Tag Archives: Hamilton

Take a Cigar for a Walk: La Gloria Cubana Serie N, and Some Odds and Ends

I decided that since the weather was starting to get a little nicer I would dig into some of the cigar samples I received at last years IPCPR show.  The La Gloria Cubana Serie N is one that has been taunting me…every time I see it’s jet black wrapper in the humidor I want to smoke it, and I finally gave in to temptation.  The sample I received was a No. 49, which measures 5.75″ x 49 and, since it was a pre-production sample, did not have the lighter tobacco leaf “N” on the body of the cigar.  The presentation of these cigars is very cool.  The come in a bright red hexagonal box, with the layers of cigars turned 120º (correct me on this, I didn’t do well in Geometry).  As I mentioned, the regular production has an “N” affixed to the wrapper in a light tobacco leaf so you know what it is after the band is removed I suppose.  This example was full of flavor, although it was a little rough around the edges.  I enjoyed it though and look forward to trying these again.  The one annoying aspect was that it wanted to burn up one side, and I had to touch it up several times.  Only a minor distraction, and I feel as if I gave it enough time in the humidor so I can safely say it wasn’t my fault!

Tommy Berry has been quite busy with work and life and I had to pester him for a contribution this week!  Here’s what he had to say:

“To be honest with all of you, I have not walked since the last review…due to my schedule and I have been lazy for the past week…once I get home around midnight each night. I have had a major deadline at work to meet…and my four year old son has had Strep for the past week. It has just been crazy for the past week…however…what does this all mean? E-X-C-U-S-E-S! Excuses, that’s right…I allowed myself excuses to fail for the past week at walking. But, I say…no more! I will go out tonight and enjoy a walk with a great cigar!

Since I have no “Take A Cigar For A Walk” review – I thought I’d better fess up to what is really going on, and that is me allowing life to get in the way of becoming healthy. This is one of my problems that has caused me to get to the point that I am in anyway…excuses! So, with your help…your support…I will no longer have an excuse. I will walk…enjoy a fine cigar…and think about how much BETTER I feel once I get in from the long walks! Thanks for your continued support!

Long “walking” ashes to ya!

-Tommy”

Lets all give Tommy a raft of sh…..I mean some words of encouragement and support!

On another note, I received a message from Joel, who was one of the “lucky” recipients of a Hamilton House Torpedo a few months ago.  Joel wrote:

I finally torched the Hamilton house torpedo that you so graciously sent me. It was a very well constructed cigar. It burned very evenly. It was mild and smooth, with moderately restrained flavors. I enjoyed it very much and would consider purchasing some HH cigars if I ever came across them. Thanks again!

I’ve been quite impressed with these myself, especially at $40 for a box of 25 delivered.  I’ve payed a lot more for cigars that weren’t as good.  Thank you Joel for the feedback and I’m glad you enjoyed the cigar.

I’m going to have a contest in the coming weeks, it will something along the lines of “how many cigars did I smoke in Nicaragua”.  I’ll start it after I come back so that your guesses don’t have any effect on how many cigars I actually smoke.

That’s all I got this time, until the next time,

CigarCraig

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Filed under Guest Review, Review, Take a Cigar For a Walk

Cigar Ramblings: Hamilton, Maria Mancini, Vegas de Santiago – Thursday January 27, 2011

It’s been a while since I wrote a proper post. It’s been a hectic winter here and circumstances just have not been conducive to smoking some of the cigars I’d like to smoke! However, I need to begin training for my March CigarSafari trip. I’m really looking forward to visiting Nicaragua and Drew Estate, and, considering I will probably smoke a few of their products, I’m going to try to avoid them over the next several weeks. I’m hesitant to smoke something new or unusual considering the winter weather we’ve been having, so I’ve been smoking some cigars that are fairly plentiful in my humidor.

Last week I took a walk with a Hamilton House Torpedo, which was actually quite nice for a cigar that costs around $40 for a box of 25 delivered. I purchased these after I interviewed Mr. Hamilton and still don’t have any more information about who makes them, or what tobaccos are in the blend. I definitely taste Cameroon in these, which I like. I shared these with 4 of my readers and would be interested to hear their thoughts, feel free to use the comments here. I think these were an exceptional value and may have to get another box when these are gone, although I wish I could get BestCigarPrices.com to provide me with some information. I know that George Hamilton no longer is involved and seemed a little surprised that they were still around.

