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Home > Magazine Archives > July/August 2008 > The Love of Lanceros
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The Love of Lanceros
The long, thin cigars are making a comeback among true connoisseurs
By Gregory Mottola
paradox exists in the cigar world right now. Retailers are reporting the immense popularity of
hefty cigars, some of which are nearly one inch thick. The robusto remains the most popular size
on the market, and cigarmakers continue to release fat sizes. But despite the consumer clamor for
heft, an increasing number of non-Cuban cigar manufacturers are adding slim, elegant lanceros to
their size portfolios. Recently, new lanceros from Coronado by La Flor, Oliva,
Davidoff, Joya de Nicaragua, Alec Bradley, Illusione, Padilla, Toraño, Cuvée, Gran Habano, Nestor
Miranda and 601 have either hit the market or have been announced as new sizes. The lancero may be
one of the slower sellers in the American market, but it's taking on a cult following. True cigar
aficionados are choosing them as exciting, different smokes.
"It's the best size that I make," says Carlos (Carlito) Fuente Jr., who is sometimes seen
smoking the long, thin versions of his Fuente Fuente OpusX or Arturo Fuente Don Carlos cigars.
"Love lanceros," says Pete Johnson, creator of the Tatuaje brand. "They were part of my
original six brown-label sizes five years ago. I was making this in early 2003 when everyone was
running from them, except maybe Carlito."
When asked what kind of customer buys a lancero, Michael Herklots, general manager of the
Davidoff shop in Columbus Circle in New York City, answered, "An educated one. A confident one. A
lancero smoker is the same type of customer who buys a Schrader RBS Cabernethe doesn't need a
trophy that other people recognize as great. He or she knows it's great, and that's enough."
The standard Cuban measurement for a lancero is 7 1/2 inches long by 38 ring gauge, but those
made outside of Cuba can be a bit shorter and somewhat fatter. Most cigars with the name are
finished with a signature flag cap, the pigtail that can be anything from a mere stub to a strip
of leaf approaching an inch in length. When rated by Cigar Aficionado, lanceros fall under the
panetela category, which comprises thin cigars. All lanceros are panetelas, but only gran (or
long) panetelas are lanceros.
Thin cigars have always been part of the Cuban cigar portfolio, but the lancero is a relatively
new size. It was first rolled at El Laguito in the 1960s with the creation of the Cohiba brand.
"The lancero came out of Cubabefore Cohiba there were no lanceros," said General Cigar's Benjamin
Menendez, whose father, Alonso, co-owned the H. Upmann factory in Havana. Fidel Castro is "the
father of the size," says Cigar Aficionado European editor James Suckling, an avowed lover of
lanceros and an expert on the cigars of Cuba.
The lancero, known as an El Laguito No. 1 in a Cuban cigar factory, is visually striking, its
length exacerbated by the cigar's unusual lack of girth. Lancero means lancer in Spanish, and the
size is evocative of the long weapons wielded by horse-mounted knights of the Middle Ages. More
specifically, one might even recall the lance held by Don Quixote in the Cervantes novel.
Many lanceros have traditionally been difficult findsor impossible to buy through normal
retail channels. The first, the Cohiba Lancero, was only for Castro when it was first created, and
when the Cohiba brand became commercially available, Castro cast another cigar mystique with the
diplomatic Trinidad, a cigar the same size as a Cohiba Lancero, and available only as a gift of
the Cuban government. (In 1998, the Trinidad Fundadore made its ceremonious commercial debut, at a
slightly thicker girth, 40 ring gauge, and was instantly recognized as the new gold standard for
lanceros.)
After Cohiba, the Cuban Davidoff was the first cigar brand to adopt the lancero size into its
portfolio with the introduction of the Davidoff No. 1. When the Davidoff brand left Cuba for the
Dominican Republic, it continued offering lancero shapes, and for years was one of the few
non-Cuban cigars with a lancero as part of the brand.
Ironically, as American consumers are presented with an increasing number of lancero choices,
the Cuban cigar industry is cutting back its thin-cigar selection. Suckling says that the Cubans
are rolling mostly Montecristo Especiales, Cohiba Lanceros and Trinidad Fundadores, while El Rey
del Mundo Grandes de España, Bolivar Especiales No. 2, Diplomaticos No. 6, Montecristo No. 7 and
many other forgotten thin sizes have all been among Cuba's cigar casualties over the last few
decades.
That's a shame, because thin cigars such as lanceros can be outstanding smokes. As with all
thin-gauge cigars, the flavor of the wrapper leaf is far more prominent in the lancero, because
there is less filler to counterbalance the characteristics of the wrapper. Some conventional cigar
wisdom dictates that the only way to really taste the vega, or plantation, where the cigar's
tobacco comes from is to experience the wrapper in as unadulterated a form as possible. So the
tobacco's terroir, whether it be Pinar del Río in Cuba or the Bonao region in the Dominican
Republic, speaks most profoundly through a thin size such as a lancero.
"We were very excited about the wrapper, and what better way is there to show it off?" asks
Alan Rubin, owner of Alec Bradley Cigar Co., who just recently released his very first lancero,
the Alec Bradley Tempus Creo. He was referring to the Nicaraguan Criollo '98 leaf that enrobes the
new brand. Some cigarmakers will roll up a piece of wrapper and smoke it to assess the leaf's
character and burn quality in its purest form. Rubin believes that the lancero best approximates
this practice.
