Author Archives: CigarCraig

A La Flor Dominicana Event and La Palina Numbers Series

LFD EventWednesday I went to a La Flor Dominicana event at my local CigarCigars shop in Frazer, PA, which featured Litto Gomez, along with our area rep, Kyle Shackleton. It was a casual meet and greet without the usual presentation which Kyle does a great job with, but Litto just hung out with the crowd, and the turn out was quite good for a Wednesday afternoon. This shop is odd, in that it has early hours, opening at 6am and closing at 7pm, and often has events early on weekday afternoons, and they seem to do well with his schedule, and this event was very well attended and they sold a lot of LFD product. There were many people there who I’ve seen at surrounding CigarCigars stores, including several of the store managers and employees. Litto doesn’t make a lot of store appearances, it was special to have him visit our little corner of the world. This shop is only about 2 miles from my house, so it was super-convenient! I spoke to him briefly at the end of the event for an upcoming CigarCraig Podcast episode, so watch for that later this week.  While I was there I smoked a LFD Ligero Natural L-400.  This is a 6″ x 54 toro that I really enjoyed for the first half of the event.  It’s not the power-house that the Double Ligero is, but it’s no light-weight LFD L-400either. It has an Ecuador Sumatra wrapper that is flawless, as was the burn and draw, and it was a pleasure to smoke. I picked up another to smoke when I could really pay attention to it. I followed that with the LFD TAA cigar, wich was the freebie with the “buy 4, get one” promo, which I’ve had before and is a perfectly good cigar. I also picked up the TAA maduro, and ended up with one of the old event only cigars which I remember to be an incredible cigar. Like I said, it was a well attended event, the company was great, the selection was great, food from my favorite local Italian restaurant was great, if it hadn’t rained cats and dogs it would have been perfect! Fortunately the event was inside!

 

LFD Double Ligero Maduro ChiselOf course, I was inspired to keep the La Flor Dominicana think going Thursday for my evening walk with a LFD Double Ligero Chisel Maduro that I had picked up at the last event I attended. These are amazing cigars. They have actually patented the shape of this cigar, so any other cigar you see with this shape is in violation of the trademark! I use the technique Litto himself taught me several years ago when I asked him how he preferred to cut these, and he said to just give it a squeeze to pop the cap and peel the cap away, works like a charm. None of the silly punching one side or both or anything, just a squeeze and you’re ready to go. Maybe once in a while a bite sideways to open it up a little, but otherwise it’s all good. It’s also my finding that this method really slows the smoking time down considerably, with no loss of satisfaction. I routinely get a good 2½ hours from a 6″ x 54 figurado, making it an exceptional value if you have the time to commit. Great heavy flavors of espresso and spice.  This has been a favorite of mine for many years.

 

La Palina_Number01_RobustoFriday evening we went to the BB&T Pavilion in Camden, NJ (across the river from Philadelphia) to see David Byrne of Talking Heads fame. It was part of a local college radio station festival, and I wasn’t awfully impressed with the first four acts, and even less impressed with the heavy rains we sat through during those acts (a down side of lawn seats, free tickets, can’t complain). The upside is that smoking is allowed in the lawn seating area! I smoked a lovely La Palina Number Series 01 before the torrential rains, which was pretty a darned nice cigar.  Like the LFD L-400, this also has an Ecuador Sumatra wrapper, but it has a binder from Costa Rica and Honduran and Nicaraguan fillers, and is made in Placsencia’s Honduran El Paraiso factory.  The example I smoked was a 5½” x 50 robusto, which is a nice size, and only a few people sat down nearby, realized I was smoking a cigar, then moved away. It’s not like people weren’t smoking other stuff…anyway, this cigar has a little of the sourdough bread flavor that I know at least one of my readers digs, and I’ve grown a bit of an affinity for, with some earthiness, quite an enjoyable smoke. Of course, being able to enjoy a cigar and listen to live music isn’t a bad thing. Fortunately, we brought umbrellas and tarps, so we rode the storm out, and it was worth the wait, because David Byrne put on a spectacular show, very unique and entertaining. If you ever liked a Talking Heads song and you get a chance to see one of his shows, I highly recommend it. Heck, look it up on YouTube for a taste.