I saw an article in the Philly news about these “Blunt Wraps”. The jist of it was that Philadelphia wanted to ban the sale of these things, and the state of Pennsylvania said that they don’t have the authority to ban a tobacco product. I’m not for banning the sale of any legal tobacco product necessarily, but seriously, how would one legitimately use these? I assume they are a homogenized tobacco sheet like one would find on a mass market, machine made cigar. Who among us would have a use for this? I understand the desire to ban these as “drug paraphernalia”, which seems to be the only conceivable use for such an item. Someone please enlighten me as to why someone would buy “Blunt Wraps” if not to roll up and smoke a non-tobacco product.

This week I grabbed a Maria Mancini Robusto Larga for my walk. This is a toro sized Honduran cigar that is a little pricier than the a fore mentioned Hamilton House. I picked up a couple 5 packs of these last year at JR’s in Whippany, NJ. for a little under $10 each. I have a suspicion that one of the 5 packs was mis-marked as maduro, as the wrapper was very dark on this one and a couple others in the box (I routinely break up five packs and put them in an old box for storage). It was a very enjoyable cigar though and it burned perfectly, and I suspect it was a maduro because the flavor was a little bit different than that of the natural wrapper, at least that was my perception. Anyone who has read this blog or known me for any period of time knows that the Maria Mancini line is one of my favorite cigars of any price range and I have had one size or another in my humidors for the last 12 or 13 years. These are $2 cigars that very rarely disappoint.

I’ve been thinking about what to take to CigarSafari. I figure it would be stupid to take any Drew Estate cigars, but I also think I may be a little insulting to take other stuff. I’m on the fence…I don’t want to show up empty handed, but I don’t want to offend anyone either. I kind of assume there will be sufficient cigars available there for smoking during our stay. What do you think the etiquette is for something like this?

This evening I decided I wanted to smoke a Vegas de Santiago Secretos de Maestro Don Luis maduro Lancero.   Several months ago Rudi and Lani at VdS sent me a 5 pack of these after asking which of their cigars I liked.  I told them I liked the shorty and the torpedo but would be interested in hoe the blend would lend itself to a lancero, and, while I was dreaming, in maduro.  Lo and behold a few weeks later maduro lanceros arrived.  I wanted to let these rest a while and tonight I could wait no longer.  I’m really looking forward to smoking the next one either in an indoor situation, or at least a warm, possibly sunny outdoor situation. Still, it was a very nice smoke, pretty smooth and well balanced with a nice flavor.  These cigars can be purchased quite reasonably with an e-mail to Vegas de Santiago or through thier website.   They have a Yahoo group, and will accept orders via e-mail.

This has been a bit of a rambling post, but I suppose I wrote a few meandering posts like this last winter. Look forward to more of these, and I’m hoping to get some more “guest reviews” in the near future to break up the monotony a little.

Until the next time,

CigarCraig

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This Week’s Cigars: A Long Walk and a Liga Privada Guest Review – Sunday October 17, 2010

Cigars were few and far between this week.  A combination of struggling to get rid of this damn cold and other general business made having a cigar a lower priority.  I did manage to get a couple in, but stuck with some familiar cigars as I didn’t feel up to smoking anything new or special.

Mid-week I grabbed a Chateau Real Maduro Small Club for my walk.  I just love these cigars and will be sad when they are gone.  They have a nice strength of flavor, but aren’t particularly strong nicotine-wise.  Great little smokes.

Today was the day of the Aids Walk Los Angeles in which my wife participated.  Of course, we are in Pennsylvania, but I joined her on a 10 Kilometer walk here in town in solidarity with Team Price is Right, where she was second to Drew Carey in funds raised!  A big thanks to those who contributed in her name!  Anyway, I took a Hamiltons House Selection Torpedo for half the walk, which had some good moments, but I’m finding that these burn quite fast.  For the second half of he walk I went with a National Brand maduro robusto which lasted until we got home.  I still think these are one of the better $2.00 cigars around, once you get past the sweet cap.  Burn draw and flavor always satisfies me.

