Monthly Archives: March 2018

Jose Blanco at Goose’s Montecristo Lounge & a Cross Street Tobacco Visit

Friday evening I was privileged to attend one of José Blanco’s (of E.P. Carillo Cigars) educational tasting events at Goose’s Montecristo Lounge and Tobacconist in Limerick, PA.  José has done over 900 of these events around the world, and they are unique. My first experience with his seminar was at an IPCPR show in 2011 in a room with Jose Blanco at Goosesseveral hundred people. It involved four separate cigars, if memory serves, not the single toro cigar with four stripes of different wrappers applied. This time there were fifteen in attendance, I dragged my amigo Mike along for the ride, I’ve gone to many events with Mike, but this is the first with an educational component. Mike has been smoking cigars longer than I have, and met a couple years ago when he was a winner of one of my holiday contests and we met at another local shop. I always enjoy smoking cigars with Mike. I don’t think I’ve had a bad time smoking cigars with José Blanco either, he’s never ruined a great cigar for me (if Jose Blanco at Gooses2you’ve ever been to one of his events, or read just about anything about them, José’s theory is that a perfect cigar can be ruined by smoking it next to an asshole, so that’s my way of saying he’s not an asshole). Not to brag or anything, but I was able to partially identify three of the four wrappers presented on the special cigar, they were mostly educated guesses, or just luck.  The one I missed was embarrassing, as it was probably a tobacco I’ve smoked as much of in my life as any. I’m intentionally leaving out specifics so José doesn’t have to have the factory change up the cigars, which he said the rollers only are able to make 50 or 60 of a day, and they would be very expensive if they were regular production. The base cigar was very good on its own, however, being able to taste the subtle Jose Blanco at Gooses3differences each wrapper presents is neat and educational. Any time spent with Jose is educational and enjoyable, the attendees at the event were friendly and engaged in the event, a couple of them even claimed to be readers of this site! It was a fun evening complete with great cigars, and they even had a photographer, Brian Miller of http://www.chorusphotography.com there taking photos! He took a great photo of me, no easy task since I usually look like a deer in headlights in pictures. Find me on Facebook as I’ made it my profile picture. I wrapped the evening up with the Broadleaf wrapped EP Carillo Dusk in the toro size. I love the Broadleaf, and this one wears it well. It’s rich and had that cocoa/espresso thing going on which I gravitate toward.

 

Yesterday, all my troubles….nevermind, although the reference is appropriate since I was supposed to drop my wife off at the Fest for Beatles Fans in Jersey City yesterday and go visit Hoboken Cigars.  Plans changed and we decided to head the other direction and go to Baltimore in search of Beatles books, my wife reviews books on her blog, Beatles-Freak’s Reviews, so we went to The Book Thing, went to Philip’s at the Inner Harbor for lunch (Crab Inch Maduro 62Mac & Cheese!), then found another little used book store on the way to Cross Street Tobacco for an after lunch cigar. There was a cigar lounge closer to the Inner Harbor, but it was in Larry Flynt’s Hussler Club, which didn’t sound like a family friendly place. Cross Street Tobacco is a great little shop with a very well stocked humidor and a lively clientele. There were about 20 chairs in the shop, and they brought out some folding chairs at one point. Sanford was working, he’s been working there Saturdays since they opened in 1996. They had a great selection, it was hard for me to choose what I wanted to smoke. Of course, since I’m in Pennsylvania, the land of no cigar tax, I’m often sticker-shocked when I shop in other states. That being said, their prices weren’t terrible, I picked up a couple of Inch Maduro No. 62, at 5″ x 62 with a Connecticut Broadleaf wrapper. I really like Connecticut Broadleaf!  It had occurred to me the night before that I hadn’t smoked the Inch line at all, don’t know why, just never managed to pick any up. It’s not like I’m averse to large ring gauges, and I’m certainly a fan of Ernesto Carillo‘s work, and it had come up in conversation last night. We ended up talking to a patron who was a music fan who told us we had to visit Protean Books & Records, which is in the shadow of Camden Yards, a couple blocks away, which we ended up doing. I can’t recommend Cross Street Tobacco in Baltimore more highly. Although small, it’s a classic shop with a great selection and staff and a lively customer base. The cigar was great, as was the overall experience.