 

Between sets, after the rain, I smoked one of those little Undercrown Coronets from the tins, and while it was good, it really underscored to me why I don’t care for little cigars. This is a personal thing, and maybe it’s because I’m a reformed cigarette smoker, but I didn’t need that cigar. I felt like it was something I smoked to pass the time, and when I smoke a cigar, I smoke it to relax and I really want to spend an hour or so with he cigar. Like I said, these are fine if you need a fix, I’m not casting aspersions, it just reminds me of when I needed a cigarette at prescribed times and got antsy if I couldn’t do it. I can separate that now, but I got an uncomfortable feeling smoking that little cigar. Perhaps it’s just my current life situation and not wanting stress to push me down any roads I don’t want to go back down…

 

La Palina_Number02_RobustoAnyway, of course, I had to smoke the La Palina Number Series No. 02 Last night. This one has a Costa Rican Maduro wrapper over a Honduran binder and Nicaraguan and Honduran fillers, also made at El Paraiso in Honduras. The Robusto in this one is (unfortunately, in my opinion) a half n inch shorter at 5″ x 52, not sure what went into that decision. For me, that half an inch might represent another twenty minutes of smoking time! When I smoked these two cigars before, I came to the same conclusion, and that was that while I likes the No. 01 well enough, the No. 02 was the cigar that was right in my wheelhouse! This guy has semi sweet chocolate, dark roast coffee, an all around tasty treat. People don’t like the bands and packaging on these, they don’t bother me. Sure, I like the traditional look of the Family series and the Black, Red, Bronze, etc. Labels series, but  I actually prefer these over the Classic series bands which I find to be just blah. I think La Palina has something for every taste, whether it’s flavor or aesthetic.

 

That’s enough for today, off to work on a could projects around the house, have a podcast to put together and cigars to smoke!  Until the next time,

 

CigarCraig

 

 

 

 

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News: Sen. Marco Rubio Strongly Advocates for Premium Cigar Exemption

This came to me via the folks at J.C.Newman, written better than I ever could! Great speech, I tried to embed the video, but it was gikving me fits technically. so click the link in the article to go to the speech or the fine folks at J/C. Newman went to the trouble of transcribing it at the end of the piece. Fingers crossed that this makes a difference, the FDA comment period ended yesterday, I left mine, and the IPCPR/CRA left a 500+ page comment. Considering the FDA’s own studies show zero, I repeat, ZERO percent of children interested in premium cigars, perhaps they’ll at least get off that particular piece of the regulations…

 

In an 11-minute speech, Sen. Marco Rubio called for Congress to save Florida’s premium cigar industry – including J.C. Newman Cigar Co. in Tampa – from FDA’s excessive regulations.

 

Yesterday, Sen. Marco Rubio (R-FL) gave an impassioned speech on the floor of the United States Senate about the urgent need to exempt premium cigars from FDA regulation. His speech can be viewed here, https://www.c-span.org/video/?c4742275/sen-rubio-cigar-speech-july-26-2018 , and a full transcript is below.

 

Sen. Rubio noted that the premium cigar industry “is on the verge of extinction” because of excessive and costly FDA regulation that “was never intended to apply to premium cigars.” Exempting premium cigars, Sen. Rubio said, would “free up the FDA to go after what they intended to go after, what everybody thought this was about, which is common tobacco products like cigarettes.”

 

Sen. Rubio cited J.C. Newman Cigar Company, a four-generation, 123-year-old family business in Tampa. He explained that FDA regulations are projected to cost J.C. Newman’s historic Ybor City cigar factory $30 million – more than three times its annual revenue.

 

Legislation to exempt premium cigars from regulation was introduced by Sens. Rubio and Bill Nelson (D-FL) and Reps. Kathy Castor (D-FL) and Bill Posey (R-FL) and has been co-sponsored by more than 160 Members of Congress. Earlier this year, the House of Representatives included the exemption in a FY 2019 budget bill. Senator Rubio spoke yesterday while the Senate was considering companion legislation. When Congress finalizes the FY 2019 budget later this year, Senator Rubio said, “we’re going to be fighting for this. . . this needs to get fixed because this is the last chance.”

