Tag Archives: Hooten Young

Serenity Now, Montecristo Exclusive, Hooten Young and Julius Caeser Cigars

Thursday night I went to a Flyers Game, their second meeting with the Tampa Lightning. You may recall that I went to Tampa last November to the game there, and they won in a shootout.  It was a fantastic experience with the Diamond Crown cigar lounge and all, Kevin and I had a great time!  This time I took my youngest son, and I smoked a Serenity Now from Asylum/CLE Cigars.  I figured this would be an appropriate driving cigar!  I got this at the TPE show, embarrassed to say I don’t remember the reps name who I talked to , but Tom Lazuka was there.  This is a cigar that Christian Eiroa came up with, Tom is usually the idea man for the Asylum line.  It’s my understanding that we wasn’t very happy with Christian at first. This comes in a box with a San Andrés sibling, the Insanity Later.  Serenity Now uses a Connecticut-seed wrapper, which may or may not be grown in Honduras, over tobaccos from Honduras and an undisclosed South American country.  There are a lot of references to CLE having a farm in South America, which is a big place.   I thought this was a little bitey for a shade cigar, on the tannic side. It was a nice road cigar as it burned well and was inoffensive.  Full flavor yet medium strength.  I’d try it again, but am more interested in trying the maduro, which I would have called Profanity Later, but that’s just me.

 

Last week when I visited the Smoke Inn Casa de Montecristo lounge in West Palm Beach, one of the cigars I bought was a Montecristo Nicaragua Great Smoke 2023 Exclusive.  This was priced higher than I usually like, but when in Rome (more on Rome, see below) you know!  Yesterday was The Great Smoke put on by Abe at Smoke Inn, and it looks to have been a good time.  In honor of that, I decided to smoke the Montecristo.  This is a Nicaraguan puro, blended by Rafael Nodal and AJ Fernandez and made at the AJF factory.  Montecristo (and a lot of Altadis cigars) aren’t generally my cup of tea, although the exceptions are the ones made by AJ Fernandez.  This has a dark wrapper, is a 6″ x 52 Toro, and performed spectacularly.  It has a distinctive flavor, I wonder if this is what people refer to as “black walnut”?  I don’t like walnut, but this was a good tasting cigar.  I didn’t regret dropping $20 on this cigar, it was a souvenir, of my trip, and I really enjoyed it.  Once again, I can’t overstate how nice an experience my visit to the Smoke Inn shop was, I will have to get back down there and go to some of the other shops.

 

Another cigar I picked up on my recent travels was the Hooten Young Ma Deuce.  I saw Jon Carney at the Cigar Circus event and he, apparently, had been working with the Hooten Young folks, and hooked me up with a couple of their cigars.  I probably should have watched “Black Hawk Down” yesterday while I smoked this, but opted for something a little lighter.  Norm Hooten, one of the co-founders of the company, is a Veteran of the mission in Somalia which the movie “Black Hawk Down” is about, and there’s also a connection to Jon Carney’s home town in Maine. This is an interesting vitola. It’s 6½” x 60, but it’s shaped like a .50 caliber cartridge. The Ecuadorian Connecticut and San Andres Maduro wrapper combo is arranged to emulate the different metals in the bullet and casing.  It has a Nicaraguan binder and filler.  They come in boxes that look like ammo cans. Everyone has a different palate, I got a sourdough flavor off the start, which continued through out. Of course, I like this flavor in a cigar, so it was good.  I smoked it for the better part of two hours, and the tapered head makes it very much unlike a 60 ring cigar. It was fun to smoke. I’ll watch “Black Hawk Down” one of these days when I’m in the mood.  

 

Finally, I couldn’t let March 15 go by without smoking a Diamond Crown Julius Caeser cigar.  Here’s something I wrote last year that I was pretty proud of, although I might be the only one who was impressed with it…

 

We all know that March 15 marks the day that Julius Caesar was assassinated in 44 BC.  We know the exact date because he invented the calendar we use.  He instituted that just a year before his death.   Anyway, he was a heck of an Emperor, but I guess his friends thought he was a dick, so they stabbed him. I may be oversimplifying things a little. A few millennia later some Hungarian folks named their son after him, and US immigration screwed up the spelling on his paperwork and Julius Caeser Newman started a cigar company that makes some great cigars. 

 

The Diamond Crown Julius Caeser is made at Tabacalera A. Fuente, has an Ecuador Havana wrapper, Dominican binder and Caribbean and Central American fillers. I smoked the Pyramid vitola, which is 6½” x 52.  I might have gotten this when I was in Tampa for the Heritage Festival in ’22.  I was kind of hoping to smoke the new Trouble Maker vitola, but I didn’t end up getting my hands on any.  This is a great cigar, with a woody profile that’s a nice change of pace for me.  I probably don’t smoke this line as often as I should, there are some good memories associated with it, beyond the historical and literary tie-ins. 

 

That’s all I have for today, no travel this weekend! until the next time, 

CigarCraig 

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