Guest Review

I received an e-mail from Jose, who was last months contest winner.  One of the prizes he won was a Liga Privada T52 Belicoso, which was one of a couple that were given to me at the IPCPR show by Steve Saka.  He smoked it as well as a No.9 and I’d like to share his comparison:

OK; the LP9 has about 6 months in my humidor; the T52 was gifted by Craig (from cigarcraig.com) and rested for 2 weeks before lighting up.

Similarities: Great construction for both cigars; oily wrappers, except because I botched lighting up the T52 they would had the same burn lines (sharp). Similar strength and complexity (but different flavors).

Differences: LP 9 started with espresso, roasted nuts flavors (kind of a “dark” impression) and went spicy after first third without losing the “dark” overtone; eventually went creamy but adding nutty and leather, cedar glimpses and it was GREAT! Paired with Jack Daniels Single Barrel and matched really good.

T52 started floral and spicy; more complex than LP9 at the beginning; burn line was a problem and maybe related to a little more oil on the wrapper. I have to mention that I had preferred the T52 over the 9 in other sizes (Robusto and Toro) but I have enjoyed immensely the Flying Pig (looking forward to the T52 version!!). After the initial ash fell off (after 1.5 inches, same for both cigars) the flavor changed slightly and started ‘darkening” (I called that when the flavor goes to coffee, espresso and roasted nuts) and sneaking up the strength. It also went creamy but with the floral taste still around, some cedary impression (slightly); did not pair well with the JD Single Barrel, changed to Macallan Scotch (Elegance) and it matched much better (because the bourbon was sweeter I think). Anyway it was better than average but I liked the 9 better.

Interestingly for me (and maybe because of the shape) I prefer the Toro size in the T52 over the LP9 but loved the Belicoso in LP9 against the T52. Personal preferences I believe.

Thank you again for the cigar and the accessories; as you mentioned I could not use the cutter on these but I have been using it with regular vitolas.

best regards,

J.A. Solis

As always, I enjoy sending out cigars to people, and am absolutely thrilled to receive feedback such as this!  Thanks for sharing that review!

By the way, I received the following information from Thompson Cigar Co. via E-mail.  Most of us, I’m sure, have our opinions of Thompson’s, but I share this with my readers as a community service:

1. Sweepstakes: This month we launched a Sweepstakes. This month, we are giving away a 20 pack of Padron Serie 1926 40th Anniversary Cigars (retail value is $516). Your readers can enter once a day through October 31. We’ll have a new giveaway in the Sweepstakes for November.

Here is a link to the Sweepstakes page:

http://www.thompsoncigar.com/content/content.jsp?pageName=Sweepstakes1

And here is a link to the Padron Serie 1926 Cigars, in case you wanted to check them out some more:

http://www.thompsoncigar.com/product/PADRON-SERIE-1926-40TH-ANNIVERSARY-NATURAL-TORPEDO/73913.uts

2. Coupons for ThompsonCigar.com: We also just launched a new site, http://www.thompsoncigarcoupons.com/ where your readers can get some pretty sweet deals for ThompsonCigar.com purchases.  Right now we have free shipping on your entire order and some other pretty good deals ($10 off a order of $50, $20 off an order of $100).

Here is the URL of the coupon site:

http://www.thompsoncigarcoupons.com/

In an unrelated note, I attended a book release party at Doylestown Bookshop in Doylestown, PA Saturday for Jude Southerland Kessler’s new book “Shivering Inside“, which is the second book in a series of nine.  Jude’s books are novels about the life of John Lennon and are painstakingly researched to be as accurate as possible.  I was there the help out as my wife is Jude’s publicist and  organized the event.  One of the people who helped Jude a lot in writing the book was Richard Langham, who was one of the engineers at EMI Abbey Road who worked on the Beatles “Please Please Me” album.  Richard is an amazingly nice gentleman who had some wonderful stories.  It was a pleasure to spend the evening with Jude, her husband Rande, Richard, and a host of other wonderful people.