 

“We are extraordinarily grateful for Sen. Rubio’s leadership and support of Florida’s historic premium cigar industry,” said Eric Newman, president of J.C. Newman. “As Sen. Rubio noted, this is truly a bipartisan issue and one that Congress urgently needs to solve.”

 

“Our family has been proudly hand crafting, all natural premium cigars for more than a century,” said Bobby Newman, executive vice president of J.C. Newman. “Like Sen. Rubio explained, our premium cigars are nothing like cigarettes.”

 

“The premium cigar industry is an important part of Florida’s cultural heritage,” said Drew Newman, general counsel of J.C. Newman. “We sincerely appreciate Sen. Rubio bringing this important issue to the Senate floor and for fighting to save our historic industry.”

 

Transcript
In my home state of Florida, we have a rich history in manufacturing, hand-rolled premium cigars. And for those who aren’t familiar with it, a hand-rolled premium cigar is not the same thing as a cigarette.

 

Number one, they’re an expensive product, and they are consumed very differently from a cigarette or some other tobacco product. I would say they’re more like wine than they would be like a cigarette, for sure.

 

The interesting thing about the cigar industry and its history, not just in Florida, but in this country, is that almost exclusively, the manufacturers of premium, hand-rolled cigars are small, family-run businesses.

 

By the way, so, too, are the retailers that sell it. This is not the kind of thing you go and buy at 7-Eleven. There are stores that specialize in the sale of premium cigars. They cater to a clientele that can afford to buy these things and they’re significantly older than someone who would walk into a convenience store and buy a pack of cigarettes from behind the counter.

 

And the companies that are involved in this endeavor are not the big companies that we see involved generally in the tobacco industry. They’re family-owned businesses, both at the retail level and also at the manufacturing level. They are, in addition to all this, they represent a rich part of the cultural history of the Cuban community in Florida.

 

Ybor City in Tampa is an example of it. It was a city that — an area that was settled over a hundred years ago by Cubans that came to Tampa to start a very vibrant hand rolling cigar industry, which again these are hand-rolled, premium cigars. These are people literally sitting down and rolling it the leaves and these are high-end products.

 

This industry is on the verge of extinction. I’ll tell you why. In 2016, the previous administration, they finalized the rule based on a 2009 law that, by the way, it’s intended — its intended target was not premium cigars. They meant to go after tobacco products that were mass produced. But this law was interpreted that would require premium cigars to regulate the manufacture, the import, the packaging, the labeling, advertisement, promotion, sale, and the distribution of their products. And with each new product, they’d have to do it over again.

 

So from year to year, the premium cigar industry may change the blend inside the hand rolled cigar. They come in boxes of eight or 12. Every time that one of these things was changed, you’d have to redo the labels, redo the packaging, redo — everything would have to be completely redone which is simply cost prohibitive because these blends change constantly, especially as you bring new markets.

 

Now, I’ve offered an amendment to the minibus that’s before us that would exempt premium, hand-rolled cigars from the FDA regulation, not just so the industry can survive but so it can thrive and also to free up the FDA to go after what they intended to go after, what everybody thought this was about, which is common tobacco products like cigarettes and some of the other things that we are aware of.

 

Now, any time you talk about this, it gets a little tricky because people talk about tobacco use and causing cancer. I’m as sensitive to that as anyone. My father was a lifelong smoker. He lost his life in his early 80’s because of cigarette smoking. We need to do everything we can to discourage people from smoking and consuming tobacco, especially cigarettes that are consumed in mass quantity and are cheap to buy in large quantities. I would note that it is already illegal to sell tobacco products to anyone who is under the age of 18. I would also tell you that beyond that, that the numbers have continued to decline in tobacco use. So we know that the laws that are in place and the programs have worked.

