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Jumpin’ Railcars and Collectin' Cans
Nub Connecticut Review
10/12/2014
Cigar: Nub Connecticut 460
Size: Gordo, 4.0”x60
MSRP: $6.00
Strength: Medium
Wrapper: Ecuador Connecticut
Origin: Nicaragua
Prelight: The cigar has a pretty nasty perpendicular split on the shoulder, but I can probably obscenely wrap my lips around it. The Connecticut wrapper is smooth and veinless, and squeezing it, I can tell the cigar is well packed. There is a nice nutty and woody aroma to the cigar. I use a punch to not further damage the shoulder. The cold draw seems a bit loose, but has a faint taste of dried fruit to it.
1/3: There is some strong pepper in the retrohale at the onset of the cigar. There is also a strong wood flavor. Soon, a sweetness arrives, reminiscent of sweet grass. The burn line is straight and the ash is a dense, light grey. The cigar definitely seems a little more on the mild side of the spectrum.
2/3: The pepper has faded, leaving mainly wood and sweet grass, and the sweetness is really stepping up in the absence of the spicy pepper. The ash is still hanging on and is impressive. The tear on the shoulder seems to be having no effect on the cigar at all.
3/3: I finally tap the ash off, but I feel it could have lasted the whole cigar. The pepper comes back in the final third (albeit mildly), and is accompanied by other spices as well. However, the sweet grass/wood flavor is still dominating the profile.
Overall: This cigar barely maxed out at medium in body and strength, and maintained the same sweet woody flavors throughout. The construction was simply amazing, and even the severe tear had no effect. This is a great cigar for Puffers looking for something on the lighter side of things. Not complex, but tasty none-the-less.
To smoke is human; to smoke cigars, divine.
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The Walrus
Nice review, Layne and GREAT pics.
You're spot-on in your assessment of the lack of complexity in these. They, like virtually all larger RG cigars, just don't deliver it. They're too short and the wrapper/filler ratio too lop-sided to offer any real complexity. Sort of one-trick ponies. Thing is, if you like the trick, they can be a very good smoke.
You're right back in the groove, my friend.
Debt is the weapon used to conquer and enslave societies and interest is it's ammunition.
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Jumpin’ Railcars and Collectin' Cans
Originally Posted by
Herf N Turf
Nice review, Layne and GREAT pics.
You're spot-on in your assessment of the lack of complexity in these. They, like virtually all larger RG cigars, just don't deliver it. They're too short and the wrapper/filler ratio too lop-sided to offer any real complexity. Sort of one-trick ponies. Thing is, if you like the trick, they can be a very good smoke.
You're right back in the groove, my friend.
I'm not "back" in the groove yet. Still reposting old reviews. Awards are my Pokemon, I gotta catch 'em all!
To smoke is human; to smoke cigars, divine.
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The Walrus
Originally Posted by
Laynard
I'm not "back" in the groove yet. Still reposting old reviews. Awards are my Pokemon, I gotta catch 'em all!
Ya mon, but quality content is just that, regardless of where it came from! Thank you.
Debt is the weapon used to conquer and enslave societies and interest is it's ammunition.
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Moderator
Originally Posted by
Laynard
...but I can probably obscenely wrap my lips around it.
Er....pics?
"You can imagine where it goes from here." - Maude
"He fixes her cable?" - The Dude
"Don't be fatuous, Jeffrey." - Maude
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The G.O.A.T.
Very nice review!
I haven't had one of these in years, but I wasn't crazy about them then either. I too remember them being fairly straightforward.
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Lucky Bum
Thanks Laynard for the review. The Habano brings more to the table IMO. But I enjoy both.
Don’t wait for the storm to pass. Learn to dance in the rain.
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