Thursday evening I went to the new Cigar Mojo location in Malvern, PA. which is about a mile closer to my house than the next nearest cigar store, which is two miles away. Yes, I could walk there if I so chose. Wade and Trae have built a really nice shop and lounge in a small center with restaurants, an Ax throwing venue, several other businesses, located adjacent to a huge corporate park in suburban Philly. The humidor is massive, and will soon be impressively stocked, and the lounge is well appointed and comfortable. I’ve been told that they are currently fully staffed ;-). Anyway, they had an inaugural event there with Francisco Almonte of DBL Cigars and I couldn’t manage to find an excuse not to make the one mile trek over there. Francisco has a background with the Fuente and LFD factories, and went out on his own probably ten years ago or more. I think it’s been at least that long since I first met him. Super-nice dude, and very talented cigar roller. I smoked the DBL Extra Viejo Maduro while there. It was pretty good, some coffee and espresso notes that I like, there’s something in DBL cigars across the board that I don’t get. Friday evening I smoked the DBL Nicaraguan, which was initially called the La Union, but the Garcia’s had that trademark tied up with their upcoming anniversary project with Pete Johnson and asked for the name to be changed. I hoped that the Nicaraguan expression would suit my palate better, alas, it still had something that didn’t jive with me. I’ve said this before, as recently as a few weeks ago with Aganorsa, there are some lines that just don’t hit the palate, and that’s why there are so many different cigars. DBL makes good, quality cigars, and if you like a lot of different cigars than I tent to like, you’ll probably enjoy them! They are very well priced, and certainly deserve a try, and if you find yourself at Cigar Mojo at The Grove, give me a holler, if I’m free, I’m like three minutes away.
I’ve been fortunate to have come into a batch of new cigar samples, so I’ve been trying out some of the new releases lately. One I smoked this week was the El Rey del Mundo Shade Grown. El Rey del Mundo is a brand that’s been in my humidor on and off in some way for over the last 25 years, I can remember smoking many Rectangulares, Flor de Llanezas, and Robusto Largas over the years, and it was always a delicious, satisfying cigar. In this case, they’ve put a Honduran grown Connecticut shade wrapper on it, over a Honduran Jamastran binder, with Copan and Jamastran fillers, making a Honduran puro. If every line has to have a shade cigar (does it?), this cigar isn’t a bad fit with the brand. It’s got the creaminess, and is on the milder end of medium, but still has plenty of flavor. I rather enjoyed it, as I’ve been enjoying shade cigars lately, as long as they aren’t too mild and flavorless! Not too bad!
Last night after a heavy Italian meal out with friends, we retired to the sala fumatori at la mia casa for a digestif. Earlier in the day I had finished watching “James May: Our Man in Italy” on Amazon Prime so I was all Italianed up. I suppose a Toscano would have been more appropriate, but I had been eying up the new Diesel Vintage, and wanted to talk about it in today’s post. I’m also smoking one as I type this morning, on a fresh palate, because smoking one with company and conversation and alone without distraction can be two different experiences. Turns out they were pretty close. This is a cigar that is to my liking. It has a San Andrés Negro Madoro wrapper, Esteli binder, and Jalapa fillers ranging from five to eight years old. Like all Diesel cigars, it’s made by A.J. Fernandez for Forged Cigar Co. I’m smoking the 5″ x 56 Robusto Gordo, and it’s available in 4 other sizes, which I will eventually sample as I find them in the wild. I can personally attest that this cigar is as good after a heavy meal as it is with a morning cup of coffee, although I did end up smoking too late and slept like crap last night…a function of my advancing years, I’m afraid, I’m in the final days of my 50’s. I see an afternoon nap, and I’m talking right after noon…anyway, I really like this Diesel Vintage. It’s got a load of sweet spice, earth, coffee, cocoa, all the flavors I really like. I want to smoke the Toro, it could become a go-to. Great smoke.
That’s all for today. I celebrate a couple milestones this week, one being the 14th anniversary of CigarCraig.com, the other being the 10th anniversary of my 50th birthday, so I’ll be smoking some special cigars here and there to mark the occasions. Until the next time,
CigarCraig
I can’t wait to smoke that El Rey!
congrats on all your anniversaries , and as an aside, while i do not care for flavored cigars, those Toscanos are excellent
A cigar shop near an “ax throwing venue” – that sounds like an event waiting to happen!
“Cut that cigar for you? Just hold it up next to the target…”
Happy birthday, Craig! Just finished a diesel vintage, I don’t really care for the other blends, but this one is really good! Cheers!