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Happy New Year! A Gurkha and an Adrian Magnus Cigar

Another year is in the books! It’s the last day of 2023, and we are participating in our annual tradition of trying to talk ourselves into going to Red Lion, PA for the New Years Raising of the Cigar. Red Lion used to have dozens of cigar factories, I think the last one closed a few years ago. I remember buying very inexpensive bags of  cigars at a local farmers market that were made there, Van Slyke & Horton, which closed around 2011. The cigars weren’t premium cigars, they might not have even been natural wrapped cigars, they were something like $5 for a bag of 20, whattaya want?  Granted, it’s been 25 years since I bought these, the farmers market is now a Home Depot. Anyway, let’s see if we make it tonight!  2023 was a quiet year here, not a lot of travel,  not a lot of excitement.  I only smoked maybe 150 new to me cigars or so, which seems like a pretty big number, but it’s dow

n considerably from years past.  If I had to pick a standout cigar this year it would be either the Muestra de Saka Krakatoa, or the  Red Meat Lovers Club Ribeye, both Dunbarton Tobacco and Trust products. 2024 should have some more activity, I hope to travel some more.  Anyway, Happy New Year, be careful, and enjoy some fine cigars!

 

Gurkha Cigars sent a nice holiday care package this year,  consisting of a little humidor with five of their cigars within. It may or may not have been packed in loose tobacco that made what can be best described as a tobacco glitter bomb (ha

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t tip: Kap), I’m not looking any horse in the mouth, let alone a gift one.  It’s appreciated, and the little humidor makes a nice “on deck” humidor.  It’s not Gurkha over the top like they’ve done in the past, very classy.  I selected one of the cigars that I hadn’t smoked before, a Gurkha Grand Age II in the Toro size. I hadn’t heard of this one, but I didn’t get to the TPE show where this was presented.  Apparently its a budget cigar, in the $7 range, this was the Habano, it comes in Maduro and Connecticut also, made in Nicaragua.  This one had a very floral taste, and I got a hint of a mintiness, much like I got from the East India Classic Havana Blend, which makes sense now. This is probably not a cigar I’d smoke again, although I’d give the Maduro a shot.  It performed well, the burn and draw were perfect, and it just wasn’t a flavor profile that I gravitate towards.  There are some other cigars that came in that package that I’m looking forward to trying.  Thank you to Gurkha for thinking of me. 

 

I had correspondence a while ago with a gentleman from Adrian Magnus Cigars.  I hadn’t heard of this brand, do I did some poking around, didn’t find much more info, and kinda tried to talk him out of sending samples.  New cigar brands with high price tags aren’t really my thing.  I wasn’t successful, and a package from Hungary showed of a week or so ago.  I’m working up my courage to try the Cognac infused cigars, as a non-drinker, I have no frame of reference for spirits flavors, but the other two looked good. Adrian Magnus started in 2020 and is based in Spain. The cigars are made in the Dominican Republic, they aren’t forthcoming with too much blend information. The cigars arrived sealed with Boveda packs (60 gram packs for 3 cigars!) an

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d were in good condition.  After a few days rest I decided to sample the Imperials in the 5″ x 50 Robusto size (they list the length on the website as 152, which, it that’s millimeters, it’s closer to six inches, and this is definitely 5″).  Like I said, $17 cigars aren’t in my wheelhouse, so I have to really think about what makes a cigar that price.  Shipping has to figure in, small batches, aged leaf.  This has an age statement  on the band of 10 years, not sure if that refers to the wrapper or one of the component tobaccos.  The cigars (I smoked two yesterday), smoked well, although one has some wrapper damage where I tried to remove the band. I want to say these are blended for the European palate.  There’s a (again) floral, fruity component, with a sweetness that starts vert subtle, but builds. If I weren’t such a cynic, I might not be surprised to find out there was Cuban tobacco in this cigar.  Of course, export of Cuban tobacco to the DR seems unlikely, and it would be illegal to sell cigars containing it in the US. Anyway, I quite enjoyed this cigar as an afternoon change of pace and look forward to trying the Supremos and XO next. Thanks to Vadim for sending these! 

 

That’s all for now, today, this week, this month, this year! A big thank you to all of you for your support over the last year!  Until the next time, 

 

CigarCraig

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Mule Kick, Metropolitan, Maria Lucia and the Contest Winner!

