, that was only a problem at the beginning.

A final observation: I noticed as it was burning between puffs in the ashtray that its aroma was like incense. Not that it smelled like incense, mind you, but it had an intoxicating power to it. I could have been in an opium den in Shanghai. Sam, your cat would have loved it.

I can sum up my impression of this cigar thusly: it was a work of art. I don't say that lightly. Whoever made this smoke knew exactly what they were doing. When I finished it, my first thought was that I wish I could smoke a cigar like that every day. Upon reflection, however, I'm glad that I can't. To smoke a cigar like this regularly would only dull its brilliance.
 
FT, your reviews bring tears to my eyes!

you are in the wrong profession! ;)
 
Excellent review my friend and I can see that in my review here I definately have to step up to the plate, raise the bar, strecth my limitations and deliver a hardcore review...

And so it begins...


Smoking a fine cigar is all about experiences. Each brand, each line, each individual cigar has an experience it is made for. The more premimium or rare a cigar is, the deeper the experience. Despite this review competition happening I had reason to celebrate last night. We had taken some big steps in getting our new house the way we like it, with new furniture for the front living room, a new big screen TV and the completion of our bonus back room with furniture being settled into place.

For the occassion of breaking in the new furniture and TV I decided that a premimium cigar was needed. I broke out a Ashton VSG Spellbound that has been aging in my humidor for the last 8-10 months. A monster size cigar weighing in at a 54 gauge by 7 1/2 inches, it was firm, dark and gorgeous. The smell of the cigar itself in pre-light stage was incredible with a rich, dark tobacco odor with a hint of light, sweet pepper.

I found the bullet cutter opened up an excellent hole for smoking this cigar with and I was dead-on with my cut, allowing a smooth, long draw upon lighting it. The flame took quickly and burned evenly, leavng a near perfect white ash for the first couple of inches before it needed tapping.

The rich, thick smoke reminded me of unsweetend chocolate that instantly attracted my Princess - the cigar loving cat and whose favorite cigar is a VSG. She literally bathed in the smoke for the first few minutes before curling up on the arm of the chair next to me and remained in calm, relaxing lounge for the duration of the cigar. Afterwards drunkely finding her way to the couch to splay fully out and go to sleep. I am finding with her that dark and maduro cigars work better than catnip with affecting her mood.

The taste of the Ashotn VSG Spellbound is simply second to none amongst sun grown cigars. The first third started off with tastes of dark chocolate, light pepper and fresh minty spice. The mixture of tastes relaxed and enthralled over the next 2 1/2 hours with gradual changes that happened so slowly, one was almost unable to detect except you would stop and think - hmm a distinct change has taken place, and always for the better and stronger as the cigar smoked down.

The second quarter of the cigar the taste changed subtly to that of sweetened coffee, still with hints of pepper that were to bloom even further in the last third of the cigar. As it burned even further down, unsweetend chocolate and coffee flavors strengthend this full body smoke and I was in nirvanna even before the spectacular finish of this cigar.

This cigar can be reviewed in one word: strength. Strength of construction, strength of smoke, strength of taste. The latter reaching a high peak of pepper, spices and coffee, leaving the aftertaste of these for a long time after the cigar was finally laid down to rest.

Cigars are all about experiences. The Ashton VSG Spellbound offers a great experience. That of time, relaxtion and an enjoyment of abundance. With 2 1/2 to 3 hours of smoking time, this cigar is not one to be rushed. Because of the nature of the complex tastes it is one that needs this time to enjoy and to relax. With the abundance of taste, smell and textrue, this cigar reeks of abundance and in my new living room last night, watching some movies ( ended up watching "A River Runs Through") gave me ample time to do but one thing: enjoy the little successes in my life and to take time and enjoy them. That's what the Ashton VSG Spellbound experience is all about for me.

I rated this cigar a strong 93 and my cat Princess made no score - she was too busy in feline nirvanna passed out and purring the entire time and well into the night.

Sam a.k.a. "the newbie reviewer"
 
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