Some cigars you discover on a shelf. Others find you in the middle of a conversation you didn’t expect to have. Nasser The Goat by AJ Fernandez is one of the latter. At the PCA show, I spent about 15 or 20 minutes talking with Jeffrey Nasser — turns out he’s the man the cigar is named for, and one of the key minds behind the blend. We talked about the San Andrés profile, about what he and AJ Fernandez were trying to build, about why this particular combination of tobacco worked. Then we took a photo in front of the display together. That kind of conversation stays with you. So does the cigar.
What Nasser and Fernandez built here is a study in restraint with power. The Mexican San Andrés Maduro wrapper gives the blend its identity — dark, naturally sweet, with real depth underneath. AJ Fernandez’s construction wraps it all together in a way that keeps everything composed and deliberate. This is bold without being blunt, rich without being overdone. It carries itself with a little swagger, and it backs that up from the first draw to the final inch.
- Nasser The Goat — Nicaraguan-made by AJ Fernandez, Mexican San Andrés Maduro wrapper, Nicaraguan Corojo binder, Nicaraguan filler. Available in Toro (6×52) and Robusto (5×54). Around $16 per cigar.
- Dark chocolate, espresso, earth, black pepper, and toasted oak. Medium-to-full body with a natural sweetness underneath the darker notes. The San Andrés wrapper is doing exactly what it should be doing.
- BLC Rating: 95/100. One of my favorite cigars of 2025. The story behind it makes it better — the smoke makes it worth remembering on its own.
THE STORY BEHIND THE GOAT
AJ Fernandez built his name the old-fashioned way — by making cigars that deliver. His factory in Estelí, Nicaragua, has produced some of the most decorated blends of the past decade, and the through-line in nearly all of them is the same: real body, real flavor, and construction that makes the whole thing look easy. When a blender of that caliber partners with someone who has a specific vision for a cigar, the results tend to be worth paying attention to.
Jeffrey Nasser brought that vision. The cigar originated as an exclusive tied to Nasser’s Cigar Lounge before finding a wider audience, which is exactly how a cigar like this should work — it earned its reputation in a room full of people who know good tobacco before it ever hit a broader shelf. That kind of origin gives the blend credibility that no marketing campaign can manufacture. When I was at the AJ Fernandez booth at PCA and ended up talking with Nasser himself about how the blend came together, it confirmed what the cigar had already told me: this wasn’t built for hype. It was built to smoke well.
The real story of this cigar is what Nasser did with the San Andrés profile. Mexican San Andrés Maduro is one of the most expressive wrappers available — oily, naturally sweet, and capable of delivering complexity that thinner wrappers simply can’t. He built the whole blend around that profile, anchoring it in chocolate, coffee, earth, and pepper, and then let AJ Fernandez’s construction polish it until the edges disappeared. That combination of concept and craft is what puts this cigar in a category of its own.
BLC BLEND BREAKDOWN
BLEND SPECS
THE VITOLA LINEUP
| VITOLA | SIZE | MSRP |
|---|---|---|
| Toro — reviewed | 6 × 52 | ~$16 |
| Robusto | 5 × 54 | ~$14 |
The Toro at 6×52 is the right place to start. It gives the blend enough length to develop through all three phases without rushing any of them, and the 52 ring gauge keeps the smoke focused rather than diffuse. The Robusto at 5×54 — wider ring, shorter smoke — will give you a denser experience with a more concentrated expression of the same profile. Both are worth your time. The Toro is the one I’d reach for on a longer evening.
THE COLD DRAW
Before light, the San Andrés wrapper announces itself immediately — dark, earthy, with that faint natural sweetness underneath that distinguishes well-grown Mexican maduro from anything that tries to imitate it. The foot gives you roasted tobacco and black pepper, with a hint of cocoa just behind it. Cold draw has a firm, satisfying resistance that tells you the pack is right. The wrapper is dark and oily, the seams are clean, and the construction feels solid without being tight. This is a cigar that’s ready to perform.

BLC CIGAR PROFILE
This cigar lives in that medium-to-full lane where complexity and balance converge. The San Andrés wrapper contributes a natural sweetness that lifts the darker notes — chocolate, espresso, and earth — without softening them. There’s real body here, but the balance score is the story. A cigar with this much presence could easily tip into heaviness or one-note intensity, but The Goat never does. Every element has a purpose and a place. That’s not an accident — it’s what happens when a serious blender and a serious concept meet the right factory floor.
THE FIRST THIRD
The opening draw delivers exactly what the cold draw promised. Dark chocolate leads, rich and immediate, with roasted coffee sitting just behind it. Black pepper rolls in on the retrohale — warm, present, but calibrated rather than aggressive. The smoke is dense and full, the texture is smooth, and the burn line comes in even and steady. There’s a natural sweetness from the San Andrés wrapper that threads through the profile just enough to keep the opening from turning sharp or dry. This is the kind of first third that slows you down — not because anything is wrong, but because everything is right.
THE SECOND THIRD
The second third is where The Goat earns its reputation. The chocolate note deepens and becomes richer. Earthy, woodsy tones come forward and add structure to a profile that was already well-built. The espresso note sharpens without turning bitter. The pepper keeps its presence on the retrohale without overpowering the rest of the blend. What stands out in this phase is how the whole profile stays cohesive — nothing breaks away from the pack, nothing fades out, nothing fights for the wrong kind of attention. That kind of balance in the second third tells you the blend was thought through from the start, not just the opening notes.

THE FINAL THIRD
The final third brings more intensity — the espresso turns toward char, the earth deepens, the pepper reasserts with a little more authority. But the cigar stays composed. There is no bitterness, no heat spike, none of the muddy retrohale that weaker blends fall into in the last inch. The finish is long and clean, with a lingering dark chocolate and roasted coffee note that stays present well after the smoke is done. For a cigar with this much body and strength, that kind of clean finish is the final confirmation that the blend is exactly what it was meant to be.
OVERALL RATING
BLC OVERALL RATING
Nasser The Goat earns a 95 on the strength of its complexity, its balance, and its finish. The San Andrés wrapper delivers everything the profile needs, and AJ Fernandez’s construction makes sure none of it gets in the way of itself. This is a cigar that can grab your attention and back it up every single time. One of my favorite cigars of 2025 — and one I’ll keep coming back to.
WHO GRABS THIS CIGAR
This is the cigar for experienced smokers who want a fuller profile with real sophistication behind it — people who enjoy AJ Fernandez blends, who appreciate San Andrés maduro construction, and who want a smoke that does something interesting across an 80 to 90-minute session rather than just delivering strength. It is an evening cigar. A slower pace cigar. The kind you pull out when you have time and space to actually pay attention.
It also makes an excellent introduction to AJ Fernandez’s range for smokers who have been curious but haven’t found the right entry point. The balance keeps it from being intimidating despite the fuller body, and the $16 price point makes it easier to commit to a few to properly evaluate the blend. Pair it with a dark roast coffee or a high-rye bourbon to bring out the best in the profile, or reach for a cold brew if you prefer to keep spirits out of the session. Any way you come at it, this cigar rewards the effort.
FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS
Common questions about Nasser The Goat by AJ Fernandez.