It only just occurred to me that that the last three cigars I smoked started with M, must be fore Merry Christmas!  Of course, today is Christmas Eve, so it’s time to start your Christmas Shopping guys!  It’s also the day I’m announcing the winner of the contest sponsored by Cigars.com, but I’ll get to that later!  In the spirit of the season, I smoked some gifted cigars this week, the first of which was from Steve from Tampa, who was up visiting on business a few weeks ago. He gifted me a Crowned Heads Four Kicks 2023 Mule Kick LE, a 5 7/8″ x 52. Funny, I thought it was a toro, but I was off by an eighth of an inch.  This one has an Ecuador Sumatra wrapper over a Dominican binder and Dominican and Nicaraguan fillers,  and is made in the Tabacalara La Alianza factory by Ernesto Carillo. I think this is the seventh iteration of the Mule Kick, and probably the first I’ve had, the Crowned Heads stuff isn’t ever really on my radar, I don’t see them in the stores near me that often. This was a great smoke, loaded with dark chocolate and spices.  Ernesto has been a master of Sumatra for as long as I can remember, which, in this case, is a long time (my memory is suspect, short-term and names is terrible, long term isn’t so bad). Many thanks to Steve for the opportunity to smoke this, I look forward to your next visit, who knows, I may get to your neck of the woods before you get back here!

 

Next up were a couple of selections from my Secret Santa this year. Quick bit of housekeeping: If you participated in the CigarCraig Secret Santa (The CCSS moving forward), and have not fulfilled your obligation, please do so. I know of one package that’s in transit. Everyone that’s been involved has done it multiple times, so I don’t worry, and I try to be hands off and just a participant. Feel free to let me know if you have comments of concerns.  My CCSS was a fellow Craig and in my area, so much so that I ran into him while out shopping Friday! So I selected the Nat Sherman Metropolitan Host Maduro Hampton, a 7″ x 50 cigar.  You might be saying, “Craig, Metropolitan is a Ferio Tego brand now” and I’d say you are correct. You also might not know that Nat Sherman closed their doors in 2021 and Michael Herklots bought the rights to the names and kept the brands alive. This particular cigar is one of the older ones, purchased at the Nat Sherman Townhouse in NYC. I believe it has a Broadleaf wrapper, over Honduran fillers, made by the Eiroas if I’m not mistaken.  This was mil

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der than I imagined it would be, but it was loaded with sweet cocoa flavor and very tasty. Perhaps any strength it had was tempered by time, but it was very good.  I enjoyed the crap out of this and it’s one that I’ll likely never see again. Thanks for the opportunity Craig! 

 

Another

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cigar in Craig’s CCSS pack was the Luciano Cigars Maria Lucia, another Broadleaf wrapped cigar.  This is a tribute to Luciano Meirelles’ mother, who passed when he was twelve, and has the artwork of his daughter on the band. The cigar is 5¼” x 54 with the Broadleaf wrapper,  double binder of Ecuadorian Sumatra and Ecuadorian Habano 92 tobaccos, and a fillers from the Dominican Republic, Nicaragua and Peru. This is going to sound strange, especially given the source, but the flavor was bready to me, like a dark bread, a pumpernickel or the brown bread that comes in a can. It was on the heavy side, which I liked, even though I smoked it before dinner (after a nap). I have met Luciano a couple times, and have enjoyed his cigars. I would like to explore more of his work, I think. Good stuff.

 

Let’s give some stuff away!  You might recall, Cigars.com has provided me with a really nice Montecristo travel humidor, along with a RoMEo cap and a Romeo y Julieta can cozy.  I am going to add some cigars to the humidor before I ship it, they will be Cigars.com exclusives from my humidor, more or less.  The sponsor doesn’t know I’m doing this, but I can’t send out a package without cigars! Anyway, I’ve consulted the Google Random Number Generator and Tim McCabe is the winner! Please send me your address so that I can get this stuff out to you!  Remember if you buy from Cigars.com, or JRCigars.com, please use the affiliate links on the left sidebar, I could use the cash!

That’s all for now, enjoy the Holidays! I guess I need to scrounge up some goodies for a New Years Giveaway!  Stay tuned! Until the next time, 

 

CigarCraig

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Contest! Travel Humidor, Cap and Coozy from Cigars.com

It’s that time of year, and thanks to the folks at Cigars.com, we have a cool giveaway for you!  They have provided me with a Montecristo Travel Humidor, a RoMEo Cap, and a Romeo y Julieta Can Coozy.  I have seen a lot of travel humidors, but I was surprised when I opened this one up an

d it had wood inside instead of foam!  This is a really nice item. 

I think everyone knows me well enough by now, I’ll be adding a few surprises to the humidor before I send it to the lucky winner!  I can’t send out packages without cigars!  Don’t worry, they will be consistent with the theme of the contest!  This should make someone’s holiday a little brighter! 

 

 

The usual process applies: Leave a comment on this post to enter. One entry per person, you must be of legal age in your jurisdiction, and the winner must contact me with your shipping details.  I’ll announce the winner on Sunday, December 24, 2023.  I might be able to find a little something to give away next week too! 