 

But one of the things that we’ve focused on that’s brought to bear some of these issues is that tobacco is a legal product and small — tobacco is a legal product and small manufacturing of cigars is being harmed by this but the regulations were not intended for them. The regulations were designed to target cigarettes for flavored, fat cigarettes and other commonly used tobacco products, the kinds that could potentially be marketed to young people, that are not like a premium cigar five, eight, $10 each one, $80, $90 a box but the sort of flavored fat cigarettes, all the new stuff that’s coming out that you can buy if behind the counter and they’re very cheap to buy and they’re manufactured, mass manufactured. That’s what the rule was about.

 

It was never intended to apply to premium cigars but the way it was written and the way the rule was interpreted, that’s would it’s now doing. It’s putting the same requirement on a completely different product and it’s a requirement they simply can’t meet.

 

And here’s the irony of it. All of the things that were targeted under this new rule are going to survive. They’re still going to be around. A little bit more expensive, a little harder to bring to market. But they are still going to survive. All the mass-produced tobacco products will continue — continue to be more accessible. But the premium cigar manufacturers are going to get wiped out. One more irony in all of this — it is still illegal to mass-import Cuban cigars, but you can bring them in on an individual quantity. Those are not impacted by these regulations at all. None whatsoever. So you just think about that for a moment. A product made in another country doesn’t have to meet the same guidelines but has all the same attributes.

 

Now, I talked a little moment ago about Tampa and in particular Ybor City. And today after all these time there’s only one factory left, a company called J.C. Newman. It is within the area and is known as Cigar City. They’ve been making premium cigars — not cigarettes, not flavored cigarettes, not JUULs so people can vape. I’m talking about premium, expensive, handmade cigars. They’ve been making them since 1895 and that’s going to come to an end in the very near future in this rule goes through. They’re a profitable company. They sell about $10 million worth of product annually. That sound like a lot of money. It is nothing compared to the mass-produced tobacco products. It is going to cost them three times that amount just to comply with the FDA regulations. Three times just as much — upwards of $30 million to comply with the way this rule has been interpreted.

 

The sad part about it is that everyone knows this. You go to the FDA and they say, look, we get it. The law was supposed to go after these guys, but that’s the way it was written. Everyone admits it. But yet that’s the way it’s going to be. And not just J.C. Newman, it’s going to put other retailers, and then the specialty cigar stories, it is going to put them out of business all because of a stupid regulation that was written as a result of a law that was not properly drafted and interpreted inappropriately. The federal government is going to put these guys out of business. And the irony is the people that they were trying to impact by the regulation are going to survive and remain in business and be as — survive and remain in business and be as successful as ever and the people that it was not meant to harm are going to get wiped out.

 

This is the epitome of government overreach abuse. Regardless if the business is 100 years old, this represents the livelihood of hundreds of American families. There are people that work in the factory, own those retail stores and they are going to be out of work not because the market shifted, not because Americans no longer wanted to smoke premium cigars. They’re going to be out of business because no one can stay in business if the cost of following the law is three times as much as what you can make. You can’t do it. That is legal product made by a hardworking Americans who have been designee it for a very — doing it for a very long time, not the intended target of this rule. And it is unjust for them to be singled out, just unfair, it’s wrong.

 

Here is the worst part about this rule. It is written retroactively. Not only will they have to start complying moving forward. You could argue just don’t change your blend in the future. They will have to go back and relabel, repackage everything they have been making for the past 11 years. That explains the cost for just this one business. By the way, they’ve broken no laws and yet they’ve been singled out and this threatens their livelihood.

 

This is a bicameral and bipartisan issue. A number of members here in the Senate from across the aisle agree with this. I have been working with Senator Nelson on this for a long time. This is not a partisan issue, this is, no sir, a big tobacco issue. This is — this is not a big tobacco issue. This is a premium cigar issue consumed by people in different ways. You don’t smoke ten cigars a day.

 

We just know — common sense. But this is what’s going to happen. We’re going to wipe these guys out because of a government rule and the way it was interpreted, even though it was never meant to be about them.