 

Senorial_Maduro_ElCuadroI got home late last night and needed to get Macha out for a walk, so I was thinking about what cigar might fit in with the theme of the weekend. I could smoke another E.P. Carillo cigar, I’ve accumulated a few here and there, or a La Gloria Cubana. Then I came across a Señorial Maduro El Cuadro by José Blanco.  A corona gorda measuring 5¾” x 46, actually one of my favorite sizes, was perfect for a short walk and unwinding from a two-hour drive. Señorial is getting hard to find around here, although, and it pains me to say, a local shop had these on their clearance shelf. The Señorial Maduro has a Mexican San Andrés Negro wrapper, with Dominican binder and filler. This vitola was presented at the 2016 IPCPR show, and might have been the last domestic release of the brand.  It was a lovely cigar with a sweet earthy flavor that made me happy. The cigar was neither too big or too short, it was just right. I linked to the Señorial Facebook page because the Las Cumbres Tobaco site seems to now be about make-up, fitness and breast enhancement, I have no idea what that’s all about. Anyway, the Señorial was great, buy them up if you can find them.  Maybe I’ll smoke a Freya today, I haven’t smoked on of those since I was in Iceland, where it seemed like the appropriate cigar to smoke.

 

It was a great weekend, even if it’s an hour shorter than 50 other weekends in the year. The payoff for the shortened weekend is more daylight in the evening hours, which I like.  That’s all for now, until the next time,

 

CigarCraig

 

 

 

 

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Dunbarton Tobacco & Trust Muestra de Saka Nacatamale

MuestraDeSaka_NacatamaleToday was a snowy day here in PA, so I decided to take the afternoon off of work so I didn’t have to risk the drive home in rush hour. This turned out to be anticlimactic, as the snow tapered off, but, after clearing the slop off the driveway, I decided to hang out on the porch with Macha and a Dunbarton Tobacco & Trust Muestra de Saka Nacatamale. I’ve had a couple of these in the humidor for a few months now, waiting for the right time to spark one up, and decided this was it.  Last year I smoked a Muestra de Saka Exclusivo with a couple of friends, and really enjoyed it, although it was a milder cigar, with loads of flavor and complexity, and last week I gave the Todos Las Dias another try, and I’m still looking forward to smoking one that draws well, it seems like those really need to be stored at a lower humidity. I went into the Nacatamale with no expectations, except to have a high quality smoking experience.  I was not disappointed.  This is a perfect sized cigar, 6″ x 48, with a nice pigtail cap.  These are made at the Joya de Nicaragua factory in Esteli, which celebrates its 50th year this year, and is one of my very favorite factories (I’ve had the good fortune of visiting the factory on two occasions). Blend information is elusive, some outlets say there are tobaccos from all of the tobacco-growing regions of Nicaragua and it’s a puro, others state that the fillers are all from a single farm, with MuestraDeSaka_Nacatamale2and Ecuador Habano wrapper and Nicaraguan binder. Perhaps there’s some confusion with the Exclusivo, perhaps the confusion is my own. It hardly matters to me, it’s a great cigar and I lean toward the single farm origin. The Nacatamale is a full flavored cigar, it has some punch to it, and strong, rich flavors of wood and chocolate with some subtle spice. While I think the Exclusivo was closer in character to the Sobremesa, I likened the Nctamaale more to the Mi Querida, not the same, just closer in general. I loved it, I’d happily purchase these, as I did with the Exclusivos (the Nacatamales were gifted to me by the company), but as Steve Saka would tell you himself, I like cheap cigars, hence my enjoyment of the Umbagog. The presentation is outstanding with the individual coffins and ribbon on the foot. Thanks to Steve and Cindy for the opportunity to smoke this cigar on a rare afternoon off.