 

Until the next time, 

 

CigarCraig

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Boliche Blvd, Some Classic Fuentes and a 1502 Cigar

This week I found myself out and about more than usual!  Monday I met up with my friend Steve Tabak from Tampa at the Cigar Mojo location nearest to me.  I stopped into the Cigar Mojo original location on Thursday for their Fuente event, then was back at The Grove location Friday for a 1502 event. That’s enough running around for me for this month!  Anyway, Monday I picked up a few of the new Boliche Blvd by West Tampa Tobacco.  I had smoked a pre-release sample several months ago before I knew exactly what it was, and was looking forward to trying it again.  This is made at the NACSA factory, which is the same factory that makes Dunbarton’s Mi Querida and Red Meat Lovers cigars, among others.  This is a 6″ x 60 and is presented in boxes of 50, it’s a big box, and they only made 500 boxes.  The blend has not been disclosed, all that is said is that the tobacco is sourced from the Oliva Tobacco Co., who owns part of the NACSA factory, so it could come from anywhere.  It’s a medium to full bodied cigar, and I’m standing by my original impression that it’s more on the savory side than sweet. I smoked two this week and enjoyed them, not as much as I enjoy the Attic, Red or even the Black, I’m afraid, but I like that sweetness for the most part. Definitely a high quality cigar and worth a try! I wish I had gotten a chance to catch up with Ricky while he was in the area this weekend, but I hung out with Steve, which is always cool!

 

I stopped in to the King of Prussia Cigar Mojo location (King of Prussia is the name of the “town” in PA, home of one of the largest shopping malls in the country), because one doesn’t often come across Fuente events, and I wanted to see what was up.  By the time I got there, maybe two hours after the event started, a lot of the selection was picked over. They had some nice sampler packs though, but I couldn’t justify the spend this time of year, I have a good many Fuente cigars in the humidor as it is. I did pick up some Hemingway Maduros,  Short Story, Best Seller and a Classic, as they are few and far between.  In my opinion, Fuente does some great work with Broadleaf, putting it on the Opus bunch to make the Ańejo made a better Opus, in my opinion. I think the Ańejo is about my favorite in the Fuente line. Don Carlos and Hemingways are a close second, and putting the Broadleaf on the Hemingway is a treat. The lounge was full at Mojo Thursday, so instead of sitting on their heated outdoor patio, I opted to go home and enjoy the Classic Maduro in my own heated patio.  I love the over-roasted coffee flavor of this cigar, it’s not subtle or complex, it’s just good, and it’s fairly priced.  I smoked the Best Seller yesterday and it’s more of the same, or I guess it’s less of the same, because it’s a smaller format!  The neat thing about the Best Seller is that it has a really tight draw until it burns past the “nipple”, then it opens up and is perfect.  The Classic is basically a Churchill in a perfecto shape, 7″ x 48,  while the Best Seller is 5″ x 55.  I’ve been smoking the Hemingway line for over 25 years and they never fail to disappoint. 

 

Friday I stopped back into the Cigar Mojo The Grove location, with is close to home, to see an old friend, Enrique Sanchez of Global Premium Cigars.  He was there with Ron Melendi, who is brokering the 1502 line in the Northeast. It’s been years since I have hung out with Enrique, it was great to be able to relax and enjoy a 1502 Ruby Toro with him and Ron.  The 1502 Ruby Toro is a 6″ x 50 with a box press, and is made by Plasencia in Nicaragua. The wrapper is Ecuador Habano and the fillers are from Esteli and Jalapa in Nicaragua. As much as I love the Black Gold (the Maduro in the 1502 line), this Ruby really does it for me. This isn’t a new cigar, if you searched it on my site you’d find that I mentioned it back in 2012, back when 1502 was part of the House of Emilio distribution group.  A lot has changed over the years, but this cigar remains consistent, it’s really good! There’s some spice and some citrus sweetness.  I arrived fairly late at the shop, hung with the guys until closing, then went home and finished the cigar. I did, indeed relax and enjoy this cigar. I enjoyed catching up with my old friend, and finally meeting Ron, whom I’ve known of for years, I used to visit his shop in New York City, De La Concha from time to time.  