 

We have an amendment, we have a law that fixes all this. I’m not going to offer it on this bill because it’s already part of the House package that lines up with the appropriations bills that are before us. But I wanted to point this out because I know people in Ybor City and I know people who care about this are watching. And I want them to know when this issue gets conferenced with the House that we’re going to be fighting for this, that this needs to get fixed because this is the last chance.

 

That’s the other point. This rule is about to kick in. The comment period is about to end, and the rule is going to kick in. So this is our last chance. If we don’t get it right here when we work this out, this is going to happen.

 

You’re going to be reading about it and maybe it doesn’t matter in some places. It matters a lot to Florida. It matters a lot to this company in Ybor City, in Tampa. It matters a lot to the hundreds and thousands of people across the country who work in the retail shops that sell them and who work in the places hand rolling and making them. And this is just wrong. And we should do everything we can to stop it from happening. And I hope that we will in conference deal with this issue. I’m glad it’s in the House version. I wish we could get it in the Senate version. We’re going to fight to include it in the final version.

 

We are not going to stand by and watch as J.C. Newman and small businesses like them are put out of business by a rule that was never supposed to apply to them.

 

Mr. President, I yield the floor and suggest the absence of a quorum.

 

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News: Mombacho Cigars S.A. Expands International Distribution and Debuts New Look for Liga Maestro

Here’s some news from the folks at Mombacho Cigars: 

 

Mombacho Cigars S.A. has broadened its international reach by adding distributors in four new countries.  Germany, Japan, Mexico and Norway are now among the 16 countries where Mombacho Cigars are sold.

 

“Awareness of our brand is not only growing in the US, but internationally as well,” said Robert Rasmussen, Brand Manager of Mombacho Cigars.  “Our cigars can now be found in 16 countries worldwide and we are working diligently to continue expanding into more nations.”

 

Mombacho Cigars S.A. is a Canadian owned company established in 2006 that entered the US market in 2014.  The international interest in Mombacho has grown rapidly and Mombacho cigars are now available in Australia, Canada, China, Denmark, Dominican Republic, Germany, Guatemala, Italy, Japan, Mexico, Nicaragua, Norway, Spain, Switzerland and Trinidad and Tobago.

 

“The recent IPCPR trade show was a success for Mombacho, both in terms of retailers in the US and our distribution worldwide,” said Claudio Sgroi, President and Master Blender of Mombacho Cigars. “It is beautiful to see the love for Mombacho spread across the globe.”

 

Mombacho also unveiled new boxes for their Liga Maestro line at the recent IPCRP trade show in Las Vegas.  The new boxes feature a matte black finish with a gold embossed Mombacho logo and have already begun shipping to retailers.  Tierra Volcán will be available in similar boxes later this year.

Mombacho Liga Maestro

 

ABOUT MOMBACHO CIGARS

Mombacho Cigars, S. A. was founded in 2006 to provide premium handmade cigars through memorable experiences in select markets around the world, including Canada, China, Italy and, since 2014, the United States. Mombacho produces all of its products at its factory in Granada, Casa Favilli, where over 30 members of the Mombacho Family work. For more information, contact Robert Rasmussen, Brand Manager of Mombacho Cigars at rob@mombachocigars.com.

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News: Plasencia Cigars’ Alma Del Campo: The World Champion of Cigars