"A lancero should be made only if the wrapper can carry the cigar," says Jose Oliva, vice
president of Oliva Cigar Co., which has also rolled its first long, thin cigar for the market, the
Serie V Lancero. "The wrapper-to-filler ratio is so much in favor of the wrapper that it really
has to be able to stand on its own, which is why we made one for the Serie V. The wrapper is so
unique and rich that we created a lancero so that people had a chance to really taste it."
Cigarmakers say they believe in the lancero size, even if they are not big sellers. "We made it
for connoisseurs and for ourselves," says Oliva. "We are not worried about the numbers." Says
Johnson of his Tatuaje lancero: "Not the best seller, but I would never discontinue the size,
because I smoke it myself."
Johnson's lanceros are made by Jose "Pepin" Garcia, who has a knack for the size. The Tatuaje
Especiale, a 7 1/2 inch by 38 ring vitola, was one of Cigar Aficionado's Top 25 cigars of the year
in 2004. Another smoke that was made by Garcia, the Padilla Signature 1932 Lancero, is the current
No. 23 cigar of the year.
While Davidoff has been producing lancero sizes for several decades, the company has been slow
to add to its portfolio of lancero shapes. This past spring, Davidoff released the Millennium
Blend Lancero, the first new regular-production lancero from the company in more than 20
years.
"While so many cigar manufacturers are going bigger and bigger [with their sizes], we're paying
homage to our roots," says Herklots. "The Davidoff brand was literally built on the lancero
format." According to Herklots, the new Millennium Blend Lancero is the best expression of the
power and character inherent in the 151 wrapper, an Ecuadoran hybrid of Corojo and Connecticut
strains. "There's definitely a renewed popularity to the size, thanks to some of the more recent
lanceros available."
Despite the history and newfound appreciation for the lancero, it is not without its problems.
Performance, price or perception issues continue to keep it out of so many cigar smokers'
humidors.
"It can be expensive, for a number of reasons," says Oliva. "It's a difficult size to roll and
needs a lot of quality control in the factory because it is easy to under-fill but it is easy to
overfill. There is a high rejection rate."
Construction is a large factor. If a roller does not put in enough tobacco, the lancero can
burn hot, resulting in unpleasant, bitter flavors. Too much tobacco, and the cigar won't draw at
all.
"They're difficult to make, and they're difficult to blend," says Litto Gomez, maker of La Flor
Dominicana cigars. Only three of his rollers can make the size.
"Lanceros had a lot of draw problems in the late 1990s, early 2000s," says Suckling. "It was
all due to bad construction. The bunch would get twisted during rolling if the roller wasn't
careful and the cigar wouldn't draw. People started avoiding them and the trend sort of
stuck."
It is not uncommon to hear stories from disgruntled customers of plugged lanceros, and there is
often little recourse for someone who has bought an expensive cigar overseas, or even a box, only
to come home and find that it was unsmokable.
Jay Henderson, manager of La Casa del Habano cigar shop in Windsor, Ontario, says that the only
lanceros his shop carries are the Cohiba Lancero, Montecristo Especiale and Trinidad Fundadore,
although a much bigger demand exists for the Cohiba.
"The biggest problem with that size is the draw," says Henderson. "I used to have customers
coming back to the shop because too many cigars in the box they bought were plugged. Who wants to
spend all that money on a box of lanceros and only be able to smoke 10 of them? We have our
lancero customers, but most people want bigger cigars."
"I love the lancero," says Suckling, "but the market is dominated by robustos. The trend is
thicker and shorter, not longer and thinner."
Part of the reluctance for some to light up a lancero is that of image. While the lancero can
project stately connoisseurship, some might find it signals effeminacyit's not for those looking
to make a chest-pounding statement.
If the slender cigar does not threaten one's masculinity, it could threaten the wallet. Because
of the skill required to roll a lancero properly, and the need for large, pristine, high-quality
wrapper leaves, the cost can be higher than that of fatter cigars of similar length.
Trinidad Fundadores and Cohiba Lanceros each retail for about £20 ($40) in the United Kingdom.
In the United States, the retail price for a Davidoff Millennium Lancero is $17.50 before taxes.
That might seem like a lot of money to someone who could get a cigar twice as thick for
significantly less. But while a thicker ring gauge tends to deliver more copious amounts of smoke,
giving the palate substantial impressions of richness and body, the lancero could be compared to a
chef's tasting at a fine restaurant where one is there to have the palate stimulated, not to fill
up on comfort food. For some, the lancero's very delicacy could simply be incongruous with their
notions of what the cigar smoking experience is about.
"I don't think the lancero will become another robusto in the near future," says Gomez. Says
Herklots: "The lancero format is not for everyone. Many people just don't enjoy that size, they
don't feel comfortable with it."
For those who are comfortable with it, there is no shortage of good lanceros, and for those who
are curious, many can now find long, thin versions of the cigar brands they are familiar with. If
a Cohiba smoker is willing to put down his Siglo VI or shelve his Sublimes for a little while and
light up a lancero, he may taste the brand in an entirely different way. Wine drinkers go through
this type of epiphany all the time, only in an inverse capacity, never understanding why Bordeaux
from a huge, inordinately pricey Imperial size bottle should taste any different from a standard
750 ml bottleuntil, of course, they try some.
This recent awakening of interest in lanceros should not be mistaken for a fad. Lanceros may
drift in and out of cigar vogue, but those with the most erudite palates know that the lancero
will remain a perennial, if not unsung, classic. If you are interested in purchasing reprints of a recent article, please
contact the Reprint Department at reprints@mshanken.com. (Minimum quantity: 500 copies)
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