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					Originally Posted by RobR1205  CA's top 25 has always made me ask myself lots of questions, one being:
 I wonder how the cigars are chosen for tasting, considering there are hundreds, if not thousands, of varieties out there to choose from....Do a bunch of cigar lovers sit in a room for a year and review cigars? (because if so, I'm putting in a job app!)
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 The list isn't formed from all the cigars out there, just all the cigars that they tested that year, typically new stuff, or new sizes in existing lines.  Past that, it's just multi-round blind or double-blind (not sure which they use offhand) tasting & elimination. 
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		| Deciding which cigar is the definitive best of the year isn't always an  easy task, especially in lieu of all the great cigars in the market. We  start by looking back at all the cigars tested throughout the year in  both Cigar Aficionado and Cigar Insider—more  than 700. Then we focus on the top-scoring smokes, and from there begin  the blind-tasting process all over again. Our tasting coordinator heads  out to the retail shops, purchases the cigars, removes the bands and  orchestrates an entirely new tasting. After multiple rounds, we arrive  at a list of 25. To name Cigar of the Year, however, we select the top three scores of  this new test and do one final round of tasting. But it’s important to  remember that Cigar Aficionado’s Top 25 Cigars of the Year  distinction is not a simple year-end awards ceremony. It’s a tournament  of performance and elimination and, is completely process driven. The  best cigars of the year were able to consistently reproduce high scores  throughout each round. Quality and consistency were crucial. Those that  could not perform consistently were out. What’s left are the cigars you  see here. Not everyone’s perennial favorites appear on the list, but  each cigar in this year’s Top 25 proved to be satisfying and excellent.
 
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 http://www.cigaraficionado.com/top25/show