Ever since Illusione announced the release of his newest cigar, The
Gigantes, I have been on the edge of my seat, drying to try them. Last
year I rated his Rothchildes as my daily smoke it on the regular. I have to hand, one
week after announcing the blend the Gigantes were already hitting store
shelves and luckily I was able to get my hands on a few.
The Gigantes features a blend very similar to the Rothchildes
starting with a Mexican San Andreas Wrapper, Criollo 98 and Corojo 99
Binders, and an all Nicaraguan filler using Aganorsa leaf. While the
blend profile remains the same, Dion Giolito who owns Illusione, aimed
to bring a much richer and fuller experience with the Gigantes. The
cigars are made at TABSA in Esteli which is the same factory where the
Rothchildes are manufactured. The Gigantes will only come in one size a
6.5 x 56 which comes packaged in cabinets of 50 and will run you $7.99 a
stick. I bought a whole mess of these from Smoke Inn.
Last time I checked they still had a few in stock. You may want to
hurry, first run of these cigars are very limited but Dion plans the
Gigantes to be a regular production line. (Thanks to Halfwheel.com for breaking the news on the release and providing the specifics on this cigar)
Size: 6.5 x 56
Wrapper: Mexican San Andreas
Binder: Criollo 98 (Esteli), Corojo 99 (Jalapa)
Filler: Nicaraguan Aganorsa
Body: Medium/Full
Strength: Medium/Full
Much like the Rothchildes, Illusione’s Gigantes carries a very deep,
dark brown wrapper with bits of medium brown and spots of a darker brown
around the veins and webbing in the tobacco leaf. The wrapper is
incredibly tooth and feels almost like sandpaper with a good amount of
oils. The wrapper is solid, thick, and very hard. It feel like I could
probably sound down my next woodworking project with this cigar. The
wrapper actually has a very rustic, crude look to it as it showcases the
natural characteristics of the tobacco leaf. Considering how much
Illusione I smoke, holding one with a ring gauge as large as this is a
bit of a departure from what I am used to. The cigar is heavy and dense
as the body leads up to a perfectly round triple cap. The Gigantes is
polished off with a band identical to what we found on the Rothchildes.
The only differences being the word “Gigantes” and of course the purple
color instead of the red. I absolutely love these bands. The remind me
of an older era. Think Henry Clay.
The wrapper on the cigar gives off a sweet aroma of chocolate and
tobacco while the foot of the cigar is much more natural leading with
lots of earthiness, and spice over natural tobacco aromas. The cap cut
clean, but took a bit of extra pressure from my double bladed Palio
cutter. The cold draw produces are really nice spice over some pepper,
espresso, and natural tobacco.
Illusione’s Gigantes starts out really bold with some strong cashew and
raisin over some spice, natural tobacco, and cocoa with a nice tart
twang on the aftertaste. I was expecting much more pepper but was
pleasantly surprised with the sheer amount of flavor the Gigantes kicked
out right off the bat. The draw is remarkable as it takes almost no
effort to get a mouthful of very thick, white smoke. The burnline is a
bit wavy, but razor sharp leaving behind a trail of very compacted white
ash which held on for an inch and a half before giving way.
One of the more interesting characteristics of the Illusione Gigantes is
the aftertaste. There is a very bold woodsy, cedary, fruit, tart flavor
that’s left behind for minutes after each puff. It’s incredibly
enjoyable and only enhances the already potent flavor profile which is
now running with tons of cocoa and spice over fruit and cedar with hints
of espresso. The burnline is still a bit wavy but I have yet to have to
reach for my lighter so no complaining there. The retrohale is
ridiculous coating my nasal passage with so much cedar and spice. While
the body of the cigar is just piling up, the strength of the cigar is
remaining rather tame as I close out the second third with no nicotine
kick at all. Gotta love when cigars do this.
The final third of this Illusione Gigantes is where the deeper, richer
experience really comes into play. That crazy aftertaste I spoke off is
now dominating the smoke leading off with really heavy smoked woodsy
flavors with strong spice backing it along with some great fruit, cocoa,
and tobacco. This is where the cigar really separates itself from the
Rothchildes. Along with the ramp up in flavor the strength has began to
ramp up as well. It’s not too strong, but I definitely feel the
difference. Over the course of the 2 hours it took to take the Gigantes
down I never once had to touch up or relight the beast, I experience
absolutely no harshness, and only a small about of extended heat into
the final inch or so. Dion does it again. I can’t say much more about the Gigantes other than
how much I thoroughly enjoyed it. The bold and complex flavors are right
up my alley and I love that he produced them without having to create a
cigar that was all about the strength. I think that far too often cigar
manufactures think that you can’t have a bold cigar without having all
the strength, and Illusione proves that to be wrong with almost every
blend they create. Although the cigar has a rustic look, the burn
performance was close to flawless. The price point is absolutely spot
on, and actually probably a lot lower than I’d be willing to pay for the
Gigantes. I am so glad that I opted to purchase half a cabinet of these
and even then I worry that might not be enough. For the price, this is a
cabinet purchase for sure and I fear that I may even want to have more
than that on hand is this cigar is incredible and is going to make for
another strong contender in our top 10 cigars of the year. And to think,
we are only half way through.
For more on this amazing cigar check out: http://www.casasfumando.com/illusione-g-gigantes-cigar-review/
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