Cardinal
02-14-2015, 08:14 PM
Cigar: My Father Le Bijou 1922 Limited Edition
Size: Corona Gorda 5 5/8" x 46
Wrapper: Nicaraguan Habano Oscuro
Binder: Nicaragua
Filler: Nicaragua
Price: MSRP ~$8.50
Initial Impression/Prelight
The Le Bijou 1922 had an almost black wrapper, with a nice sheen of oil and almost no veins except for a couple moderate sized ones near the cap which I reckoned wouldn't affect the smoke.
The aroma was strong from the wrapper and foot, with dark chocolate, leather and barnyard most evident. The cold draw had good resistance, and I could taste pepper and coffee from it.
I bought a box of these last year with the intent of smoking one each year around my daughter's birthday. She's 18 months old now, but I wanted to get a better bead on a cigar that might stand up well over time and I didn't have any expertise at all when she was born. I still have a lot to learn about cigars, but I do think this box has a chance to age gracefully. I enjoy the regular production Le Bijou, and besides that I like both the "My Father" part of the name and the "Le Bijou" part, which translates from French to "The Jewel". The name definitely works for my purposes here.
Since I got started late, I decided to sample one today, then I'll do another in 6 months on her 2-year birthday and thus be on track. If I'm still into cigars by then, I figure I'll do this until her 18th, then have five cigars left for special occasions like getting married. Who knows, maybe she'll even smoke one someday. My bold plan is to come back to this thread yearly and do a quick write-up to see how they age in addition to keeping entries in my little cigar journal. I'm a sentimental person and I love traditions, so whether the cigars age well or not I think this will be a fun journey.
http://i1329.photobucket.com/albums/w547/temeric79/Mobile%20Uploads/2015-01/829E77B0-8C94-43C1-BE18-B7CEAA161929_zpsfxox4d3z.jpg
1st Third
The initial 2015 Le Bijou tasting led with a huge black pepper blast, which dominated all other flavors for at least the first 1/2". After that, I got a rich brownie taste along with some woodiness and coffee flavors. The retrohale was just pepper and more pepper. The profile is slightly dry, but not too much so. The cigar gave off massive smoke, burned well, and came out right away at full flavor and med-full strength.
http://i1329.photobucket.com/albums/w547/temeric79/Mobile%20Uploads/2015-01/57092DE5-991A-45C4-9F50-F5FEA694B655_zpsk5fglrfh.jpg
2nd Third
The profile turned from a little dry to, if not creamy, then creamier. I also got some slight fruit sweetness, along with ever-present black pepper. There was also some leather and a fairly strong coffee flavor. Burn stayed great, while the grey ash only held for about 1/2"-3/4" and flaked quite a bit.
http://i1329.photobucket.com/albums/w547/temeric79/Mobile%20Uploads/2015-01/3C75B3BF-7CE5-420F-8633-571EE074763F_zpscfikmttg.jpg
Final Third
I continued to get a bit of a rich, fruity sweetness in the last section, along with strong coffee and more of the dark chocolate flavor from the first third. The retrohale pepper eased slightly, but the pepper was still fairly strong throughout. The cigar ended easily full flavor and pretty full strength as well.
http://i1329.photobucket.com/albums/w547/temeric79/Mobile%20Uploads/2015-01/F6E6F5D3-79ED-4477-B543-FBDD30F5EFCB_zpsvaf6njpn.jpg
Overall Impression
This was a powerful cigar with good, strong flavors and just enough complexity. It burned beautifully and put out a ton of smoke too. I enjoy the regular production Le Bijou, but I understand this is a tweaked version. Whatever the differences, this one is quite good.
I don't know much about aging cigars from first-hand experience, but from what I read this one has a chance to age nicely. I can imagine the pepper smoothing out a bit, and if it does and the rest of the flavors mellow a bit but remain, I think this will continue to smoke well for a while. Check back in a few years for an update.
