Tag Archives: La Gloria Cubana

CigarCraig’s 12 Spectacular Days of Cigar Giveaways Day 12: PipesandCigars.com

Well, we’ve finally reached the last day of contests.  Let’s see who the big winner for Day 11 is!  First I’d just like to mention that when I went up to Famous Smoke Shop to meet up with Michael Giannini, I had no intention of laying a big old mooch on him.  I was quite happy giving away a box of Retro Especiales!  So over to Random.org‘s Random Number Generator!  Anyway, it wasn’t until I was there for a while that I had the idea to get a video, and it was supposed to be just a “Happy Holidays”, “act like we’re buddies as if you really know me” (I do know Micheal well enough that he could pick me out of a police line up, by the way!) little thing and then Michael ran with it.  The winner of the super La Gloria Cubana prize is number 10.  Back to the story:  So Michael and I did end up thumb wrestling and we decided that he was going to send a whole bunch of extra cigars and we’d give it all to one big winner!  By my figuring, Duane Holmes is the winner!  Congrats Duane!  You of all people know the drill by now!  Send address, receive copious La Glorias!  And now on to the dramatic conclusion of CigarCraig’s 12 Spectacular Days of Cigar Giveaways:

 

Today on CigarCraig’s 12 Spectacular Days of Cigar Giveaways we have a pre-filled humidor from the folks at PipesandCigars.com!   Here’s what’s included:

Humidor – 25 count Cherry humidor by Orleans w/humidifier

Cigars:

5 Montecristo Platinum Toro

5 Romeo Y Julieta Reserva Real Churchill

5 Gran Habano #3 Habano Gran Robusto

5 Sancho Panza Valiente

1 – Gurkha Black Dragon Sampler Tin that contains 5 Gurkha Black Dragon cigars not available for sale in full boxes, or anywhere else but in these collectible tins. You get 1 dual-wrapper (Cameroon & Natural) Gurkha Black Dragon Torpedo (6 x 54), 2 Gurkha Black Dragon Toro Cameroon (6 x 54) and 2 Gurkha Black Dragon Torpedo Cameroon (6 x 54).

 

 

My thanks to Travis Lord at PipesandCigars.com for providing this generous prize package. I also want to thank everyone who has provided prizes for this most excellent past 12 days! I could have done it without you, but it would have cost me a fortune!!

 

You know what to do! Leave a comment to enter and good luck!

 

Until tomorrow,

 

CigarCraig

 

 

 

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CigarCraig’s 12 Spectacular Days of Cigar Giveaways Day 11: La Gloria Cubana

It’s been a hell of a ride.  Just when I thought I was giving stuff away, I go and win a contest on Facebook that The Griffin’s Cigars was holding.  I can’t actually remember entering!  Today UPS delivered an absolutely gorgeous 75 count The Griffin’s humidor, and 2 boxes of The Griffin’s No. 500 Coronas.   Thank you to Dylan Austin and the folks at Davidoff. I’m stunned and amazed.  Anyway, you came to see who won the joint AJ Fernandez/Emilio Cigars prize, and Random.org tells me that Brian Impson is the winner!   Send me your address please!  Next up:

 

Today on CigarCraig’s 12 Spectacular Days of Cigar Giveaways we have something very special!  Here’s a little video to explain how this all came about:

httpv://youtu.be/n-EKEVkgCJo

 

So, as Michael said, not to be outdone, we have not only a box of La Gloria Cubana Artesanos Retro Especiale Clubs, which would be a wonderful prize on its own, but a selection of about 30 La Gloria Cubana Artesanos de Tabaqueros, a bunch of which are Sumatra/Broadleaf versions only available on the Retro Tour stops.  That’s right, you can’t buy these cigars!  I can tell you from past experience, all of these cigars are outstanding!  There are also a couple of nice tubes as well as a La Gloria cutter thrown on top of everything.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

What a haul, huh?  I can’t begin to thank Victoria McKee Jaworski and Michael Giannini at General Cigar Company enough for providing this overabundance of cigars!  Also a special thanks to Bryan Glynn of Cigar Obsession for helping me out with the video.

