Equipment Needed
Procedure
Understand the Three Core Wrappers
The wrapper is the outermost leaf — it contributes 60–90% of a cigar's flavor. Before touching a cigar, know these three types:
Connecticut (Shade or Broadleaf): Golden to tan. Mild, creamy, with notes of cedar, nuts, and white pepper. Grown under shade cloth in Connecticut Valley or Ecuador. Best for: mornings, beginners, and pairing with coffee or light beer. Typical price range: $5–$12 per stick.
Maduro: Dark chocolate to near-black. Medium to full body. Rich flavors of dark chocolate, espresso, molasses, and dried fruit. Achieved through extended fermentation — sometimes 18+ months. Best for: after dinner, experienced palates, pairing with bourbon or stout. Typical price range: $8–$18 per stick.
Habano: Reddish-brown to dark brown. Medium to full body. Spicy, earthy, with black pepper, leather, and a signature Cuban-seed tang. Originally from Cuba, now grown extensively in Nicaragua and Honduras. Best for: experienced smokers, evening sessions, pairing with rum or aged whiskey. Typical price range: $7–$20 per stick.
Assess Your Current Palate
Before selecting, answer these three questions honestly:
1. Do you prefer bold flavors (dark roast coffee, dark chocolate, black pepper) or subtle flavors (green tea, cream, light toast)?
2. What are you drinking right now — or planning to drink?
3. Is this your first cigar today, or have you already smoked one?
Visually Inspect the Wrapper
Hold the cigar at a 45° angle under good light. Examine three attributes:
Color: Connecticut = golden to light brown. Maduro = dark chocolate to near-black. Habano = reddish-brown to dark brown with a reddish tint.
Texture: Connecticut feels smooth with fine veins. Maduro is thicker with slightly more visible veins. Habano has a slightly oily, toothy feel with moderate veining.
Oiliness: A slight sheen indicates good fermentation and proper storage. If the wrapper looks dry, cracked, or dull — set that cigar aside.
Apply the Wrapper Selection Matrix
Using your answers from Steps 2–3, narrow your choice:
Cut, Light, and Record First-Third Notes
Use a straight cut for the cleanest draw. Toast the foot evenly — hold the flame 1 inch below and rotate the cigar until the entire foot glows amber. Don't rush the first puff.
Within the first 5 minutes (the first third), record these notes in your journal:
Pre-light aroma: What does the wrapper smell like before lighting? Hay, barnyard, chocolate, pepper?
First draw flavor: Dominant note on the first puff.
Body rating: Scale of 1 (mild) to 5 (full).
Wrapper match: Does the actual flavor match the expected profile from Step 1?
Evaluate and Rate the Wrapper
At the end of the cigar, fill out this rating in your journal:
Wrapper Type: (Connecticut / Maduro / Habano)
Brand & Line: (e.g., Padron 3000 Maduro)
Body: 1–5
Flavor Accuracy: Did it taste like its wrapper type should?
Construction: Did it burn evenly? Any wrapper issues?
Would Repeat: Yes / No / With different pairing
Rotate and Build Your Wrapper Library
Don't smoke the same wrapper type two sessions in a row. Rotate to prevent palate fatigue and build a comparative database.
Weekly rotation template:
Session 1: Connecticut → Session 2: Habano → Session 3: Maduro → repeat. This ensures you taste each type with fresh perspective and can detect subtle differences over time.
Monthly review: At the end of each month, flip through your journal. Which wrapper type scored highest? Which specific cigar was the standout? Use this data to refine your humidor stock — buy more of what you actually enjoy, not what's hyped online.
Common Mistakes
Get the Printable SOP
Download the laminated-card version of this procedure plus our wrapper tasting template and flavor wheel — all free from Margaret.