Vol. VI · No. VII · July, MMXXVISearchSubscribeThe Humidor Notebook →
The Cigar Lifestyle · No. CXXVII

Building a Seasonal Cigar Rotation

How to build a cigar rotation that matches weather and occasion throughout the year.

By the EditorsJul 7, 20261 Min Read
v of v — Essential
Building a Seasonal Cigar Rotation
Cigar LifestyleEditors’ Notes

Most cigar smokers settle into a handful of favorites and stick with them year-round. Adjusting your selection with the seasons makes smoking more enjoyable. Temperature, humidity, the food you eat, and time spent outdoors all shift through the year.

Spring: Mild to Medium, Shorter Formats

Spring weather is unpredictable. This is a good time for shorter cigars you can finish in 30 to 45 minutes. Connecticut Shade wrappers and light Habano-wrapped cigars work well. Cream, cedar, and grass notes feel natural. Pair with iced tea, light lagers, or sauvignon blanc.

Summer: Light Body, Larger Ring Gauges

Heat and humidity change how a cigar smokes. Keep your humidor slightly lower, around 65 percent instead of 70. Large ring gauge cigars with mild to medium bodies are ideal. The larger ring gauge burns cooler. Avoid full-bodied maduros on blazing summer days. Nicotine hits harder in heat. Pair with rum cocktails, gin and tonic, or cold brew coffee.

Fall: Medium to Full, Classic Sizes

As temperatures drop, richer flavors feel right. Reach for Habano, Sumatra, and San Andres wrappers. Toro and Churchill sizes suit the longer evenings. Look for chocolate, espresso, leather, and spice. Pair with bourbon, scotch, red wine, or dark beer.

Winter: Full Body, Long Smokes

Winter is when the big cigars come out. Full-bodied maduros with Broadleaf or San Andres wrappers, double corona or Churchill sizes. Pair with aged scotch, port, or espresso.

Building the Rotation

Stock your humidor with 40 percent mild to medium for spring and summer, 30 percent medium to full for fall, and 30 percent full-bodied for winter. Adjust based on your preferences and climate.

Aging Across Seasons

Buy fall and winter cigars in spring, let them rest for six months, and enjoy them when the time is right. That natural resting period smooths rough edges and develops complexity. A well-managed humidor with a seasonal rotation gives you variety and anticipation.

The Verdict
V
of V

A cigar that rewards the hour you spend with it.

Not the flashiest on the shelf, not the cheapest, but one of the few that will taste the same good way in five years as it did tonight. Stock accordingly.

The Humidor Notebook

One letter, every Sunday.

A recommendation, a short review, and a note on something worth lighting this week.