Cigars 101

Cigar Strength and Flavor — Understanding the Difference.

New cigar smokers often confuse strength with flavor — assuming a strong cigar tastes more, and a mild cigar tastes less. The reality is more subtle: strength is about nicotine and physical impact, while flavor is about complexity and intensity of notes. A mild Connecticut Shade can be highly complex; a full-bodied Nicaraguan puro can be relatively simple. This guide untangles strength from flavor, explains how filler tobaccos (ligero, seco, viso, volado) build the strength curve of a cigar, and tours our 21-cigar collection by strength tier — so smokers can scale up gradually without surprises.

Strength vs. Flavor — Two Different Things

A lit cigar releasing a slow ribbon of smoke against a dark background
Strength and flavor are two distinct dimensions of a cigar's character

Walk into a cigar lounge and ask three smokers to define a "strong" cigar, and you will get three different answers:

  • One says strong means "high nicotine — makes you feel it."
  • Another says strong means "intense flavor — pepper, leather, charged."
  • A third says strong means "thick smoke — fills the mouth."

All three are partially right, but they describe two different concepts. The cigar industry uses two distinct terms:

Strength = the nicotine load and physical impact on the smoker (dizzy, energized, sweaty if too much).

Flavor (or body, or intensity) = how much taste presence the smoke has on the palate.

These can move independently. A mild cigar can be highly complex and full-flavored on the palate without being strong (low nicotine). A strong cigar can be high in nicotine but relatively simple in flavor (one-dimensional pepper, for example).

Understanding the distinction is the difference between a beginner who picks the wrong cigar (full strength, low complexity, too much nicotine) and a beginner who picks well (mild strength, high complexity, lots of flavor without overwhelming the body).

The Mild / Medium / Full Scale

The cigar industry organizes strength into three tiers:

Mild

  • Low nicotine load
  • Beginner-friendly
  • Daytime / before-dinner appropriate
  • Pairs with light drinks (champagne, white wine, coffee)
  • Common wrappers: Connecticut Shade, Cameroon, mild Connecticut Habano lines

Medium

  • Moderate nicotine load
  • Most popular tier for everyday smokers
  • After-meal appropriate
  • Pairs with most drinks (red wine, scotch, bourbon, dark coffee)
  • Common wrappers: Ecuadorian Sumatra, light Habano, milder Maduro

Full

  • High nicotine load
  • Experienced smokers only
  • After-dinner / evening appropriate
  • Pairs best with strong drinks (cask-strength whiskey, port, espresso)
  • Common wrappers: Habano, Corojo, dark Maduro, Oscuro

Many cigars sit between tiers — "mild to medium" or "medium to full" are common labels. These transition cigars are excellent for smokers learning where their preferences fall.

How Filler Tobaccos Build Strength

Dried tobacco leaves arranged in a curing barn
Filler leaves are harvested from different plant positions — Ligero, Viso, Seco, Volado

Inside the cigar, the filler is built from leaves harvested from different positions on the tobacco plant. Each position produces a leaf with different characteristics:

Ligero — top of the plant

Ligero leaves grow at the top of the plant and receive the most direct sunlight. This produces thick, oily leaves with the highest concentration of essential oils and nicotine. Ligero is the powerhouse — it provides body, strength, and depth. Cigars labeled "double Ligero" use a higher-than-normal proportion and are notably full-bodied. Master blenders use Ligero in carefully measured ratios; too much overwhelms the blend.

Viso — between Seco and Ligero

Viso leaves grow between Seco and Ligero positions and provide flavor presence and aromatic notes that bridge the two. Viso typically contributes pepper, cedar, and earthy tones.

Seco — middle of the plant

Seco leaves grow in the middle section. The Spanish word means "dry," and these middle leaves are characterized by moderate oil content and balanced flavor. Seco contributes most of the aromatic complexity in a cigar blend — flavor notes of cedar, light spice, and subtle sweetness. Seco burns evenly and is essential to good combustion.

Volado — bottom of the plant

Volado leaves grow at the bottom and receive the least direct sunlight. They are mild, low in oil, and contribute very little flavor. Volado's purpose is combustion — it burns easily and ensures the cigar stays lit. Most premium blends include some Volado for combustion reasons.

The Blender's Math

A typical premium blend might contain:

  • 50% Seco (flavor backbone)
  • 25% Viso (balance and aromatic notes)
  • 15% Ligero (strength and body)
  • 10% Volado (combustion)

A double Ligero blend like the La Flor Dominicana Double Ligero 660 reverses this proportion, packing the filler with Ligero for a notably full-bodied 90-minute smoke. The Spanish-language naming (the "660" refers to size) signals to experienced smokers that this is a powerhouse cigar.

Strength Does Not Equal Flavor Intensity

This is where beginners often get confused. A cigar can have:

  • High strength + high flavor (full-bodied Maduro like Padrón 1964 Anniversary) — both punch and complexity
  • High strength + low flavor (overpacked Ligero blends with too little Seco) — punch without nuance
  • Low strength + high flavor (refined Connecticut Shade like AVO Classic No. 6) — complexity without nicotine load
  • Low strength + low flavor (cheap or under-fermented mild cigars) — neither punch nor nuance

The cigars worth seeking are the first and third combinations — strong-and-flavorful, or mild-and-flavorful. The second combination (strong but flat) tends to feel one-dimensional and rough. The fourth (mild but flat) is what beginners often experience when they buy a generic cheap cigar and conclude the entire category is boring.

A useful rule for beginners: start with mild-and-flavorful, then scale strength up over time while maintaining flavor complexity. The body adjusts to nicotine slowly, but the palate develops faster — so building flavor recognition on a forgiving strength platform is the efficient path.

Our Collection by Strength Tier

A premium Maduro cigar held over a crystal whiskey glass
Twenty-one cigars mapped across five strength tiers from Mild to Full

Here is a practical map of our 21-cigar collection organized by strength.

Mild (3 cigars)

For first-time smokers and afternoon enjoyment.

Mild to Medium (5 cigars)

The most popular tier — comfortable, complex, broadly appealing.

Medium (3 cigars)

Versatile, occasion-flexible, the heart of the catalog.

Medium to Full (5 cigars)

The transition tier — fuller body, more pronounced spice and depth.

Full (3 cigars)

For experienced smokers only — full nicotine, full body, full attention.

A Practical Progression

For a smoker building toward full-bodied confidence over six months, a reasonable progression:

  1. Months 1-2: Two or three Mild cigars per month. Goal: develop palate recognition for cedar, cream, almond, and toasted notes.
  2. Months 2-3: Step up to Mild-to-Medium. Notice how added body changes mouthfeel without overwhelming.
  3. Months 3-4: Medium cigars. Begin pairing with stronger drinks (bourbon, dark coffee).
  4. Months 4-5: Medium-to-Full. The first encounter with peppery Habano-lineage and rich Maduro wrappers.
  5. Month 6 onward: Full-bodied as desired. The smoker is now an experienced palate and body that handles full nicotine without distress.

Skipping steps is possible but rarely wise. The body adjusts to nicotine on its own timeline, and rushing the progression usually leads to a bad experience that reinforces incorrect beliefs about which cigars are "good."

For technical guidance on cutting and lighting any of the cigars above — different shapes call for different cutting tools — read the Cutting and Lighting guide. To keep your collection fresh once it grows beyond a handful of cigars, the Storage and Humidor guide covers the essentials.