I missed this last week somehow, it seemed like a neat story, so I thought I’d share. I still haven’t had the Alma Del Campo yet, it’s on my ever-growing list…
Plasencia Cigars, the leading producer of premium cigars and the largest producer of tobacco in Central America, was awarded 1st place in a consumer cigar blind tasting held by Manuel’s, one of the finest and most renowned cigar shops in Zürich, Switzerland. The award was conferred for its Alma del Campo Tribu cigar, one of the company’s first brand name cigars to be introduced to the market.
This is the second time Manuel’s hosts a blind tasting among its consumers – this time around with the timely theme of soccer. Broken into four rounds over the span of four weeks, with half of the top-rated cigars moving up to the next round, the search for the best cigar in the world consisted of 16 Robusto-size cigars, eight Cubanos, and eight non-Cubanos, including products from Nicaragua, Honduras, Costa Rica, and the Dominican Republic. Cigars were reviewed and judged on a preliminary maximum 50-point scale based on their processing and construction (10 points), aroma and taste (20 points), smoke (10 points), and overall quality (10 points).
In the final round, Alma Del Campo and Cohiba Robusto were then rated by approximately 100 consumers under the same categories. Alma Del Campo received a total rating of 91 points out of a possible 100, securing its spot as the champion among cigars from all over the world -a title which was previously held by Cuban Juan Lopez Seleccion No. 2 in 2014.
“We are proud to have been selected by Manuel’s as the top cigar in Switzerland,” said Nestor Plasencia, CEO of Plasencia Cigars. “Competitions such as Manuel’s blind tastings are imperative to our company, because the top cigar is selected by consumers, and that’s who we think about when creating our product.”  
“This year’s competition was fierce with some of the top cigar brands in the world participating,” said Manuel Fröhlich, owner of Manuel’s. “We want to congratulate the team at Plasencia, a family owned business and today’s biggest premium tobacco producer, for winning the public’s vote for its Alma del Campo cigar’s creaminess and voluminous smoke.” 

Alma del Campo is a complex smoke with the perfect balance, showing flavors of coffee and nuts. It is a very creamy cigar with a touch of spice. The cigar has a fantastic finish that seems to leave a memorable experience on the palate. Alma del Campo is available in five vitolas.
The cigar brands competing in the blind tasting contest included:
  • Plasencia Cigars
  • Cohiba Robusto
  • Blind Man’s Bluff Robusto
  • Bolivar Royal Corona
  • Brun del Ré Gold Robusto
  • Camacho Nicaraguan Barrel Aged
  • Davidoff 702 Grand Cru Robusto
  • Drew Estate Liga Privada
  • Enclave Robusto of AJ Fernandez
  • H. Upmann Connoisseur
  • Juan Lopez Seleccion No.2
  • Montecristo Open Master
  • Partagas Serie D No. 4
  • Quesada Reserva Privada Robusto
  • Quintero
  • Romeo y Julieta Short Churchill
Visit plasenciacigars.com. Follow along on Instagram and Twitter @PlasenciaCigars and Facebook.com/Plasencia-Cigars. Join the conversation with #PlasenciaCigars.
About Plasencia Cigars
The foundation for Plasencia Cigars began in 1865 when Eduardo Plasencia started growing tobacco in Cuba. Three decades later the business was expanded, and the Corojal Farm in Cuba’s Vuelta Abajo region was established. Since then, five generations of the Plasencia Family have been growing tobacco. They are greatly regarded in the industry as being one of the largest producers of first-class cigar tobacco in Nicaragua. Today, Plasencia Cigars manufactures more than 35 million handmade cigars per year, growing tobacco on 3,000 acres combined in several locations throughout Central America: four in Nicaragua, three in Honduras, one in Costa Rica, and one in Panama.

 

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New Cigars I’m Anticipating, a Fonseca, a Diesel and a Tatuaje

I mentioned in my last post that as I’ve been seeing news come from the IPCPR one of the things I miss is getting my hands on some of the new products that come out, lots of times months in advance of them hitting the stores. As I get on in years (I think using the phrase “get on in years” is, in it’s self, proof that I am), I find my interest waning in obscure, new, little, unheard of, never again to be seen brands which always seem to find their way into the IPCPR samples, and I don’t miss having to wade through those, heck, I probably still have some from years past that I can’t figure out what they are and Google isn’t even a help. That might be a fun blog post, I guess I need to work on that. Anyway, several things I’ve either posted about in the lead up to the show through news items, or read about elsewhere, piqued my interest. From Drew Estate, really the notable cigar to grab my attention is the Liga Privada H99. The bundles the announced really don’t excite me, I think La Viaja Habana comes very close to playing in this space and I don’t understand the need, just expand that brand into the bundle space, but JD is the master of marketing, not me, he has a job and I don’t so who am I to say? The Liga 10th anniversary is cool but I’ve smoked it, been there, done that. But a Corojo wrapper grown in the Connecticut River Valley intrigues the crap out of me and I’m in. Same with Willy’s new Brazilian wrapped Herrera Esteli, and I’ll give the Ligas a shot in the Corona Viva sizes if the opportunity arises (or opportunities arise) and the Undercrown Dogma is a proven winner in my book. From the Joya side, of course I’m interested in the Cinco Dècadas, the Quatro Cinco was exceptional, and I’ve been a big fan of the brand for a long time. The Joya Silver is also on my radar, although the Red and Black in that series have not been in my wheelhouse for some reason (the Cabinetta having been added to that new age kinda series is still a little weird for me, it came out in 2010, still a favorite in the shade wrapped genré).

