Tag Archives: Fine and Rare

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 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 chocolate, 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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Villiger de Nicaragua, Alec Bradley Fine and Rare and Bocock Brothers Cigars

I’ve been getting into a pattern of smoking what I want to smoke in the beginning of the week, then smoking new cigars for here at the end.  So Thursday I smoked a Villiger de Nicaragua torpedo which I had received in a package from Villiger  a week or so ago. This is a $15 limited edition ciga made in Villiger’s factory in Esteli, Nicaragua.  It’s a pointy 6″ x 52 box pressed torpedo, with an Ecuador Sumatra wrapper, San Andrés binder and Nicaraguan and Pennsylvanian filles. This cigar has nice, dark, rich flavors.  It’s. got some spice with dark chocolate, very nice smoke.  It burned without incident, it was among the best cigars I had all week.  Very nice. VIlliger opened their factory in Esteli in September of 2021, they are also making La Meridiana, San’Dorp, La Vencedora, La Libertad, Casa De Nicaragua, and Corrida in that factory now. 

 

I had a trying Friday, so I went to the special humidor where I keep the Secret Santa cigars I received this year.  I chose the next Alec Bradley Fine and Rare in the series I received, the 2018 Second Edition.  This is the JRS10=(86) blend, all of the Fine and Rares are a blend of ten tobaccos, and they keep those tobaccos to themselves.  This one was a 6½” x 56 Gran Toro.  I needed a great smoke and I got just that. This is outside of my normal comfort zone, it’s bright, floral, slightly fruity, but it sure tasted good.  Perfect construction was a big factor in my enjoyment, if I had encountered one of those cigars that produced loads of smoke when blown through, but you don’t get any when you draw, I would have been homicidal.  Why does that happen, by the way, it really pisses me off, I had it happen yesterday.  Anyway, the Fine and Rare was just that, thanks again to Mitch for sharing with me, very generous.

 

Finally, I went into some cigars that I got at last year’s TPE show.  I thought about going this year, but I have some scheduling conflicts which made it impossible.  I did a video with Bryant Bocock then, and have smoked a few of their Bocock Brothers cigars, but came across this 5″ x 50 World Traveller, which I initially thought was Habano, but now that I think back it might have been the Maduro.  I like the rooster on the band, I suppose “cock” in the Bocock name is the reason they use that imagery. I like chickens, we have a few.  This was an interesting cigar, it had a nice, meaty flavor.  Very dense, rich smoke.  I know it was 5″ x 50, but it somehow seemed thinner to me, which was OK, it was the right size cigar for the time available.  I know they were doing some cigars with AJ Fernandez, although this wasn’t one of them. It was different from your standard maduro, I enjoyed it quite a bit, I need to see if I have some more floating around. 

 

That’s all for now.  I know I’m from the Philly area and should be losing my mind over the Super Bowl, but I honestly don’t give a rats ass about football. Good for them if they win, I hope the city survives the carnage whichever way it turns out.  Thanks to all this Philadelphia has become known for having the grease all the light and traffic signal poles so fools won;t climb them, when there are so many other great things about the city to focus on.  Whatever, I guess it’s good for business. Until he next time, 

 

CigarCraig

 

 

 

 

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Happy New Year, Winner Announcement and a Cigar or Two

It seems that 2022 is in the books, and it’s 2023 now.  Still no flying cars, but we do carry the entirety of human knowledge in our pockets, at the expense of education and common sense! I am blessed with a beautiful family and enough cigars to get me through for a while, so I’m not complaining. I’ve had worse years than 2022.  I managed to fly 4 times, a record for me. Twice to trade shows in Las Vegas, once to Tampa and a personal vacation to Puerto Rico.  We also went to a Barnsmoker, a Red Meatlovers Club dinner on a friggin battleship, and a few shop events, although not as many of the latter as I’d like.  It was a good year. Hopefully ’23 is equally good!  I know I’ve slowed down a little on original content, I’m just not smoking the volume of new cigars that I used to. I’m finding as I get older I tend to want to smoke what I like!  Weird, huh?  I have no plans to give up though, after 13 years I’m invested.  I do have a prize to give away, so let’s get on to that!

 

I let this giveaway go on a week and a half, longer than usual, but it’s been a busy week or two!  You may recall the prize was a hefty pile of stuff from various venders, and undisclosed cigars from my humidor.  I’ll have fun packing up a bunch of my favorites to share with the winner.  I referred to Google’s random number generator and the number it spit our was 2, which corresponds to the second comment at 9:28pm on 12/21, which was by Tim McCabe.  Tim, please email me your info!  Tim is a long time reader, and I have to appreciate the patience and fortitude of the many folks who’ve been reading my nonsense over the years!  Thanks to everyone, I may be able to scrounge up some more goodies in the near future. 