 

You know what to do! Leave a comment to enter and good luck!

 

Until tomorrow,

 

CigarCraig

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12 Spectacular Days of Cigar Giveaways Countdown! A Monte Pascoal, a My Uzi and a Cain

It’s been a busy week, I’ve been gearing up for the 12 Spectacular Days of Cigar Giveaways and the weather was mild and rainy for the fist part of the week, and cold at the end.  This didn’t stop me from getting in a few interesting cigars though!

 

Mid way through the week I took a walk with a Monte Pascoal Minuto.  This Brazilian puro is a tasty little firecracker of a smoke.  The cigar is 4 3/8″ x 42, with Brazilian Mata Fina wrapper and binder and Mata Fina and Mata Norte fillers.  The word on the street is that the smaller sizes are stronger than the larger sizes, based on the higher wrapper to filler ratio, but I find this difficult to comprehend given that the blend is so heavily weighted toward the same tobacco variety. Perhaps I’ll ask Wes at Tabacos Mata Fina USA about this the next time I see him.

 

Last night it was cold.  I needed to get some cash, and the nearest ATM is probably a mile and a half away, so I grabbed the 7″x 60 My Uzi Weighs A Ton pre-release sample Jonathan Drew sent me quite a few months ago. This cigar is a joint venture between Joya de Nicaragua and Drew Estate/Subculture Studio, and was released at this years IPCPR show. Certainly this monstrous cigar would last me the entire walk, and then some.  There’s nothing more frustrating that finishing the cigar before the walk.  Anyway, this cigar had a nice flavor, and as has been said many times by others, it’s not a killer strong cigar as the name may imply.  It’s just a really nice, balanced, medium bodied cigar that was an excellent companion for the 3 mile walk!

 

Yesterday I felt inspired to smoke a Cain Daytona Corona after a big Olive Garden meal with my wife.  I really needed a couple laps around the block to burn off the pasta!  I love the Cain line, but most of them are just too strong for me.  Not the Daytona!  It’s another medium bodied cigar that’s packed with delicious flavors.  What led me to this cigar was a meeting earlier in the day with my areas Oliva rep, Mike Staiber, who provided a terrific prize for the upcoming contest.  Always nice to see Mike, and I wish we’d have had the time to sit and smoke one together.

 

Speaking of the contest, it starts TOMORROW!  Keep any eye here bright and early each morning for the next two weeks for a fantastic parade of prizes!  Leave a comment to win and check back every day for the winner and the next prize!  This is a contest that is unprecedented in the history of CigarCraig.com!  Many thanks to the following companies who have made this contest possible:

La Gloria Cubana

Villiger Stokkebye

Brothers of the Leaf, LLC

Miami Cigar and Co.

Oliva

CAO

Cigar Journal

Pipes and Cigars

C-Gars Ltd. 

Tabacos Mata Fina USA

Oja Cigars

and more to come!

 

My deepest gratitude for everyone for helping to make this a terrific 12 days of contests!

That’s it for now, more tomorrow!

CigarCraig

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A Saturday Afternoon of La Gloria Cubanas

I received an e-mail from Famous Smoke Shop last week about the La Gloria Cubana Artesanos Retro Especiale tour stop and decided this would be the perfect opportunity to finally visit their new location in Easton, PA.  I don’t quite know why I haven’y yet visited the place, it’s a little over an hour and a half from home, although it ended up taking two hours or so to get there.  The retail shop and Leaf Restaurant and Cigar Bar appears to be in the front of their huge warehouse and distribution center.  It’s a little off the beaten path, as I’m driving through a new, under construction residential area and industrial park, I was really starting to doubt my GPS (which has failed me before).  But there it was, in the middle of nowhere, this huge building, with a beautiful restaurant and retail store.  The humidor is enormous, with an equally enormous selection of boxes, five-packs and singles.  The staff was very friendly and attentive, and I picked up a fiver of La Gloria Serie R Maduros.  In the lobby, Michael Giannini was set up with posters that he was autographing, Retro Especiale Club samples, and bundles of Atesano de Tabaqueros, which were free with various levels of purchase.  My simple five-pack purchase got me three of the Artesanos de Tabaqueros, of which I chose two of the new Sumatra/Broad-leaf versions.