 

Fonseca NicaraguaFriday evening I went back to a cigar that came out at the 2016 IPCPR show, the Fonseca Nicaragua Toro, a classic 6″ x 50 Nicaraguan Puro, with a Criollo ’98 wrapper from Jalapa, Jalapa binder and fillers from Esteli and Ometepe made at Placencia for Quesada Cigars. I smoked this at the show back in ’16 and was quite impressed and bought a bunch at a local shop when I got home. These are reasonably priced, I think the Toro being the largest and most expensive in the line in the $6 range online or in reasonable cigar tax states. This cigar continues to impress me every time I remember to smoke it, the flavors are kinda woody with some sweetness and a little coffee and maybe a hint of spice here and there.  Cigar Aficionado had this on their Best Buys of 2017 and I tend to agree, this is a good deal, and aged very well.

 

Of course, there were plenty of other cigars I look forward to trying from the show, and General Cigars has a bunch. The Hoya Black is one for sure, along with the new Punch Diablo, which I posted the news about back on July 6, both made by A.J. Fernandez. I don’t think there is one cigar media outlet that will tell you otherwise, General Cigar Co. rolls out the red carpet for media, and gives a structured, on time, tour of the booth, with supporting media, samples, whatever you need, and they are simply the gold standard when it comes to booth tours for media. I’ve been through their booths at seven of the eight trade shows I’ve attended (one was pre-blog) and have always gotten first class treatment. I missed seeing all my friends there too!  I look forward to the new La Gloria Cubana Esteli (different from the Serie R Esteli), the new Partagas Legend, CAO Nicaragua, and I’d happily sit down with my old buddy Sean Williams and smoke the new Cohiba Spectre, but at $90 a cigar, I’m not holding my breath!

 

Yesterday I was assembling and IKEA piece on the porch and I find that the best way to reduce the profanity during one of those projects is to have a cigar while doing it. It worked, and everything went together like it should have. The cigar I chose, the Diesel Whiskey Row, I chose while writing this piece in my head, because it’s the one new release from General Cigar Co. that had been released in advance of the show. Justin Andrews, who’s the brand manager and ambassador for the Diesel line is very proud of this cigar, he told me that it took him several trips to Nicaragua and well over a year to convince AJ to put his tobacco in bourbon barrels. I’ve since heard that AJ is now begging for more barrels, he’s so fond of the results. In the official press release, I found this one passage interesting:

AJ Fernandez says, “A lot of passion went into this process and I am very pleased with the results. Aging the binder leaf in the bourbon barrels added an unexpected layer of flavor and aroma right beneath the wrapper. When you smoke Whiskey Row, you get a unique and complex experience that engages the senses unlike any other cigar I’ve smoked.”

I imagine he said something more like this:

“Pasé un montón de pasión en este proceso y estoy muy satisfecho con los resultados. Envejecer la hoja de encuadernación en los barriles de bourbon agregó una capa inesperada de sabor y aroma justo debajo del envoltorio. Cuando fumas Whiskey Row, obtienes una experiencia única y compleja que atrapa los sentidos a diferencia de cualquier otro cigarro que he fumado “.