This isn't a typical review in the sense that I'm not going to assign a score, but rather I'll try to record changes over time. That said, this was a really fine cigar and I'd be happy to have a box even for smoking at a normal pace so if you're interested in a recommendation, I'd say buy a 5-er or box with confidence.
http://i1329.photobucket.com/albums/w547/temeric79/Mobile%20Uploads/2015-01/F62B9155-B619-457F-A897-021843D345D1_zpskhqe2oby.jpg
Size: Corona Gorda 5 5/8" x 46
Wrapper: Nicaraguan Habano Oscuro
Binder: Nicaragua
Filler: Nicaragua
Price: MSRP ~$8.50
Initial Impression/Prelight
The Le Bijou 1922 had an almost black wrapper, with a nice sheen of oil and almost no veins except for a couple moderate sized ones near the cap which I reckoned wouldn't affect the smoke.
The aroma was strong from the wrapper and foot, with dark chocolate, leather and barnyard most evident. The cold draw had good resistance, and I could taste pepper and coffee from it.
I bought a box of these last year with the intent of smoking one each year around my daughter's birthday. She's 18 months old now, but I wanted to get a better bead on a cigar that might stand up well over time and I didn't have any expertise at all when she was born. I still have a lot to learn about cigars, but I do think this box has a chance to age gracefully. I enjoy the regular production Le Bijou, and besides that I like both the "My Father" part of the name and the "Le Bijou" part, which translates from French to "The Jewel". The name definitely works for my purposes here.
Since I got started late, I decided to sample one today, then I'll do another in 6 months on her 2-year birthday and thus be on track. If I'm still into cigars by then, I figure I'll do this until her 18th, then have five cigars left for special occasions like getting married. Who knows, maybe she'll even smoke one someday. My bold plan is to come back to this thread yearly and do a quick write-up to see how they age in addition to keeping entries in my little cigar journal. I'm a sentimental person and I love traditions, so whether the cigars age well or not I think this will be a fun journey.
http://i1329.photobucket.com/albums/w547/temeric79/Mobile%20Uploads/2015-01/829E77B0-8C94-43C1-BE18-B7CEAA161929_zpsfxox4d3z.jpg
1st Third
The initial 2015 Le Bijou tasting led with a huge black pepper blast, which dominated all other flavors for at least the first 1/2". After that, I got a rich brownie taste along with some woodiness and coffee flavors. The retrohale was just pepper and more pepper. The profile is slightly dry, but not too much so. The cigar gave off massive smoke, burned well, and came out right away at full flavor and med-full strength.
http://i1329.photobucket.com/albums/w547/temeric79/Mobile%20Uploads/2015-01/57092DE5-991A-45C4-9F50-F5FEA694B655_zpsk5fglrfh.jpg
2nd Third
The profile turned from a little dry to, if not creamy, then creamier. I also got some slight fruit sweetness, along with ever-present black pepper. There was also some leather and a fairly strong coffee flavor. Burn stayed great, while the grey ash only held for about 1/2"-3/4" and flaked quite a bit.
http://i1329.photobucket.com/albums/w547/temeric79/Mobile%20Uploads/2015-01/3C75B3BF-7CE5-420F-8633-571EE074763F_zpscfikmttg.jpg
Final Third
I continued to get a bit of a rich, fruity sweetness in the last section, along with strong coffee and more of the dark chocolate flavor from the first third. The retrohale pepper eased slightly, but the pepper was still fairly strong throughout. The cigar ended easily full flavor and pretty full strength as well.
http://i1329.photobucket.com/albums/w547/temeric79/Mobile%20Uploads/2015-01/F6E6F5D3-79ED-4477-B543-FBDD30F5EFCB_zpsvaf6njpn.jpg
Overall Impression
This was a powerful cigar with good, strong flavors and just enough complexity. It burned beautifully and put out a ton of smoke too. I enjoy the regular production Le Bijou, but I understand this is a tweaked version. Whatever the differences, this one is quite good.
I don't know much about aging cigars from first-hand experience, but from what I read this one has a chance to age nicely. I can imagine the pepper smoothing out a bit, and if it does and the rest of the flavors mellow a bit but remain, I think this will continue to smoke well for a while. Check back in a few years for an update.
This isn't a typical review in the sense that I'm not going to assign a score, but rather I'll try to record changes over time. That said, this was a really fine cigar and I'd be happy to have a box even for smoking at a normal pace so if you're interested in a recommendation, I'd say buy a 5-er or box with confidence.
http://i1329.photobucket.com/albums/w547/temeric79/Mobile%20Uploads/2015-01/F62B9155-B619-457F-A897-021843D345D1_zpskhqe2oby.jpg