Vitola: Sapta (Gran Toro)- 6.25ā x 54 ring gauge
- MSRP $9.50
- Gifted by a reader
Background
This particular review may be an actual first for me on this blog. Recently a gentleman came into Burns while I was working. He was moving to the area from the New York City area and was looking for a good cigar shop. He was also a cigar review blog readerā¦including a reader of this site. The next time I saw him he had moved and was checking out our flagship storeā¦and he had a cigar to give to me. Fable Cigarsā Fourth Primeā¦which he gifted to me for review purposes. So first, let me say a public āthank youā to Michael for introducing me to a new brand. (On a side note…”gifted by a reader” sounds like a perfect euphemism in this post-FDA-regulatory-environment for cigars…I could say that a manufacturer was a “reader” and they “gifted” me cigars that I elected to review…and suddenly it’s not a “free sample” anymore…just throwing that out there.)
Turns out the brand is new to me, but the factory isnāt. The brand was born from a ālove of art and storyā but blended and created in Skip Martin and Michael Rosalesā Fabrica de Tabacos NicaSueƱo in EstelĆ, Nicaragua. Yes, these cigar come from the same place as the celebrated CroMagnon, Intemperance, and Neanderthal blends (among others). This particular cigar uses Nicaraguan and Dominican fillers, Ecuadorian Habano Ligero binder, and a Pennsylvania Broadleaf wrapper.
Fourth Prime āis the story of the number 7 and the significance is holds in our world.ā The particular vitola Iām smoking today is āSapta,ā a word which is āderived from the Indian cultural term Saptarisi, or Sapta Rishi, meaning āSeven Sagesā, prominent religious ļ¬gures that parallel the traditional Saints of mainstream religion. This size has a personal connection to Mitul Shah through his roots in Indian culture, religion and tradition.ā
Prelight
The artwork for Fourth Prime is simple and stark. There is a triangle in a concentrically designā¦appropriately for a cigar celebrating the number 7, there are 7 straight lines making up the design. The back of the band features the Fable Cigars logoā¦which doesnāt look much like an āFā and āCā unless you know what it is and are trying hard.
The wrapper leaf was a dark chocolate brown color with a nice combination of oily and velvety feel under the fingers. The veins in this wrapper leaf looked almost as large as some Connecticut Broadleaf tobacco that Iāve seenā¦which is significantly more veiny than most Pennsylvania-grown leaf. The wrapper had a mix of semi-sweet chocolate and earthy aromas; the foot had richer earthiness with a bit of graham and cocoa powder in the mix.
The cold draw on the Fourth Prime was very good and it featured a flavor mix of cocoa powder, coffee, graham, nuts, and pepper spiceā¦none of which was overpowering, but all of which was there.
Flavor
Once I got the Fourth Prime fired up, I got a medium-bodied earthy core flavor, surrounded by notes of semi-sweet chocolate, mild coffee and cedar. There was some pepper on the nose and a little built up at the back of the palate as I puffed along, but overall, I didnāt find it a very spicy cigar. Pennsylvania Broadleaf typically isnāt as well-received on my palate as the Connecticut-grown version, but this had more sweetness and up-front flavor than PA-grown leaves Iāve smoked in the past. Longer fermentation, perhaps? Donāt know, but Iām curious.
As I burned past the first third and into the second, I started to get a spicy tingle on the lips and the overall flavor profile was still very earthy, but with plenty of sweetness to balance it. Woody and coffee notes were more muted at this point, but still an important part of the whole, while the Dominican leaf in the mix provided a creaminess that you donāt often see with heavily Nicaraguan blends.
The last third had more sweetness and a little less pepper. The creamier notes fused with the coffee flavor creating a really nice combination and earthiness was more in the background.
Construction
I had a great draw, very even burn line with no touch-ups, and a solid ash that never flaked off on me.
Value
The price point on this is in the moderately high range, but itās a very good cigar so Iād say itās worth it.
Conclusions
My introduction to Fable Cigars and the Fourth Prime was quite pleasing. I found the blend to be unique enough that it stood out for me and balanced enough that I was never bored. It isnāt my favorite blend to come out of Nica SueƱa, but it is among the top two cigars Iāve smoked that use a Pennsylvania Broadleaf wrapper. I honestly thought Iād never had a PA Broadleaf stick that would make me want more, but this stick proved that it can be an excellent wrapper leaf. I hope Fable has many more stories to tell.
By-The-Numbers
Prelight: 2/2
Construction: 2/2
Flavor: 4/5
Value: 1/1
Total: 9/10






2 Responses
This is a blend I really want to try!
Great cigar…not perfect…But considering the prices here in California. I think price/complexity ratio is good.
Burn is good, not perfect but, good. The thing that makes it even more perfect to me…one cigar I didn’t cut quite good, and the wrapper was unraveling.
I took the wrapper off and it still had complexity š
I do find the first inc or so is smooth complex and creamy then tapers off to a one dimensional note…however I find this to be characteristic of higher end Padron sticks also.
Call me crazy but I think this is the poor mans Padron Aniversario. A fun stick..sadly the Davidoff.Padron,Fuente crowd won’t give this cigar it’s proper acknowledgement.
It’s a great blend, rolled well, not perfect but darn good. And they want 230$ a bundle for these at the local shop…I’ll wait patiently, till they sell them at a cost…Nice smoke!