Diesel Whiskey RowOK, so that’s just my own twisted sense of humor, unless AJ’s English has gotten a LOT better since the last time I “talked” to him…anyway, the Whiskey Row is an interesting cigar. Of course, the burn is excellent, the draw is perfect, the ash is nice, but that’s the way cigars are supposed to be. As always, any spirits references are lost on me, but the base flavor to my palate is an umami I guess, I want to say, mushroomy, kinda savoryness, that is one of the few flavors that doesn’t really resonate with me in a cigar. There are obviously some people who are going to love the heck out of this cigar, and it’s not that it was offensive to me or made me want to throw up (that’s a mushroom story from the ’80s for another time), it’s just not my go to favorite flavor. Based on the blend, which is Nicaraguan Ometepe, Condega and Jalapa, each aged 5 to 8 years, bourbon-barrel-aged Mexican binder, wrapped in Ecuadoran Habano which is aged for five years, I don’t think I should be tasting what I’m tasting, and maybe I’m way off, maybe it’s just earthey and woody, but a, earth and wood I don’t care for. I like most nuts, but I can’t stand walnuts. It’s a solid cigar, it got me through my project with minimal swearing, and I did get to about the 1″ mark before I put it down, so how objectionable could it have been? I’ll have to get a series of bourbon barrel aged cigars together and see how they compare one of these days, is there any non-alcoholic bourbon so I can get an idea what the flavor of bourbon is? 🙂

 

Some other cigars I heard about at the show and look forward to trying are Foundation Cigar Co.s new The Tabernacle Havana Seed CT #142, another new strain to the Connecticut River Valley. Another I’m looking for is the Inch Ringmaster from EP Carillo, just because anything from EPC interests me, and I’m still exploring his line up. I’d say what everyone else is saying and put Dunbarton Tobacco and Trust’s Sin Compromiso on the list, but I’ve smoked it, and it’s fantastic (Oh yeah, the pre-release samples I smoked I was asked not to write about…they were really really good, the torpedo had pre-light nose of the wood fire curing that Saka talked about in an interview I heard with him recently, might have been on one of Cigar-Coop’s podcasts…an absolutely stellar cigar, I look forward to the regular production, although the price will up there!). Crux cigars is a line I need to familiarize myself with with the addition of my old friend Roy McLaren to the team. Except for the few Ninfa darks some time ago, I’m relatively ignorant of the brand. I can’t think of anything else off the top of my head, although I’m sure someone will remind me of a glaring omission.  Like I said, I’m on a rapid spiral to curmudgeondom, I could probably be happy smoking about twenty brands in rotation these days.

 

Tatuaje_ReservaBroadleaf_J21Last night I decided to treat myself with another cigar from the 2016 IPCPR show. I have vivid memories of stopping in the Tatuaje booth first think on the third day of the show and finding it empty, to my delight. For once, I had a chance to sit down with Pete Johnson uninterrupted, virtually unheard of. My first show as a blogger, Pete was the first person I met, and he gave me a La Riqueza Lancero, and, due to a scheduling snafu, I was only on the show floor for about 3 hours, so that was my only cigar of the show, and I didn’t meet too many people. So I was ready to get some great video and have a good conversation with Pete for a change. Dontcha know, Laura, who handles social media for the IPCPR, and should know better (yeah, I’m throwing you under the bus, Laura!), excuses herself to interrupt to introduce some middle-eastern journalist to Pete, who ends up monopolizing the discussion for about 20 minutes, introducing another guy, and it all went to hell. Pete had an appointment, I had an appointment, we were both (Pete and I) too polite to tell this guy to F-off), and I didn’t get my great one on one video (again). On the positive side, Pete did give me a couple of the Tatuaje Reserva Broadleaf J21s, as they were launching that huge $1200 100 count box collection of the Broadleaf wrapped Reservas at the show, and I smoked my last one last night. Boy was that a great cigar, and I’m envious of the folks who had the coin to drop on those cigars. I would have bought singles here and there, but the smallest quantity I was presented with to purchase was ten (one of each size) and I didn’t have the hundo in the budget at the time,  and I only wanted specific sizes.  This J21 with  two years of age was smooth, sweet, rich with everything I love in broadleaf, in Tatuaje cigars in general. Two years after release, are people selling singles now?

 

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

 

CigarCraig

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