Plasencia Cosecha 146 La Musica - Blue Smoke Spirit - Cigar subscription and gifts - delivery in Switzerland

Plasencia Cosecha 146 La Musica

A cigar with humble, delicate aromas that promise a smooth enjoyment. Light aromas of chocolate and freshly baked brioche. Gourmet connoisseurs can enjoy it with a triple beer.

Produced from the 2011 harvests, the tobaccos used here come exclusively from fields belonging to the Plasencia family in Honduras (where the factory is located) and Nicaragua.

Produced from the 2011 harvest, this cigar marks the creation of a brand new range for Plasencia, 'Cosecha'. This word means "harvest" and is intended to tell the stories of these exceptional years.

The tobacco used here comes exclusively from fields belonging to the Plasencia family in Honduras (where the factory is located) and Nicaragua.

Tasting note

Notes

Its delicate, thin and slightly fragile wrapper will require careful cutting (preferably a straight cut), before you can enjoy the humble and delicate progression of tasting, where the chocolate subtly evolves towards discreet notes of old oak barrels. The wrapper is smooth and clear and the veins stand out slightly.

In the first third, a touch of mint combines with milk chocolate and a pleasant woody roundness.

The second part of our tasting adventure adds light spices and a touch of pepper to the ever-present chocolate. The evolution is gentle, marked by an aspect that reminds us of the smell of toasted brioche. The smoke is pleasant and dense.

The final third evolves subtly, returning to notes of aged wood with a hint of vanilla.

Pairing

A triple-fermented blonde ale that's full-bodied. We tasted it with a Goudale.



Plasencia

In 1865, Don Eduardo Plasencia arrived on the island of Cuba with a single goal in mind: success. He soon had the opportunity to start his first tobacco plantations in the Vuelta Abajo region.

A few years later, he was joined by his nephew and exported the family's tobacco until 1963, when Cuban policy no longer allowed them to work and confiscated their farms.

It was then time to move to Mexico and Nicaragua in 1965. Then, once again, the family had to move to Honduras following the Sandinista revolution.

1987 marked a decisive turning point for the Family, as it was in this year that they officially entered the world of cigars by manufacturing their own vitolas.

Once a producer of tobaccos for other companies, it is now one of the great names in cigars, offering exceptional modules for over 35 years.

Still owning fields in various Latin American countries, it continues to supply its tobaccos to other cigar producers. This control of the production chain from seed to cigar enables it to guarantee the impeccable quality of all its cigars.

Discover the brand's other cigars