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

CigarCraig

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The Week’s Cigars: 601, Camacho, La Aurora – Sunday October 10, 2010

Autumn is my least favorite time of the year.  The days get shorter and there just seem to be fewer opportunities to enjoy a nice cigar.  Undeterred, however, I did manage to get a few interesting cigars in this week, as well as a cigar store visit.

I started out smoking a 601 Habano Robusto, which I had gotten a couple weeks back when I met Eddie Ortega at Old Havana Cigars in West Chester, PA.  I had previously smoked and enjoyed some 601 cigars a few years ago that I had received as samples at the IPCPR show.  I had really enjoyed the samples, which I believe were green and maybe red banded varieties.  This one was a fine cigar, it had a nice taste, it burned very well and all in all was nice.  It didn’t “wow” me like the previous samples, which was a  disappointment, but despite my expectations, was still a very nice cigar.  I think, when given the option, I’d probably opt for the Murcialago over the 601.

Friday evening was a nice, warm evening, so I selected the last Camacho Corojo Monarca from my humidor.  I have had this one for years and had passed it by more than once.  I love these cigars and smoking the last one was a little sad to me, but I finally said the heck with it and fired it up.  It was a disappointment. It really didn’t burn very well, although the draw was fine.  It was very bitter tasting to me, not as rich as I think this cigar should be. I figured it would lose a little of it’s punch over several years storage, but I didn’t think it would actually turn bad.  I’ve smoked many of these in the past and always enjoyed them, I guess I’ll have to pick up a few more and give them another shot.  I’ve enjoyed Camacho cigars since I first reviewed a Monarca in 1996, which I liked better than a Montecristo #2 in a blind review.  I still have a few Candela Monarcas that always make me smile.

Saturday October 9 was the anniversary of John Lennon’s birth, he would have been 70.  As a Beatles fan, and the husband of the public relations person for several Beatles related artists, we decided to make a trip up to New York City where one of her clients was having a gallery show and demonstrating her craft.  We got there plenty early and walked over to De La Concha on 6th for a cigar.  I have been itching to smoke the La Aurora 107 corona and I haven’t been able to find them around home.  They had them, and I was pleased to find that they were priced at $7.77, which I thought was OK considering NY taxes.  Most of the cigars there were over $10, which offends my sensibilities being from Pennsylvania where there are no oppressive cigar taxes.  Despite the sudden onset of a head cold, the La Aurora 107 corona was a really nice cigar.  I look forward to ditching this cold so I can properly enjoy the one I brought home.  Burn and flavor were terrific.  I’m guessing that if i can find these in PA, or most places that aren’t New York, it’s probably a very reasonable cigar, maybe in the $4.00 range.  From De La Concha we headed to the Gallery at 25 Central Park West.  There was good foot traffic as there had been a viewing of the movie “LENNONYC” a few blocks further down Central Park.  Shannon is “the Worlds Greatest Beatles Artist”, and has a huge collection of Beatles related art.  She capped the evening off by painting her vision of what
John Lennon would have looked like today.  It was incredible to watch the image take shape.  I stepped out for a bit at one point and encountered a very nice old guy taking a Davidoff 3000 for a walk. He was in his 70s, lived in the building the gallery was in, and enjoyed his cigar while walking the street as he had family visiting.  It was nice see someone enjoying his cigar in NYC.

I couple posts ago I promised to select three people to send some Hamiltons House Selection Torpedos to, so I once again consulted Random.org and selected the following people:Joel Solomon, Joel Scott and Keith911,  please e-mail me their addresses so I can mail you each a cigar. Congrats to the winners!

That’s about it for now, hopefully this cold will run it’s course and I won’t have to bore you all to tears with a tour of my lighter colllection!

CigarCraig

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Celebrity Cigar Chat with George Hamilton – Monday, September 20, 2010

Last week I had the pleasure of interviewing George Hamilton. He’s not just a Hollywood icon (“Love at First Bite“, “Zorro the Gay Blade” ), author (“Life’s Little Pleasures“, “Don’t Mind if I Do“) and famed ladies man, George Hamilton loves cigars.  Not only does he love them, but his knowledge of the growing and manufacture go well beyond that of even the most hardcore enthusiast. From landing in Havana in January of 1959 and being detained by the revolution (read “Don’t Mind if I Do”!), to having brands of cigars and cigar bars bearing his name,  Mr. Hamilton knows cigars and took some time out of his busy day to speak with me about them.  Here is the transcript of my Q&A with him:

Do you still smoke cigars?