 

Naturally, I smoked some good cigars over the last few days. Most notable was another of the Alec Bradley Fine and Rare series, this one dated 2017. The one I smoked last week I’m told was from the tenth anniversary set, and I assume this one is from the same.  My Secret Santa, Mitch, was very generous and shared these with me.  Aside, he managed to send a bunch of cigars I’d never smoked before!  No small feat.  Another aside, and Kevin Shahan witnessed this, while in Tampa I met a gentleman, we’ll call him Aaron, who was shocked when he attempted to gift me a cigar he was sure I’d not had before, a pre-release Nica Rustica with actual Rustica leaf in the blend, and I had smoked that back in 2013 in Nicaragua.  I digress.  The ALec Bradley Fine and Rare 2017 (BR12-13) is a 6″ x 52 torpedo, or maybe 109, shaped cigar.  It has mostly Honduran components, with some Nicaraguan in the filler.  It started off with a little bit of a bite, some acidity, perhaps, but that quickly became what I call spicey. It was, overall, a very good cigar, with some nice, medium flavors, and I think there was a cinnamon or baking spice flavor that came and went.  Thank you, Mitch, for the opportunity to try these! 

 

Yesterday we met friends at what might be the only White Castle in PA for lunch, and I would have stopped in to New Tobacco Village, in Whitehall, PA, but, you know…White Castle…When I got home after an hour drive and got things squared away, I sat down to watch hockey with what might be my favorite cigar of 2022, the Diamond Crown Black Diamond. It gives the Muestra de Saka The Bewitched a run, if I had smoked more of those it would have been my number one for the year.  As it stands, I’m going with the Black Diamond, so good!  I ended 2022 with a Partagas Serie D No. 6 which I had picked up at the Rome Duty Free several years ago, just a little guy, but tasty. So let’s just say that the New Diamond Crown Black Diamond Emerald is my favorite cigar of 2022! Thanks to J.C.Newman for making this year memorable for me! 

 

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

 

CigarCraig

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Merry Christmas and a Couple of Cigars

This is going to be a short one, I mean, I have family stuff to do today, and I assume many of you do also.  Not many people are going to have time to read a long post!  So Happy Holidays to everyone!  Go back to my last post and enter the contest! Maybe you’ll win some great stuff!

 

We’re enjoying a cold snap here, Friday started out a balmy 50 and dropped to the teens by evening. I got my cigar in early, my heaters can’t keep up with this bitter cold.  I chose from a selection sent to me by my secret Santa this year, an Alec Bradley 2014 Fine and Rare.  It was my first time smoking a Fine and Rare, I may smoke another Fine and Rare later if time and temps allow.  This was a special smoke, a 7″ x 54 perfecto-ish cigar. I’ve had the same shape in a tubed Tempest ,I think.  It didn’t seem like it was that big, but it smoked for a good two hours.  When I say “good”, I mean really good! I seem to recall the Raices Cubanas factory having some quality issues around this time, which were not apparent in this cigar, it was perfectly built.  I believe the blend is Honduran and Nicaraguan with a Honduran wrapper. I also seem to remember some ridiculous number of varietals in the blend on these. Seven? Anyway, this was a really delicious cigar, pretty nunced and refined, but full of flavor.  It was bready, with some spice, but not much. It certainly was a special cigar befitting the season.  TY MS for these! I look forward to future Fine and Rare’s.

 

Yesterday I stopped by Goose’s Montecristo Lounge in Limerick, PA for a smoke or two.  I intended to just pick one or two nice cigars out to smoke, but I started looking through the discount bin (buy 3, get one free) and found some gems, some CyB Corona Reals, Cornelius and Anthony Meridian Corona Gordas, Jaxx LTs (forerunner of the La Sirena LT) and even an Emilio AF2 (AJ Fernandez).  So after I smoked a gifted Montecristo Epic, I lit up one of the CyBs I bought and it was delicious.  These had a pretty short life, coming out sometime around 2013 when José Blanco (the B) worked at Joya de Nicaragua with Dr. Alejandro Cuenca (the C).  It was originally called Cuenca y Blanco until someone pulled a trademark dispute. The cigar was really good, and I think I found all that he had in the bins. The cigar has an Ecuador Habano wrapper, Dominican Piloto binder and fillers from Nicaragua and Peru.  It’s woody and sweet with some spice, the spice probably from that Peruvian leaf.  Good stuff!  Goose’s is a great spot with a large selection and comfortable lounge.  I’d like to get there more than I do! 

 

That’s all for today, Merry Christmas and Happy Hanukkah to all, 

 

CigarCraig

 

 

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