Wednesday, April 9, 2025

A Fire Pit Evening: Cigar, Stout, and Spring’s Edge

After a wonderful meal out on Saturday afternoon, I was eager to enjoy a fire in the backyard that evening. Our time around the fire pit has been severely limited over the past year. Although the temperature lingered around 80° even as the sun set, my enthusiasm was undiminished. The forecast for the following week called for a return to daytime temperatures in the 30s with plenty of rain, so this was likely one of the last good opportunities before the truly hot days of spring and summer arrived.

I had a Quesada Oktoberfest Das Boot from the 2024 release resting in my humidor since it arrived from Luxury Cigar Club last August. I last smoked cigars from this line in 2021, pairing them variously with coffee, an Oktoberfest beer, and whiskey. After selecting the cigar for the evening, I rummaged through the downstairs beer fridge for a suitable companion and settled on an older bottle of Bourbon County Stout — specifically, one from the 2022 bottling.

With Colleen’s help, I gathered some wood and built a small fire in the pit. Once everything was ready, I settled in with my cigar and beer, watching the sun begin its slow descent below the horizon.



The 2024 Quesada Oktoberfest Das Boot is a 6 x 52 Torpedo with a sharply pointed cap. I made several cuts to open up the draw. Made entirely of Dominican tobaccos, the cigar features a shiny maduro wrapper. Medium-bodied, its flavor profile offers notes of dry wood, sweet bread, and nuts. A hint of cinnamon emerges later in the smoke, but otherwise the flavors remain consistent throughout.

While the burn was strong with a straight char line, the smoke output was a bit on the lighter side. The Quesada Oktoberfest is designed to pair with an Oktoberfest beer — a style known for low ABV, sweet malt, and minimal hop bitterness — and in that regard, my experience is the cigar delivers on its intent.

The Bourbon County Stout I chose for the pairing, however, offers a bolder profile than a traditional Oktoberfest. This bourbon barrel-aged Imperial Stout from Goose Island Brewing clocks in at 14.7% ABV. Its flavor is rich and complex, yet surprisingly approachable. Deep notes of dark caramel, coffee, chocolate, and molasses delight the palate. A pronounced sweetness borders on cloying but stays just under the threshold of overwhelming. A subtle boozy edge complements the richness, and the mouthfeel is viscous and indulgent.

The pairing between the Quesada Oktoberfest and the Bourbon County Stout was generally harmonious. I think a cigar with a fuller smoke output might have stood up to the stout even better, but overall, they worked well together. 

As the cigar came to an end, I sipped the last of my beer in the dark, gazing into the glowing embers of the fire. It was a deeply relaxing end to the day — a moment in which, if only briefly, the aches of post-surgery recovery could be forgotten.

Cheers!

No comments:

Post a Comment

Comments on posts over 30 days old are held for moderation. Please be patient.