Tag Archives: La Gloria Cubana

Happy New Year From CigarCraig and E.P.Carrillo Contest Winner Announcement!

Tomorrow is New Years Eve, and I hope everyone has safe and fun plans, and great cigars picked out. I have to work today and tomorrow, so tomorrow night will be a quite night at home. I’m going to select a nice cigar to relax with on the porch, much like any other evening. It might be something from the rare and unusual part of the humidor, this year has been a weird one for me on a personal level. I’m not quite sure how I want to celebrate it yet! Anyway, as I generally do around this time if year, I’ve spent the last week or so smoking cigars I’ve wanted to smoke with little regard for presenting synopsis’s here (is that the right word? plural of synopsis?), but last night I smoked my last Todos Las Dias from Dunbarton Tobacco and Trust, and felt the need to mention it. Of all the cigars Steve Saka has brought to market, this one is one that it took me the longest to “get”.  I suppose the first few I had didn’t seem to draw as well as I’d like, or, more accurately, burned on the wet side, as in over-humidified. This was ironic since Steve was hand picking his IPCPR samples for the exact reason that the samples were still on the wet side from the factory, but the ones I had were in my humidor for some time, so I can only guess that it was my fault, and maybe this liga just needed to be kept as a lower RH. There was an earthy, mushroomy flavor I didn’t care for, and it’s a flavor I typically don’t like in cigars, I think it goes back to a bad mushroom experience I had in the ’80s, but that’s another story. I bought some of the Double Wide Belicosos and put them down for a while in a lower RH humidor. I love the size, Joya de Nicaragua uses the same molds for a couple other cigars in their portfolio and I really dig it. It’s 4¾” x 60 with a blunt, tapered head. With a dryer, open draw, I finally “get” this cigar, and, like the other cigars in the DTT portfolio, I can finally say that there isn’t a cigar in the lineup that I don’t like. It may not be my favorite in the bunch, but it’s certainly one I’d choose over many, many other cigars on the market.  It’s still earthy, but it didn’t have that off-putting (to me), mushroomyness, but more of a hearty Nicaraguan peppery flavor. I still need to try the Thick Lonsdale “Mas Fuerte” (Steve’s alleged mistake), and need to put some more Double Wide Belicosos in the humidor. Perhaps tomorrow night’s smoke will be a pre-release Sin Compromiso…or a Nacatamale, or something of that ilk. Or maybe not.

 

Thursday I posted a video review of the Herics Cigar Measuring Tape.  Please let me know if that’s a format you’d like to see more of, or if a little of me on video is enough! If there’s positive feedback, I might do more, if nobody cares, I might do more, if there vehement opposition, I’ll scrap the idea! and, as I alluded to in the last post, I’ll have another contest in the coming weeks which will include one of the tapes along with some other goodies. Speaking of contests, I have to announce the winner of the E.P. Carrillo Prize Package! I added a few cigars to the package, including an Encore Majestic, which was CA’s No. 1 Cigar of the year. These cigars are out of my humidor, it’s completely legal for me to give cigars to my friends! (that should hold off the black helicopters!).  So there’s the EPC Hat, the pair of tumblers and steel whisky cubes, lighter and cutter, the CigarProp Lighter Bleed Tool (Thanks Kevin!) and now a five pack of cigars (the La Gloria Cubana isn’t technically an EPC cigar, but it’s made at his factory and was blended with his help, along with Yuri Guillen of General Cigar Co. I’m counting it, it’s my contest. I don’t think the winner is going to complain, it’s a fantastic cigar! So, as per normal, I consulted the random number generator, and Andy Klueber‘s number finally came up. Andy has been lamenting the fact that he never wins for as long as I can remember, so now he can give it a rest!  Please send your address so I can send this out to you! Thanks to E.P. Carrillo and Cigar Prop for the goodies, and than you all for your support and participation over the years!