 

While I was hanging out talking with Michael, Gary and Seanna (Gary is the General Cigar Event Manager and Seanna is the General Cigar account manager for national accounts), I enjoyed another Retro Especiale Club, which I’ve been smoking quite a few of in the last couple months.  If you haven’t tried these yet, find them and try them. Great cigars.  After that I just had to try the Artesanos de Tabaqueros with the Sumatra and broad-leaf wrappers.  I love broad-leaf, and once the burn line reached that broad-leaf it exploded with flavor.  Not that it didn’t start off great, with the Sumatra wrapper portion being very nice, but the broad-leaf is so rich and full flavored that I was sad when it was finished. I’d love to try broad-leaf and Connecticut shade, hint hint. These cigars are only available on the Retro Tour.

 

It’s always a treat to hang out with Michael, he’s a real mensch, and I’m pleased to know him and call him “Bro”.  I’m glad that I had the opportunity to visit Famous finally.  We are fortunate to have quite a few very large retailers in Pennsylvania, due to the lack of a cigar tax.

 

For my evening “Take a Cigar for a Walk” cigar, I figured I’d keep the La Gloria theme going with a Serie R No. 5 Maduro that I picked up at the shop.  I haven’t had one of these in years, and it was actually milder than I recall. The Tabaqueros was much stronger, and I suppose I expected the R to be stronger.  Regardless, it was a very nice cigar, although the cold evening was, perhaps, not conducive to fully enjoying this cigar.  It burned perfectly. I remember drooling over the stacks of these I saw at the factory.

 

That’s about all I have for now, until the next time,

CigarCraig

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General Cigar Domincana Trip Report: Final Day: Bunching, Box Factory, Wrapping/Packing

Wednesday brought another early wake-up, another terrific breakfast at the hotel buffet, and another bus ride to the General Cigar Dominicana factory.  Today we would have cigar making lessons and tour the box manufacturing facility.  Videos of my attempts are available on my previous entry.

 

I admit to having some apprehension about the hands-on aspects of this part of the trip.  It’s something I’ve looked forward to trying, knowing full well that my manual dexterity is pretty terrible.  We were each provided with a mentor, trainer, teacher.  In my case, it was a gentleman named Danny, who was a supervisor.  As I speak no Spanish and he spoke no English, this was going to be interesting.  We began with the Leiberman machine, and building the bunch.  Each leaf is rolled individually, and each leaf is placed in a specific order in the hand, with the ligero placed in the middle.  I had a 4 leaf blend, with one of the leaves being a half.  Once the leaves are placed in the hand, they are obviously too long for the 5½ x 42 coronas we were rolling, so you tear off the bottom parts and place them back in the bunch, carefully distributing these parts through the bunch.  Once that’s all accomplished, it’s time to put the bunch into the binder leaf and roll it using the Leiberman.  Next comes a bit of pectin on the end to hold it all together and a twist, then it gets shoved into the mold. I screwed this up a few times and Danny bailed me out, deftly redistributing my filler leaves.  We made 20 cigars.

 

While our cigars were spending some time in the press, we went to the box factory.  This incredible place was a wood shop, where they took slabs of wood and ripped it, planed it, cut it to various sizes.  Think of the number of brands that General Cigar makes, then consider the line extensions, then each size.  One quickly reaches the conclusion that there are a whole bunch of different boxes to make!  Then there’s dress boxes, lacquered boxes, all different kinds of boxes, even the semi-circle boxes for the La Gloria Artesanos Obilescos.  They also make boxes for others, we saw Guillermo Leon Signature boxes as well as E.P. Carillo boxes (including one for a cigar we hadn’t yet heard of, “Dark Rituals”.  Once the boxes are made, they have to be decorated.  Some boxes are paper-wrapped, which they were doing in a “Lean Manufacturing” cell method, where each person completed one step and passed the box to the next person in line.  Henry Ford pioneered this method of manufacture and the Japanese auto industry perfected it.  Other boxes are stained and lacquered and decorated with silk screening or foil printing. They have old printing presses and boxes of type, very old school but quite efficient.  They produce some really beautiful boxes, it was quite an amazing operation.

