Montecristo Maltes linea 1935 The Montecristo Maltes linea 1935 sits in Montecristo’s Línea 1935 style: darker, denser and more forceful than the standard numbered range. The key format detail is Maltés, 153 mm (6 in) x 53. It should read as a precise Cuban cigar, not as generic luxury copy: format, storage and smoking pace matter more than slogans. Montecristo is one of the central names in the Habanos S.A. portfolio. Its core identity is earthier than Cohiba and more measured than Partagás, with coffee, cedar and cocoa forming the backbone of the smoke. Tasting Notes The first third opens with dark coffee, cedar and cocoa. The draw should show steady resistance, enough to keep the smoke cool without muting the flavour. Early pepper should support the profile rather than dominate it. In the middle third, leather, espresso, toasted walnut and black pepper come forward. Body is fuller, while listed strength is Full. The better rhythm is slow and deliberate: Montecristo often shows more depth when it is not pushed hot. The final third moves toward bitter chocolate, oak and a concentrated tobacco finish. Well-stored examples keep the earth and cedar integrated; tired or overheated examples can become dry, so humidity and cadence are important. Construction and Feel The Maltés format at 153 mm (6 in) x 53 sets the tempo. Expect a firm bunch, clean cap work and smoke output that builds gradually. If the burn wanders, a small correction is preferable to drawing too hard. Value and Experience Montecristo Maltes linea 1935 should be evaluated by format, age and provenance. For regular-production cigars, consistency and balance matter most. For limited, vintage or ceramic presentations, condition and storage history are part of the experience. Storage and Care This is among the largest ring gauges in the catalog, and that mass means slow, deliberate equilibration; keep humidity at a steady 65–70% and avoid chasing short-term hygrometer swings. Montecristo's earthy, coffee-driven profile sharpens quickly if the box runs dry, while excess humidity flattens the draw and blurs the cocoa notes. This longer format benefits from a slightly extended settling period — seven to ten days in the humidor after unboxing is a reasonable rule of thumb. Frequently Asked Questions What does Montecristo Maltes linea 1935 taste like? Expect dark coffee, cedar and cocoa, then leather, espresso, toasted walnut and black pepper. The finish usually moves toward bitter chocolate, oak and a concentrated tobacco finish, with strength and body shaped by vitola, age and storage. Is Montecristo Maltes linea 1935 stronger than Cohiba? Not always. Montecristo often feels earthier and more coffee-driven, while Cohiba usually reads creamier and more polished. Strength depends on the exact vitola and release. Should I age this Montecristo? A full-strength blend like this has the depth to reward extended rest; expect the pepper to soften and the base flavours to fuse gradually over several years rather than months. With this much tobacco mass, the format has real depth to age into over a decade or more, unfolding more slowly but more completely than a slimmer vitola ever could. None of that happens on its own, though — a cigar that has spent time in unstable conditions will not recover simply by sitting longer. Related Reading Montecristo Cuban cigars Authentic Cuban cigar guide Montecristo background Habanos S.A. Vuelta Abajo
| brands | Schmersal |
|---|---|
| Mfr. Part No | 103015160 |
| RS Stock No | 206-5882 |