 

I never said this was a new cigar blog, but a blog about my smoking experiences, although I do try to smoke newer stuff.  This week was some oldies, but goodies!  There are a lot of classic cigars that are worth smoking. I like to have certain Fuente cigars in my humidor all the time, I just love smoking them, and sometimes I don’t get around to them as much as I’d like.  In other news,  Secret Santa names have been selected and I’ll be working on putting my SS package together today. Don’t delay!  Finally, stay tuned for a giveaway or two in the coming weeks!  Tis the season!  Until the next time, 

 

CigarCraig

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Lampert Cigars 1675 Series and an Alec Bradley Fine and Rare

Last week I talked about the Dominican and Costa Rican Lampert cigars, this week I smoked their Nicaraguan selections.  All three of these are made at the AgroIndustrial Nicaraguense de

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Tabacos S.A. in Condega, Nicaragua, which is owned by the Ortiz family of Omar and Indiana Ortiz fame.  We have been hearing about Indiana Ortiz for a few years, She did some work with the Psycho Seven folks when they were around, and was then doing some things with Mombacho.  Fingers crossed for Lampert Cigars! I was presented with the three cigars in the range, the Azul and Rojo in Robusto and the Morado in Toro.  Now, one would think I’d smoke the Morado first, its a toro and it’s Maduro, but I bucked convention and went with the Edición Azul first. It was Thursday evening, I was getting started later than usual, and a 5″ x 50 rubusto fit the time best. Picking the right size cigar for the time at hand is an important skill to develop, I’m always available for consultation. Best advice is not to be in a position to need a smoke!  Anyway, the Azul is not blue at all, it has an Ecuador wrapper (no further information, but it’s probably a Habano), Nicaraguan binder and fillers from Nicaragua and Peru. I do love a little Peruvian tobacco in the filler!  This had a sweet cane flavor throughout, with that little twinge of peruvian spice.  It was a thoroughly enjoyable cigar all the way through, and I’d love to sample the toro, and even their short robusto at 3¾” x 52 is very intriguing. So far, so good with the Lampert Nicaraguans!

 

Friday night was maduro toro time, so the Lampert Edición Morado.  I joked that Morado was a misspelling of Maduro, of course it’s Spanish for Purple, This one was 6″ x 52, has a Mexican wrapper and Nicaraguan binder and fillers.  It’s listed as full strength, I found it to be medium personally, but I’m old and jaded.  This was a good maduro cigar, it had some dark coffee, bittersweet c

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hocolate, and maybe some dried black cherry notes, fairly typical of the genré.  I enjoyed it immensely and, once again, am intrigued by that short robusto size. As much as I like Toros, Churchills, even Gordos from time to time, sometimes a short smoke is warranted!  Maybe it’s a second smoke, maybe you aren’t sure if you are going to be interrupted, who knows?  I know a guy who knows a guy, there has to be a shop that sells singles or 5ers.  

 

Finally, yesterday afternoon (late morning, really), between running some errands, I decided to tackle the Edición Rojo.  This one also lists the wrapper as Ecuador, but I’m going to say it’s a Connecticut Shade varietal.  I’ve come to realize that the names of the cigars match up to the bands color, not the wrapper, so this doesn’t have a rosado wrapper, it’s on the dirty blond side, much like an Ecuador Connecticut would be.  This was the 5″ x 50 Robusto size, and, while I really liked this cigar, I don’t know if the smaller size interests me as much. I found that this cigar had a lot in common with the Azul, that sugar cane sweetness, which I really like. instead of the spice the Azul had, it had a more nutty undertone, perhaps smoother and milder.  I liked it, it was quite good.  One think I found that the three cigars had in common was that they all smoked really well. I don’t know that I ‘ve smoke many cigars from this factory, but I look forward to seeing more.  Thanks to Andrew for getting me the samples, and to Kap for making the introduction.  

 

Last night I decided to smoke something new to me, but several years old, that I’ll probably never have a chance to smoke again.  I was watching hockey, and watching the Flyers play the Penguins always gives me anxiety. I guess it’s because I really hate the Penguins and I hate it even more if the Flyers lose to the Penguins. So I went with a cigar that came from my Secret Santa (time is running out to sign up, BTW!) last year, Mitch, an Alec Bradley Fine and Rare HOF / 506.  This was the 2019 Fine and Rare release if my research is correct, and was a tribute to David Rubin, Alan Rubin’s father.  The Fine and Rare line typically uses ten types of tobacco. The nuts and bolts of this one are a Honduran Trojes wrapper, and undisclosed binder, and Honduran and Nicaraguan fillers. By the way, I used the term “nuts and bolts” because Alan Rubin’s father was in the fastener business, and it seems appropriate. This was a really spectacular cigar.  There were a range of baking spice type of flavors, it was really quit a treat.  It burned well, lasted well into the third period (it’s 6¼” x 54 with a box press), and was good to the last drop. The Flyers won in a shootout, which gives me anxiety against any team, when it’s the Penguins I don’t breath until it ends!  I don’t have another Fine and Rare to smoke Monday night when the two team play again, but I think I’ll be meeting up with an out of town visitor at a local shop anyway, so I’ll find something else.  

 

Four great cigars in a row, what can I get into today?  That’s all for now, until the next time, 

 

CigarCraig

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