 

Once we were done being amazed once again by the sheer scope of the operation, it was time to do the most difficult thing ever, wrapping our cigars.  As we were making Macanudo cigars, we were using a Connecticut Shade wrapper.  In my self-deprecating way, I viewed this exercise as a fine way to turn excellent raw materials into crap, at least in my case.  If my blend wasn’t a complete abomination and assault on the senses, the possibility of me rolling a functional cigar was remote at best.  Again, Danny was my mentor, and he really knew what he was doing.  I struggled with trimming the leaf to the right size, he jumped in to make corrections.  I never was able to properly trim the “flag” that forms the perfectly rounded head of the cigar, and actually lost the cap, when I successfully punched one out of the leaf, several times,  I thought I had gotten it glued on properly, only to find it on my finger. Think of some delicate task, like threading a needle, or putting a watch together, and do it with mittens on, that’s how I felt trying to wrap my cigars.  The military has a phase involving a monkey and a football, that’s how I felt.  I feel safe saying that I think we were all pretty humbled by the experience.

 

Once we were finished and properly fed, we were escorted to the packaging area where we banded our cigars, We placed Macanudo bands on ten of our cigars, and bands with our names on the remaining cigars. The ones with our names would be smoked by the executives and the blending experts and one would be selected as the best in the group, based on the blend, construction, draw and appearance.  I certainly would not have a horse in this race!  Once the cigars were banded, we put them in cello, another seemingly simple task that, upon doing it, one wonders how these women can do it so quickly.  Then our ten cigars went into a Macanudo box, got a seal and were wrapped in cello.  The company took a whole lot of people away from their jobs to try to show us poor schlubs how hard their jobs are, and they succeeded!

 

On the way out we stopped in the El Credito area and watched the one pair of rollers making the La Gloria Cubana Artesanos De Obelisco.  It was amazing to watch, they had special molds made just for this shape and it’s very hard to roll.  Here’s a little video of the pair doing their thing:

 

httpv://youtu.be/mBVAhl14umo

 

Some of us went sight-seeing where we visited the Centro Leon museum which had one floor of historical and cultural artifacts, and the second floor was made up of art collected by Eduardo Leon Jimenes, who many will recognize in association with La Aurora/Leon Jimenez.  They had cigars in the gift shop, guess what kind?  We also paid a visit to the Monument to the Heroes of the Restoration which has a wonderful view of Santiago.

 

The day wrapped up with a sumptuous meal at the Camp David Ranch.  Again we were able to hob-nob with all of the executives of GCD.  It was great to be able to talk candidly with these new friends, as well as spending some time with others in our group.  The award for the best cigar went to Stephen Boyajian, with yours truly miraculously pulling down and honorable mention for the best construction (thanks to Danny!). We were each presented with our box of ten cigars of our own blend and rolling, as well as a commemorative box with each of our names printed on it.  It was the perfect end to a fantastic trip.  I will forever be amazed by all of the time and effort that goes into making something that we burn in an hour or so, and am grateful to everyone at General Cigar for the opportunity, and to my fellow bloggers for their fraternity (that’s a fancy way to say Bro!).  I smoked a bunch of cigars that I hadn’t smoked in a while, and they were excellent.  I found myself smoking Macanudo Maduros and enjoying the heck out of them, as well as regular old Partagas.  No one should think that because they are so big that they don’t have the same passion for the product that smaller producers have.

 

I’ve certainly typed enough here, yet I feel like I’ve left so much out.  I’ll sprinkle in videos and photos over the coming months as I go through and edit them into something meaningful.

 

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

CigarCraig

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