Yeah, I do.  I have really great cigars that I’ve collected over the years.  I don’t think cigars get “better” with age…I don’t believe that.  I think you can preserve them for a long time, and I’ve had very old, pre-embargo cigars that were still hanging on…and I’ve had a lot of Dominican cigars and Nicaraguan ones and even Jamaican that were during the war that were preserved well.  So I’ve always had a collection of great cigars and while I don’t smoke every night anymore, my brother likes it, and I like it. So I find that when I really have something in-depth to think about or ponder, I take a cigar.  Or when I have a meeting with someone where it’s going to be 45-minutes of business, I choose well the cigar, and I try to choose well the person I’m going to smoke it with.

You had the Hamilton’s Cigar Lounge in Las Vegas and the Hamilton Reserve cigars…

I had two lines of them…one of them made by Upmann, and I had made one by Davidoff …Kelners.  And then I developed my own line which was called “Hamilton House,” which was a blend of Dominican with Nicaraguan … perhaps stronger tobacco that was quite good from the old Somoza fields.

I did this in the Dominican, and I think at that time I was fairly accomplished at not only appreciating a cigar but knowing why I appreciated it.

When you enjoy a cigar, you don’t realize how many hundreds of people’s hands touch it before you get to it.

It’s not as much the cigar as it is the tobacco…I mean, what goes into the actual tobacco…the fillers and binders.  The binder’s  another thing, that’s grown in a different way, really.  It is an enormous amount of time that hands are touching it.  It’s incredible to see a torcedor make a cigar properly (and crimp and book it right).  It’s not an easy thing to do, and there’s nothing worse than a cigar that’s badly rolled.  I just want to ditch when they burn quickly.  You can feel a cigar. I can look at it now.  If you can stand it on its ash, you can tell it’s pretty much been rolled right.

That brings up an interesting question: there is a current trend towards short fat cigars, 60 ring gauge, and I’ve seen some manufacturers brag about them standing on their ash.  So it’s interesting that you mention that….

Well, I can do it on a panatela …I mean any one that’s rolled right it’ll stand on its own ash.  If you get a least three-fourths inch to one-inch, you should be able to stand a cigar on its ash in an ashtray.

I like to look at a cigar, and I like to see the combustion ring and look at the magnesium and see how white a ring it is. You can smell a cheap cigar across the room…or these days, across the street. There’s nothing worse than a cigar that’s made with cheap tobacco and green tobacco. The minute you take it in, you know.  I can smell it a mile away, but once in awhile someone will give you a cigar and it’s a “fooler“. You think, “Oh my God, why am I with this person for 45 minutes with this cigar?!”

How do you feel about the Cuban embargo and how that affects things now and how the possibility of it ending will affect things?

Well, I think that Cuban tobacco, just by the nature of the tobacco, (the Vuelta Abajo…in that area) is some of the most wonderful cigar tobacco I’ve ever seen.  And I know for a while they made their Cohibas from there, and I know that Castro’s people rolled from those farms in that area. Tobacco is so personal that you have to know the farm; you have to know the people.  And you can get consistency by going to the same people…knowing their land – if it’s been rotated, if the lands been worn out…you know.

Cuba has incredible tobacco…always has. And it’s not to say that we don’t have it. Connecticut broadleaf binder is incredible.  It has stretch and give to it and feel to it. And they use it in Cuban cigars, but the Cuban tobacco that they have is so incredibly good and so unmistakably Cuban that if you’ve ever smoked them, you get used to them, and it’s a sad loss not to have them.

There are many wonderful cigars in the Dominican. In Nicaragua, the Somoza fields have incredible tobacco…Cuban seed tobacco that was wonderful.  But “the Cubans” are unmistakably Cuban just as a great bottle of Lafite or La Tour or a Chateau Cheval Blanc or Haut Brion or Petrus come from a specific piece of land, and you know why that wine is great. (Not to say California hasn’t got great wines and isn’t getting better, but the price of it doesn’t make a lot of sense – what we’re charging for a lot of the wines.)

