As you can tell, it's a fantastic shape for a cigar. The construction was top notch, the burn was great. But the flavor....it was the same as all the most common Nicaraguan power cigars. It's a flavor I still do not get. You get flashes of brilliance among plain old strong tobacco notes, acidic, rough, steamy smoke and boring flavor. I can get the exact same taste out of the Omar Ortez I reviewed a few months ago for 2.50 each and available everywhere. The Flying Pig is rare, pricey and coveted. I am not getting the difference. I have a few more vitolas of the Liga Privada line, and I certainly would not like to denigrate what my friend has done in answering my curiousity. I also think Drew Estate cigars can be great. But this smoke was more hype than flavor. I have no idea what was going on .
I also had a chance to smoke a cigar that had treated me equally as bad on previous occasions, but I thought time might have turned the tide. That is the Diplomaticos No.5 from 2008. Previous testings of these small cigars were just awful. Steamy, harsh, tasteless tobacco. I lit one up the night I arrived in Blowing Rock, and it exploded with coffee and toffee notes plus a hint of light tea and cinnamon. What a great little cigar.
I have handed these cigars out for years with apologies for what I thought might be not worth smoking, much less an example of a havana cigar. It was wrapped in a heavy fireproof wrapper and burned like a fuse. This time around, every single facet of it's flavor, performance, burn, ash...were perfect. I smoked this to the nub and enjoyed it, and wished I had another to back it up with. However, I gave that to the guys at Peabody Wine & Beer in Boone. They hooked me up with some great beers at some great discounts. This was a great trip to the mountains, with some great craft beers enjoyed and a few good cigars smoked. Here are a few pictures of some great views on the Blue Ridge Parkway......