Walking the floor at PCA is its own experience — thousands of people, hundreds of booths, and a constant low hum of conversation about tobacco. You run into people you know, you discover things you didn’t expect, and every so often, if the timing is right, you end up talking to someone who actually built the thing you’re there to see. That happened to me this year at the A.J. Fernandez booth. I didn’t expect to get even a minute of his time — the man is genuinely one of the icons of the premium cigar world and was clearly busy — but he came over, talked for a few minutes, and was generous enough to pose for a photo. Meeting the person behind the cigar changes how you hold it.
The cigar in question is Amar, a brand-new regular-production release that A.J. Fernandez created in the wake of the March 2025 fire that devastated his Estelí factory. The name carries a dual meaning rooted in his Cuban and Lebanese heritage — in Spanish, amar means “to love,” and in Arabic, amar means “moon.” The box lid reads “Gold Is Tested By Fire.” This is not a line extension. It is a statement.
- A.J. Fernandez Amar Toro — 6×56 Nicaraguan puro, Nicaraguan Habano wrapper, produced at the San Lotano factory in Ocotal. Born from the 2025 Estelí factory fire. MSRP $10.40–$11.30.
- Earth, toasted wood, spice, cinnamon, coffee, and a natural sweetness that keeps the profile from feeling heavy. Medium-to-full in body and strength — substantial and expressive, with the rounded texture the 6x56 format delivers well.
- BLC Rating: 92/100. An A.J. Fernandez cigar with a story that earns its way into every draw. Priced to smoke regularly, built to be worth it.
THE MAN BEHIND THE BLEND
A.J. Fernandez does not need an introduction in serious cigar circles. He has spent decades building one of the most respected names in Nicaraguan tobacco, and his fingerprints are on more well-regarded blends — both under his own label and for other houses — than most smokers realize. What sets Amar apart from anything else in his catalog is the reason it exists.
On March 31, 2025, a fire broke out at his factory in Estelí, Nicaragua. Millions of cigars were lost. The damage to finished inventory was significant. But the cigar community showed up — messages, support, and loyalty from retailers, fellow manufacturers, and smokers around the world. Amar was Fernandez’s response to all of it: a brand built specifically to honor the people who stood by him.
The dual meaning of the name carries real weight once you know the backstory. “To love” in Spanish and “moon” in Arabic — the lunar phases on the band connect to Fernandez’s Lebanese roots and serve as a symbol of transition and growth after adversity. The purple in the color scheme represents resilience and strength. The box lid says “Gold Is Tested By Fire.” None of that is decorative. Every element is deliberate, and the cigar was built to back it up.
Production moved to the San Lotano factory in Ocotal, Nicaragua, which has been part of the Fernandez operation for years. The result is a true Nicaraguan puro — Habano wrapper, Nicaraguan binder, Nicaraguan filler — that fits squarely in the A.J. Fernandez flavor language while carrying more personal meaning than anything he has put his name on before.

BLC BLEND BREAKDOWN
BLEND SPECS
THE VITOLA LINEUP
| VITOLA | SIZE | MSRP |
|---|---|---|
| Robusto | 5½ × 54 | ~$10.40 |
| Torito | 6½ × 50 | ~$10.75 |
| Toro — reviewed | 6 × 56 | ~$11.00 |
| Gordo | 6 × 60 | ~$11.30 |
The Toro at 6×56 is the sweet spot in this lineup. The wider ring gauge gives the blend room to breathe, keeps the smoke texture full and cool, and rounds out the spice without softening the profile. The Robusto is the faster, more concentrated version — worth smoking, but the Toro gives you more time with the blend and shows you more of what Amar is built to do. Start there.
THE COLD DRAW
Pre-light, the Nicaraguan Habano wrapper shows a medium-brown, slightly oily leaf with a light tooth and an aroma off the foot that is earthy, woody, and faintly sweet — a clean, tobacco-forward cold impression that fits the puro format exactly. The cold draw delivers dry cedar, hay, and a mild floral sweetness with just a whisper of spice on the back end. Resistance is smooth and slightly open, appropriate for a 56 ring gauge. Construction is tight and even throughout: the cap is clean, the seams are barely visible, and the cigar has the firm weight of a well-rolled 6-inch stick. Everything about the pre-light experience sets the right expectations.
BLC CIGAR PROFILE
The Amar Toro reads like a classic A.J. Fernandez Nicaraguan — which means it has real body, real presence, and a flavor profile that earns your attention without demanding it. Earth and toasted wood are the anchors. Coffee and cinnamon thread through the middle thirds and give the blend a warmth that keeps the profile from feeling flat or one-dimensional. The natural sweetness stays consistent across all three thirds, acting more as a foundation than a featured note, and it is part of what keeps the Amar from ever feeling heavy despite its 7.8 body score.
THE FIRST THIRD
The opening third arrives composed and confident. Earth leads — rich and dry, distinctly Nicaraguan — followed almost immediately by a cedar and dry wood note that fills in the mid-palate. There is a mild pepper on the retrohale that gives the opening some energy without pushing into aggression. The natural sweetness from the Habano wrapper is already present, threading through the profile and giving the cedar a softer edge. Draw is smooth and full, the burn line comes in even and clean, and the smoke texture is exactly what the 6×56 format promises: full, cool, and easy to pace. This is a first third that tells you everything you need to know about the blend and does it without fanfare.
THE SECOND THIRD
The second third is where Amar earns its complexity score. Coffee moves into the foreground — not sharp or harsh, but rounded and rich, the kind of note that suggests a well-fermented, well-aged leaf at work. Cinnamon and nutmeg begin to surface on the retrohale, adding a warmth to the mid-palate that plays well against the earth and wood still anchoring the profile. The sweetness from the wrapper stays present but quieter now, doing its best work in the background. The 6×56 ring gauge is doing exactly what it should here — keeping the smoke broad and textured, rounding the spice, letting the more delicate notes come forward without getting crowded out. This is the section that justifies the Toro as the right size for this blend.

THE FINAL THIRD
The final third brings more weight to the profile — pepper and darker earth move forward, the wood becomes drier and more pronounced, and the coffee takes on a slightly roasted edge. The sweetness pulls back but does not disappear, and that restraint is important: it keeps the closing third from feeling bitter or harsh. The burn stays straight, the draw stays consistent, and the finish is long and clean with a lingering pepper and wood note that sits comfortably on the palate long after the cigar is down. For a medium-to-full Nicaraguan puro, that kind of clean, composed finish is the hallmark of quality construction — and Amar delivers it.
OVERALL RATING
BLC OVERALL RATING
Amar earns 92 on the strength of its construction, its well-layered Nicaraguan profile, and a backstory that gives the cigar genuine weight. This is one of the first formal scores for the Toro — the line debuted at PCA 2026 and is still early in its retail life. What A.J. Fernandez built here is a cigar that performs at the level you expect from his name, priced where you can smoke it regularly. That combination is harder to pull off than it looks.
WHO GRABS THIS CIGAR
This is a cigar for the smoker who already knows what a well-made Nicaraguan puro is supposed to taste like and wants one with a little more meaning behind it. Medium-to-full in body and strength, with enough complexity to reward patience — this is an afternoon session cigar, an evening-on-the-patio cigar, somewhere you have an hour and a half and you actually want to pay attention to what’s in your hand.
The story behind Amar — the fire, the name, the dual heritage, the community it was built to honor — is the kind of thing that changes how a cigar lands once you know it. There are cigars you smoke and forget and cigars you smoke and find yourself thinking about later. Most of the time, the difference is the story. Amar has a real one.
FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS
Common questions about A.J. Fernandez Amar Toro 6×56.