 

Happy New Year! Until the next time,

 

CigarCraig

Share

10 Comments

Filed under Contest, Review

Esteban Carreras, Kristoff, Leccia Luchador and La Gloria Esteli Cigars

Tuesday was my day off, so after doing some yard work, I went to Cigar Cigars in Downingtown, PA to hang out with Kevin, the manager there for a little bit. My friend Greg had been after me to try  the Esteban Carreras Mr. Brownstone for a while, and I’ve been meaning to, so I figured it was a good time to do it. It seems Kevin is Greg’s dealer for this particular cigar, so it just seemed fitting. I love a good Broadleaf cigar, and this certainly is a good broadleaf cigar. In addition to the Connecticut Broadleaf wrapper, it had an Ecuador Habano binder and Nicaraguan fillers from Jalapa and Condega.  I smoked the Toro, and the store signs these as “toro”, “robusto” and “gordo” instead of the given names, which is where this line goes off the rails for me. It’s a great cigar, the build was great, it burned straight, the draw was great, the flavor was great, everything about the experience was perfect, and I wanted another one, I totally get it. However, in this day and age, where the FDA, and governments and health organizations are actively trying to eliminate tobacco entirely, I find it irresponsible to name a cigar and it’s sizes after illicit drug slang names.  Mr. Brownstone, and the size names Smack, Speedball and Mainline, are all heroin references, and  heroin is a big problem (I probably wouldn’t know this if I hadn’t read Slash’s biography). There are stores that won’t carry this line because of the name. The anti-tobacco people are looking for anything to try to tie tobacco use in with addiction and drug use, and things like this, however benign you and I know them to be, don’t help our cause to the casual observer. It’s a great cigar, I just wish it were named more responsibly, and I wish I didn’t have to waste bandwidth ranting about the name and spend more time on the experience, which was awesome!

 

I left Cigar Cigars before they started their Kristoff event, but not before meeting Bill Coyne, the Kristoff sales rep. Bill is a super nice guy, knowing Glen Case, I expected nothing less.  I had picked up the Kristoff Vengeance in a Toro, since I hadn’t tried that yet, and Kevin recommended it, so I lit that up for my evening walk. Sidebar: since my new job has me on my feet a large part of the day, and its been so friggin cold lately (it’s been so cold, the politicians have had their hands in their own pockets! ) my walks have been shorter than normal. That’s where the enclosed back porch comes in handy! The Vengeance, like the Brownstone, has a Connecticut Broadleaf wrapper, Indonesian binder, and Nicaraguan and Dominican fillers. It’s funny, I like Kristoff cigars OK, but I’m not overly wow’d by many of them, which is funny, because I really like Dean Parson’s Epic Cigars, which are made in the same factory. All the Kristoffs have the unfinished foot and pigtail cap, which differentiates them, and I like the flavor blast of the unfinished foot, but you have to be careful of the mess factor, and the only time I’ve ever burned a hole in a shirt has been lighting a cigar with a shaggy foot.  Anyway, I liked the Vengeance a great deal, it had the sweet and savoryness that I look for in a Broadleaf wrapped cigar and I found it satisfying, although I would have liked to have let it rest a little longer in the humidor. I’ll certainly smoke this cigar again.

 

I reached back into the archives for an old Leccia Tobacco Luchador cigar this week. Back in 2014 Sam Leccia had a year-long distribution arrangement with General Cigar Co, and during that time released the  El Gringo line extension to the Luchador line, made at American Caribbean Tobacco S.A. in Nicaragua. American Caribbean Tobacco is the factory that makes a lot of Gurkha cigars as well as Toraño. I selected a Squared Circle, the 6½” x 64  box pressed pyramid. Only as I am writing this am I realizing that this was a 64 ring gauge at the foot, with the box press it didn’t seem that large. This represents a missed opportunity to  try out a new tool I got, the Cigar Measuring Tape from www.herics.com. Not that I’ve smoked this cigar, and I probably won’t see another one again, I’ll have to find another cigar to try out this measuring tape out on, which I  think will be a useful tool for determining the ring gauge on a box pressed cigar. I think I have some El Gringo Frog Splash’s left in the humidors, that’ll work.  Anyway, I’ll do a video about the Measuring tape real soon. In the world of the Leccia Luchador, the El Gringo blend was never my favorite, I always preferred the sweet and spicy San Andrés wrapped original Luchador over the El Gringo, however a few years of age on the El Gringo has been good to it, and it was a very nice smoke. The El Gringo has a Nicaraguan oscuro wrapper, Nicaraguan habano binder and ligero fillers from Pennsylvania and Nicaragua, but it wasn’t all that strong originally, and mellowed a bit over the years. I remember buying this at CI when we went to see Sam when he hosted  a wrestling event there featuring little people, which was both hysterical and uncomfortable.

