Many novice smokers have embarrassed themselves trying to smoke a cigar with the same frantic, huff-and-puff energy that goes into cigarette smoking. But cigars aren't cigarettes, any more than cheap beer is fine wine, and just as you'd never guzzle a fine Cabernet Sauvignon, you shouldn't just inhale a cigar.
The first question to consider is, of course, the quality of the cigar. Handmade cigars are generally considered best. Machine-rolled cigars use scraps and bits of tobacco, rolled together, while handmade cigars use entire leaves, blended with specially-picked filler leaves to create a rich, full, subtle taste. Otherwise, remember the "wrapper rule": cigars wrapped in darker paper will tend to be sweeter, while lighter wrappers often denote a drier taste.
The second question for many cigar smokers is whether to smoke with the band on or off. The bands, which wrap around the cigar and give the cigar's brand name or manufacturer, was first introduced in 1850 by manufacturer Gustave Bock to set his high-quality Havana handmade cigars apart from knockoff brands. If you're smoking in the UK, where smoking with the band on has long been considered gauche, a form of bragging, you'll want to remove the band. Some smokers also collect bands, as a way of remembering all the different experiences they've had with cigars. Otherwise, it's up to you.
The next step is to cut the cap of the cigar, which must be removed so that air can flow through. Most cigar fans have small guillotines, which cut right across the top of the cigar. (You can usually purchase one from the same place where you buy your cigars - or bum one from a friend.) Some smokers still bite off the top of cigars, an unappetizing and possibly unhealthy alternative. Cigar "punches" and "piercers" (or V-cutters) are also available. Choose the method that's best for you, and keep your cutter sharpened.
How to light? Steer clear of paper matches, which will only stay live long enough to light a small portion of the cigar. You need a full flame that will cover the entire head of the cigar. Wooden matches may work, though it's recommended that you let the sulphur burn off the tip of the match before lighting.
Butane lighters are free of odor and taste and are the favorite method for many smokers, as are "torch" lighters. Whatever you prefer, make sure you turn the cigar as you light it ("turn and burn," experienced smokers say), so that the entire cigar is lit. Some aficiandos believe it's a bad idea to let the flame touch the cigar and prefer to use a lit cedar strip, but many American smokers argue that this is just a bit of unnecessary European pretension.
Inhaling the smoke is unnecessary and dangerous. Once again, cigars are not cigarettes. You pull the smoke into your mouth and, like a wine taster, allow its flavor to saturate your palate, without allowing the smoke into your lungs. For this reason, cigar smoking is more taste-oriented and less harmful to your health than cigarette-smoking.
The taste of the smoke varies depending on the tobacco type and the sorts of flavors added by the makers, as well as the age of the cigar, the conditions in which it's been stored, and many other factors. Regardless, the taste is richer, fuller and subtler than that of cigarettes, and many people who don't enjoy cigarette-smoking have found that they like the taste or odor of cigars.
The cigar can be stopped from burning and "finished" later, though its taste quality quickly declines (like that of an open bottle of wine) the longer it's left half-smoked. It's a better idea to wait until you have time to fully savor the taste, beginning to end.
As for the aftertaste, try a drink containing citric acid (such as orange juice or lemon-flavored liqueurs), followed by a hard cheese and, eventually, a good tooth-brushing. (You'd be brushing your teeth anyway, right?) After-dinner mints can help, too.
Most of all, remember what worked this time. Cigar smoking - again, like wine - is a pleasure that should improve with age.
- Related Videos
- Related Articles
- Ask / Related Q&A
- What to Look for in a Quality Cigar Humidor!
- Basics for setting up your own cigar humidors
- Cigar humidors and accessories you certainly cannot be after one!
- A Cigar Humidor -every Aficionado Needs One
- The ABCs Of Cigar Humidors
- The Cigar Boom: What It Was (And Is)
- What You Need to Know About Cigar Accessories
- How To Store Cigars




How To Cook For Radiant Health
By: Les Finley | 31/12/2009Who can resist the mouth-watering pictures in a cookbook? Who doesn't have childhood memories of the fragrances that wafted from the kitchen on holidays, and even on regular, ordinary days? Spices, bread baking, cookies fresh out of the oven - all these trigger a deep longing in most of us. As eating holds a
Cleaning A Trout Fish
By: Les Finley | 31/12/2009Cleaning trout. Does that bring back memories! I think I was about 9 years old when I first learned how to clean trout. It is really pretty easy. A little practice and you will soon be cleaning trout with ease. If at all possible, use clean, running water to rinse the trout as you clean.
