Plasencia Alma Fuerte Nestor IV: Five Generations in a Single Smoke

The family that grows more tobacco than anyone in Central America finally launched their own brand—and the Alma Fuerte proves they can make cigars every bit as well as they grow tobacco.

February 5, 2026
2 min read
Plasencia Alma Fuerte Nestor IV: Five Generations in a Single Smoke

For decades, the Plasencia family occupied a unique position in the cigar world: universally respected as the largest and finest tobacco growers in Central America, but known primarily as a supplier to other brands. Some of the most celebrated cigars in your humidor contain Plasencia-grown tobacco, even if the band says something else entirely. When the family finally launched their own brand in 2016, it was a seismic event—and the Alma Fuerte was their statement of intent.

"Alma Fuerte" translates to "Strong Soul," and it's an apt name for a cigar backed by five generations of tobacco expertise. The Nestor IV vitola is named after current family patriarch Nestor Plasencia Jr., the fourth generation, and it carries the weight of that heritage with evident pride.

The shade-grown Jalapa wrapper is beautiful—smooth, slightly oily, and releasing pre-light aromas of chocolate and aged cedar. Light it, and the first third delivers immediate richness: dark chocolate, espresso, and leather mingle with a chocolate-dipped graham cracker sweetness that is instantly addictive. There's a depth here that speaks to the family's access to the finest tobacco in Central America.

The second third introduces cinnamon, dried fruit, oak, and toast alongside brown sugar and a smoky barbecue depth that adds a savory dimension. The construction is impeccable—the Plasencias didn't spend five generations learning tobacco to produce a cigar that doesn't burn straight. The smoke is rich and plentiful, rewarding slow, contemplative puffs.

The final third delivers full-bodied plum, molasses, roasted coffee beans, and aged oak with a creamy yet powerful finish. The retrohale is leather, black pepper, and clove with milk chocolate warmth—a fitting crescendo to an exceptional smoke.

At $20, the Alma Fuerte competes directly with the Padron 1926, and while it doesn't quite reach those lofty heights, it offers a distinctive experience that is worth every penny. The Plasencia family proved they can make cigars as well as they grow tobacco, and the cigar world is richer for it.

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