 

Finally, I have enjoyed the newest La Gloria Cubana Esteli in the  4½” x 52 Robusto, so I picked up a few of the Toros to test them out. This is the Esteli, not the Serie R Esteli. I can see where there might be some confusion. This has a Nicaraguan Jalapa Ligero wrapper, Honduran binder from Jamastran, and Honduran fillers from Jamastran and La Entrada. Basically, the only thing Esteli about this is that it’s made in the factory in Esteli, the only tobacco from Nicaragua is that Nicaraguan wrapper, and that from Jalapa. Weird. Apart from that small criticism, the cigar is good, although this is another cigar that will benefit from some rest in my humidor to knock off some rough edges in the final third. There’s some earthiness and a little sweetness and spice. The Toro is only 5½” x 54, but by the time I got a bit past the half way point it started smoking like it had a little too much humidity in it, which will go away after some time. I had just brought these home from the store a few days prior and while the other cigars I bought smoked fine, every cigar is different and this one needed some rest. We’ll see how this is in a few weeks, so far, I really enjoy the little robustos. One interesting note: The bar code sticker calls it “LGC Esteli White”, and I don’t see the “White” anywhere else in the marketing. Will there be and Esteli Maduro on the horizon called the “Black”, like the Serie R Esteli Maduro? It’s not a stretch to speculate, I suppose.

 

That’s all for today.  I was going to write a whole rant on top-whatever lists and their relative merits, but I have some fine-tuning to do…it seems they are a valuable marketing tool for retailers and manufactures, so it wouldn’t make any sense to crap all over them (if that’s what I were going to do, not that I was or anything…).  Anyway, until the next time,

 

CigarCraig

Share

Comments Off on Esteban Carreras, Kristoff, Leccia Luchador and La Gloria Esteli Cigars

Filed under Review

CigarCraig’s Holiday Giveaways No. 3 – Drew Estate Goodies!

Happy New Year’s Eve to everyone,  2017 is just about in the books, the year went by really fast.  I honestly don’t know what to expect from 2018, but I’ll keep smoking cigars, visiting shops and going to events I suspect. So I wish everyone a safe and happy 2018, and be careful out there tonight!  I’ll be finding an appropriate cigar to smoke this evening, that’s for sure.  Anyway, there’s the business of selecting the winner of the La Gloria Cubana Contest, which includes a travel humidor and a dozen La Gloria LaGloriaCubana ContestCubana cigars. The random number generator selected Trent Berry as the winner!  Trent, please send me your address so I can ship this off to you!  Once again, thanks to Rami at General Cigar Co., Cigar Cigars in King Of Prussia for having a great event with Ernesto Carillo which caused me to open my wallet and end up with a cool humidor to give away, and of course, General Cigar Co, for being an awesome steward of a long loved brand.  Gee, I wonder what today’s giveaway is?

 

Contest (note: not Comic Sans this time Mike P!)

 

DE Contest2017Today’s third and (maybe) final giveaway of the season is a collection of goodies from my friends at Drew Estate. Included are some items that may not be very common in the wild. These are items I’ve received over the course of the year, there’s a Barnsmoker cap from the Connecticut Barn Smoker (I’m not a hat guy), a DE backpack which contained a lighter, ashtray, and other assorted goodies which was from the media party that DE threw at the 2017 IPCPR, some various stickers that I’ve accumulated over the years, some of which are from my last visit to the factory in 2013, and a selection of cigars from my humidor including Undercrowns (and example of each wrapper), a KFC, a Nica Rustica and some Joya de Nicaraguas because Drew Estate distributes them and I have a bunch.  I’ll add to it if I come across more stuff. Once again, it’s not that I don’t appreciate these gifts from Drew Estate, I do, but I like to share my good fortune, and I have lots of “stuff”! You know the de4l, leave a comment here to enter and I’ll pick a winner next Sunday, Jan 7, 2018. As always, thank YOU all for your continued support!

 

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

 

CigarCraig

(I was thinking of making a version of the logo with a party hat and one of those noisemaker, party things, for New Years, but lack the patience for that right now…something for me to work on for next year!)

