In 2005, Habanos S.A. introduced a new series of limited production releases that would eventually become to be known as Edición Regional (Regional Edition). The program took regular Habanos S.A. brands and gave their regional distributors special sizes that aren’t part of respective brands regular production line-up. In some cases, like the Bolivar Gold Medals, Habanos S.A. gave specific distributors sizes that had been discontinued, but most are sizes that have never been available prior. There’s one major exception to the rule and that would be perhaps the most famous ER, the Edmundo Dantés El Conde 109, which is an ER available for Mexico that is related to the Montecristo brand, but is largely its own brand.

The first Edición Regionals didn’t feature the red and silver secondary bands that read “Exclusivo (Region Name)” that have become synonymous with the ER releases. In 2007, Habanos released eight (8) different Edición Regionals, which at the time was the most they had ever released. Two of the releases were the same size, the Gordito, which is a 5 2/3 x 50 Robusto Extra shape. One of the two was for the relatively new Vegas Robaina brand, aptly named Maestros, and was given to Altadis S.A., the Habanos distributor for Spain. The other went to El Rey del Mundo, a brand that has largely been given new life thanks to the ER program.

Oddly, Wikipedia probably has the best (concise) history of the ERDM brand online, and it reads in current form:

Believed to have been created, along with Sancho Panza, by German businessman Emilio Ohmstedt in 1848, El Rey del Mundo (King of the World in Spanish) was at one time the most expensive and prestigious cigar brand in the world. Spanish businessman Antonio Allones took over the brand sometime around 1882 (a rival version of the brand’s history claims the brand became defunct after Ohmstedt’s death and Allones re-registered it, but cigar connoisseur Min Ron Nee maintains the brand was passed to Allones from Ohmstedt’s company, based on records stating Allones as the owner of El Rey del Mundo from as early as 1873). Under Allones, the brand reached the height of its worldwide prestige. In 1905, Allones’ company was bought by the Díaz Hermanos y Cía venture, owned by Cándido Vega Díaz (supposedly the namesake of Don Cándido cigars), which was later renamed the Rey del Mundo Cigar Co. to reflect its most famous asset. The company also produced such famous brands as Sancho Panza, Rafael González, and Don Cándido. Production continued after the Revolution and the brand maintained its popularity through the 1960s and 1970s, but as the world taste started to run towards stronger cigars, the milder El Rey del Mundo brand began to lose its status as a foremost brand of Cuban cigars. Despite its loss of popularity, El Rey del Mundos cigars are still prized for their mild, complex flavors, with the Choix Supreme, Grandes de España, and Demi Tasse sizes being particularly popular among connoisseurs.

In 2007, Rasa Trading, the Habanos distributor for the Baltic Region (Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania and select parts of Finland) received its first ER, the El Rey del Mundo Edición Regional Vikingos. Only 408 boxes of 25 cigars were made (10,200 Total Cigars) and even before the cigar was released, the number was anticipated to be too small.

Cigar Reviewed: El Rey del Mundo Vikingo Edición Regional Báltico (2007)

El Rey del Mundo Vikingo Edición Regional Báltico (2007) Country of Origin: Cuba

Cuba Factory: n/a

n/a Wrapper: Cuba

Cuba Binder: Cuba

Cuba Filler: Cuba

Cuba Size:

Ring Gauge: 50

50 Vitola: Gordito

Gordito Est. Price: $25 (Boxes of 25, $625)

$25 (Boxes of 25, $625) Release Date: 2007

2007 Number of Cigars Released: 408 Boxes of 25 Cigars (10,200 Total Cigars)

408 Boxes of 25 Cigars (10,200 Total Cigars) Number of Cigars Smoked for Review: 1

From the get go the ERDM looks great. The wrapper is milk chocolate with some red leather to it, but you can tell there is some depth to it. Veins are mild, there’s the pronounced roughness common in Cuba’s creations, but overall it’s a pretty good looking Cuban, as it seems most ERs are. The cigar feels a lot bigger than the dimension, particularly in terms of RG, but it passed the actual measuring. One thing quite unique to the Gordito vitola is the oddly flat cap. The pictures don’t do it that much justice, but the mold is noticeably flatter than the normal practice. There’s not much of an aroma from the Vikingos, some light barnyard, a touch of aged leather and some other mildness. From the foot I pick up a sweet bbq note, some soft milk chocolate notes and a bit of a floral note. Cold draw is very gritty with a bit of sweet tang, cotton candy and bbq notes somewhere around medium-full. The draw is slightly tight, but not worth much concern.

The first rid begin with a bit of the hickory bbq sauce, followed by an orange flavor that tastes identical to Tang (the drink, not twang) and then my notes say Nica. The reason is, the remainder of the initial flavor is cedar and black pepper, it’s extremely full and extremly not-Cuban. To somewhat of my dismay, that’s much of the rest of the third, the pepper and cedar continue to battle it out with little getting in the way of the two dominant flavors. If you really concentrate you can pick up some cotton candy and some actual twang, but it’s deep down within the flavor profile and rather hidden. Shortly before the transition, there’s some herbs and harshness, which begins the pondering of whether or not the Vikingos needs more time.

Pretty quickly into the second third, the pepper breaks free and becomes the dominant flavor of the ERDM. There’s black pepper up front and mid-tongue, white pepper on the back of the throat, and unlike the first third, it’s rather controlled. The cedar hasn’t changed one bit from the first third, but there are some additional flavors that begin to become noticeable, particularly a mushy sweetness, herbal twang and some bitter coffee on the retrohale. While the Vikingo holds ash great, the burn is rather uneven and begins to become rather problematic into the second third, but the rest of construction is pretty good.

I was really hoping the final third would see a departure or at least drastic change as far as the pepper was concerned, I was disappointed. The complex arrays of pepper remained the defining feature while the sweetness and herbal twangs began to slowly leave the cedar to occupy only the finish of the El Rey del Mundo. There’s really not much change, except for a tightening of the draw that takes place around the last inch and a half, shortly before the Vikingo just looses it.

Final Notes

Smoke production was great, even if the pictures don’t show it. The pictures also don’t really capture how bad the burn was, here’s some evidence.

I really was hoping for some of the flavors from the cold draw, particularly the Tang, sadly it never arrived.

Nino of flyingcigar.de in 2009 described this Vikingo as having “hints of excellence.” I fully agree with the statement, despite the fact we had two very different flavor profiles.

This is unlike any other ERDM I’ve had, and might be the most pepper-filled Cuban cigar I’ve ever had.

It seems like at one retailer in the Baltics might still have some of these available and is selling singles.

While the body was rather full, the overall strength never crossed medium and the aroma, despite the great smoke production, was nearly non-existent.

Final Smoking Time for the Vikingo was one hour and 45 minutes.