Finding And Purchasing The Perfect Charcoal Grill
By: Les Finley | 31/12/2009Everyone loves good, old fashioned charcoal grilling. Aside from being cheaper than other grilling methods, it adds a raw, distinctive taste to your sausages, burgers, ribs, and other grilled items. Some people prefer charcoal grills over gas grills because they are easier to transport and are safer to
Finding A Quality Cookware Set
By: Les Finley | 31/12/2009The role of a good cook ware in the preparation of a sumptuous meal cannot be overemphasized. When one consider purchasing a good cookware the first point that comes to the mind is the budget. Buying a standard cookware within one's budget and at the same time obtaining all the pieces and features one has in
Using A Grill To Cook Chicken
By: Les Finley | 31/12/2009Wow I have a hankering for some really good grill roasted chicken, the melt in your mouth variety with some fresh homemade salsa slathered right on top. Just seems that we never have time during the lazy days of summer to get everything done. You know, you have to mow the grass, weed the garden and if you're
How To Cure Chile Heat Instantly
By: Les Finley | 31/12/2009Chile heat index? Scoville units, what? Capsaicin? My mouth and hands are on fire, ouch!
Decafin the evening Regularin the morning, Coffee freaks
By: Coffe Drinker | 31/12/2009Decafin the evening is probably an expression that most of us already heard many times. Society has changed our consumer habits, especially when it comes to beverages such as coffee or alcohol.
Ideas For Cake Decoratings For Every Holidays
By: Les Finley | 31/12/2009You really don't need a special occasion to decorate a cake, but some events that can be made unforgettable and extra special with a decorated treat are holidays, birthdays, graduations, religious occasions, showers, weddings, and other personal special events.
Tobacco Makes a Very Picky Crop
By: Garson Smart | 28/06/2009 | GardeningIf you love cigars--if you're a true cigar aficionado--you probably wonder, every now and again, what life is like for the hard-working folks who grow the tobacco for your favorite cigars. Well, if it's premium cigars you like to smoke--perhaps by the box, perhaps one by one in a premium cigar...
Cigar Store Trends and Tastes
By: Garson Smart | 25/05/2009 | BusinessIt happens to the biggest premium cigar aficionados out there: things start to get a little stale. Not "stale" in the sense of dried-out. That can happen, of course, but it's not likely to, if your humidor is set at the standard sixty-seven to seventy-four percent relative humidity range, and as...
What Do You Do With a Moldy Cigar
By: Garson Smart | 21/05/2009 | GardeningEven the most solicitous and devoted cigar aficionado occasionally runs into a little trouble. Taste spoliation; a cigar humidor dial gone wonky; an infestation of tobacco beetles; mold; even the occasionally badly-made cigar from a generally reliable premium cigar factory--any and all of these little mishaps can blight the cigar...
How Do Tobacco Farmers Live
By: Garson Smart | 21/05/2009 | GardeningIf you love cigars--if you're a true cigar aficionado--you probably deal with the Vacation Conundrum at about this time every year. What's the vacation conundrum? It's the issue of which cigars to bring on your vacation. After all, you don't want to bring anything that could get crushed. (Long, thin cigars are...
How to Grow Tobacco
By: Garson Smart | 28/04/2009 | GardeningIn times like these, even the most hardened urban dwellers take another look at the pleasures and profits of gardening. After all, with supermarket prices going up, farmers going under, and the economy going tipsy, it's tempting to seed that sideyard, rent a plot from the city, or even "claim" a...
Buy Tobacco Illegally in Canada?
By: Garson Smart | 16/04/2009 | News & SocietyIn tobacco-related news: Recent reports in several media outlets throw some light on the deepening problem that illegal small cigar factories, known as chinchals, pose for the Cuban government. It turns out that other United States neighbors face similar problems in managing the flow of tobacco. A flurry of news reports...
Humidors to the Rescue: A Necessity For Every Cigar Smoker
By: Garson Smart | 25/09/2008 | HealthPerhaps the movies are to blame. All those scenes where the powerful businessman or politician says to the ingenuous hero, "May I offer you a cigar," then-without missing a beat-brandishes a gold-embossed cigar case. A case with no humidity controls. A case that is not a humidor. Whatever the reason, many...