I think the art of anything is to find out a price you can live with that suits your habit and suits your “pocket.” Cuba will come in with cigars, and it only costs about 85 cents to roll that cigar…maybe $1.30 – I don’t know what it is now – but they retail these cigars for $30 and $40 in some places.

At some point the embargo will go. The Cuban cigar when there was no embargo was still a great cigar. So it wasn’t just the idea that it was “impossible to get,” it was because it competed worldwide as one of the great cigars, and it’s unmistakable.

You know the difference when you smoke a Montecristo 2 or an Epi or you know when you have …there are 10 or 20 brands of Cuban cigars. I’ve had them in England for periods of time and enjoyed them, and the British love them. The Spanish have better selections of them. And they had them in Switzerland for a while to help Cuba when there was an embargo. So anybody that is a cigar smoker, when they go out of the country, they will try a Cuban cigar… and if they have Cuban cigars, they will know why they match up.

I’ve been fortunate to have sampled many Havana cigars and they do appeal to me…

Now there aren’t many I haven’t had over the years, there are some [about which] we think the tobacco is strong, and it’s all how it’s blended. And there are cigars from Cuba that are incredibly soft and mellow…and there are others that are very strong. I mean, someone who’s never had a Montecristo 2 Torpedo Figurado says their eyes will roll back in their head! <laugh>

The last one I had that came from an English friend. It was very smooth, complex and delicate.  I was surprised by it…it was a shock…

That’s right. There used to be two great guys in England, Desmond Sautter and Edward Sahakian.  Those guys had the best cigars in the world…the best selection of cigars in the world! And they even had ones that were pre-embargo that I tried.  I was always amazed at their cigars. Nothing I had ever measured up to those two fellas cellars.

How do you feel about smoking bans?  Florida is proposing some pretty crazy restrictions and California started out back in the late ‘90s…

California is the one that actually destroyed smoking, and interestingly enough, the Governor smokes cigars…and probably still smokes them…and it crept in and spread like wildfire across the country.

I think… to me, there’s no doubt about it [smoking] being carcinogenic. There’s no doubt about alcohol being bad for your health…there’s no doubt about that, but it’s all in how you do it and the frequency in which you do it, I believe.

People should have that choice in their lives – what they want and what they do. I mean, I want to be informed and make my own decisions.  And that’s not to say an addict can’t be cut off …an addict should be cut off. You do everything can to make sure people don’t drink and drive!

But when it comes to cigars, I think they’ve been around a long time and people have survived to a very late age with them.  And it’s a decision made by the individual that shouldn’t be taken out of their hands, but I don’t disagree with the information.

Yes.  Some could argue that the sun’s rays could be carcinogenic!

There’s no doubt about it.  There’s nobody who’s more…I’m informed about the sun, I know all about it, and I’m probably the tannest white man in America! <laugh> I made that choice.

Well, that’s about it.  I thank you for your time.

I appreciate it and your interest.  My cigars have always been a passion, and I love them…and I have great wines that I love…but they are only an adjunct to my life.

It’s amazing: I believe in dieting, I believe in cutting back on calories and all those things as you get older, health-wise, but another thing that’s terribly important is that there is a balance in your life and that you see the humor in the tragedy and that you get a hold of some sense of freedom in our government’s proposal to clamp down on everything we do!  You can’t live by those laws and really live.

It was really cool to chat about cigars with George Hamilton, he really knows his stuff.  I purchased a box of the Hamilton House Torpedos from Best Cigar Prices in honor of this occasion.  Mr. Hamilton tells me that these cigars were his third line and added Cameroon to the Dominican blend, if, indeed, they are the original.  I received the box today and they look brand new, so I don’t think they are old stock that has been buried in a humidor for years.  They are beautiful looking cigars.

Tell ya what,  I will send a Hamilton House torpedo to 3 random folks who leave a comment on this article.

Many thanks to my wife, Jennifer, for transcribing the recording and making the interview happen. Thank you to Mr. Hamilton who was very generous with his time and I deeply appreciate the opportunity to have had a brief discussion with him.

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

CigarCraig

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