 

That’s all for today, until the next time,

 

CigarCraig

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Saint Luis Rey, Mark Twain and Debonaire Cigars

I have a co-worker who likes cigars and we’ve been trading smokes back and forth over the last few months. he lives in the Allentown, PA area, so he’s in the CI stores pretty often. When I say trading, it started with one of the guys telling him I liked cigars, and him gifting me a couple as a welcome to the company kind of thing. I responded in kind, as I’m the one who’s supposed to be giving cigars to people, ya know?  Over the last year or so he still doesn’t get it. So it’s become a thing, the same bag being passed back and forth SaintLuisRey_Titanever other Monday. Oddly, he seems to find cigars I haven’t tried.  One of which was a Saint Luis Rey Titan.  He gave me one of these last year and I had the unfortunate experience of literally falling on my face in the street with the cigar in my mouth.  I was digging it too, and it smashed, probably saving my teeth and nose form damage.  So I had an opportunity to give it another go this week, and I really enjoyed it.  It’s made in Honduras with a Nicaraguan wrapper and binder, and fillers from Honduras, Nicaragua and Peru.  When I look at the Altadis portfolio and think that there are only a select few cigar in it I like, I forget about the Saint Luis Rey.  I really liked think in the 90s when I believe they were made by Julio Eiroa, but my recollection could be flawed. ck to the cigar, I really like these, it probably has to do with that peruvian tobacco, I love what that does to a blend. There’s an interesting and unique spice the it brings. The cigar burned well, I didn’t fall on my face, and life was good. The size is 5½” x 60, and I found that it was a good size. I don’t mind a 6×60, or 4½x60, or 4×60 even, so this was good. These are a very good value.

 

MarkTwain_MemoirNo2Next from my coworker, we’ll call him “Stan” so I don’t have to keep typing “coworker”, was a 6″x60 Mark Twain Memoir No.2.  He gave this to me a while ago, and I sat on it a while. I remember that Mark Twain smoked terrible cigars to keep the moochers from mooching his cigars, so maybe not a great branding idea?  So with a bit of trepidation I lit it up. Not bad at all!  There’s not a lot of information about this line out there, it seems to be Nicaraguan in make-up, which seems right and has a Pennsylvania Broadleaf wrapper, which is very intriguing. It’s a Meier and Dutch distributed brand, so it would be available to B&Ms, but most of the outlets that seem to have it online are in the CI Family.  These are under $4, which makes them a tremendous value I think, because it was a solid cigar. It had a pleasing flavor, there were more interesting flavors than in some pricier cigars. I don’t know where this is made, but it was of good quality, which probably would have put it out of Samuel Clemens’ wheelhouse. Nothing to fear there, I’d smoke them again, and I like what the PA Broadleaf adds

 

“Stan” also gave me a RoMEo 505, which I’ve enjoyed before, and the one I smoked this week came from a purchase a few months ago. I also had a yearning for a Hemingway Short Story, b

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ut I came across a Maduro Best Seller first and had to smoke it, what a special little smoke! I also grabbed a Herrera Esteli TAA edition. Oddly, the Herrera Esteli Dobonaire_Maduro_Sagitaline doesn’t excite me as much as it does others. I love the Norteño, and I happily smoke the Herrera Estelis and think Willie is a great guy, but I’m afraid it’s not a cigar I go out of my way for. I do keep trying though.  So I’ll wrap this up with the Debonaire Maduro Sagita.  I

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forget the circumstance, but Friday I wanted a smaller cigar, I remember, it was snowing like crazy, I dropped my wife off at a job, got home t find out it was canceled, and headed back out to get her. So when I got home I was more than ready for a smoke, if only to calm my shattered nerves.  I am well familiar with the Debonaire Maduro, as well as the Habano, but I haven’t tried the Daybreak yet.  Anyway, The Sagita is a 5½” x 38 petite lancero. It has a Connecticut Broadleaf wrapper over Dominican and “Central American” fillers. Interesting fact about the Debonaire line: only the wrappers change, the blend stays the same, and it’s a tasty blend. Phil Zanghi uses what he calls an alchemy process to turn his tobacco into gold,  and I do enjoy the cigars. The Maduro adds a sweetness to the savory blend that I find appealing. Thanks to Drew Estate, who distributes the line, for sending these along.

 

That’s about all I have for today. I’m happy that Spring seems to be close, and Daylight Savings time closer. Hopefully I can get back on the two posts a week schedule soon. I had a thought about supplementing with some sort of video, although I’m not entirely sure about that… Until the next time,

 

CigarCraig

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