Share

71 Comments

Filed under Contest

CigarCraig’s Top Five Memorable Cigars of 2017

This is a little early but Sunday’s post just might be another contest and I don’t want to confuse things! I was trying to get this posted Wednesday, but things weren’t working out the way I wanted them to! Just like last year, my criteria is simple, a cigar that I consider “Memorable” is one I smoked, made a positive impression on me to the point where I really want to smoke more of that cigar.  I noted last year that this format, in no particular order, would keep me off Halfwheel’s Consensus list, but I just recently came to find out that my 2016 was included on their 2016 Awards: The Consensus Top 25 Cigars which included at least three of my five most memorable. So, without further ado, here’s my list of memorable cigars of last year.

 

LaGloriaCubana_Colección Reserva_PresidenteI’ve been a fan of La Gloria Cubana cigars since the mid-nineties when I started really getting into the premium cigars. Back then they were made by Ernesto Perez Carillo in Miami and later the Dominican Republic and were excellent. Time has passed, along with ownership of the company, and Ernesto has gone on to do his own thing, but he came back to partner with General to make the Coleccion Reserva. one a side note, the current contest running now until Sunday includes ten of these great cigars, and let me tel you it’s going to be hard to let go of them! I kid, I’m happy to share such great cigars. These are manufactured at Ernesto’s  Tabacalera La Alianza in the Dominican Republic using materials from both companies. I like them so much I bought a box of the Presidente size for full retail! This cigar exemplifies the cooperative nature of the cigar industries where competing companies work together. It doesn’t always work, but in the case of the La Gloria Cubana Coleccion Reserva is does. Smoking one with Ernesto at a local event puts it at the top of my most memorable list ( I know, I said it was in no particular order!).

 

CorneliusandAnthony_SenorEsugars_RobustoCornelius and Anthony makes an appearance again this year, I still go to the Cornelius Toro as my “go to” special occasion cigar, but there aren’t a lot of cigars in their portfolio that I don’t like. OK, I don’t think there are any that I don’t like. OK, OK, there aren’t any I don’t like! This year they released two new lines, the Aerial with a Ecuador Connecticut Shade wrapper,  and the Señor Esugars with a San Andrés wrapper, which is my second selection on my memorable list. These are made at the La Zona factory in Esteli. I really dig this cigar, which, like the Aerial, has a super secret US grown binder. they are tight-lipped about the origin of the leaf they use, but considering the Bailey family has been growing tobacco in Virginia for 150 years, one cant help but think it’s grown in Virginia. It certainly adds a unique component to the cigars, and the Señor Esugars hits my palate just right. There’s a super cool dog on the box too. Full disclosure: Cornelius and Anthony is an advertiser on CigarCraig.com, but the only effect that has on my opinion is in that bearing contacted by them to advertise put them on my radar, and meeting Steven Bailey and his team adds to the memorability.

 

SouthernDraw_Jacob'sLadder_GordoSouthern Draw Cigars has been on my radar for a while, but at this year’s IPCPR I finally got to meet Robert Holt, his wife, Sharon, and their family. Upon meeting, Robert did a convincing job of knowing who I was and was generous with his time.  Robert is a gentleman, a veteran, a spiritual man and is behind some of the best cigars coming out of Tabacalera AJ Fernandez.  New to me this year was the Jacobs Ladder, his Pennsylvania Broadleaf flavor bomb. The name hints at his commitment to family and faith, and the cigar is awesome. I’m currently on the hunt for more, because it’s one I want to smoke more of, and it’s an especially good choice for the cold weather we’ve been having as the weight of the flavor cuts through the crisp air.  The Rose of Sharon is also a stellar offering in the Ecuador Connecticut wrapper (there should be little doubt by now that a maduro is almost always winning out over a shade wrapper with me!), it’s among the best out there (the above mentioned Aerial and the Fratello Oro get honorable mentions).  So that makes the Southern Draw Jacobs Ladder my third memorable smoke of 2017.

 

OscarHabano_SixtyNext up is another cigar I really enjoyed this year, the Oscar Habano. Funny think about this one is that I had bought some of the Toro  and Gordo sizes an really enjoyed them, but it wasn’t until  I had the Robusto that was part of 2 Guys Smokeshop‘s Contenders pack that I really saw the beauty of this cigar. Listen to The Cigar Authority tomorrow (Saturday 12/30) to see if they get it right and select this cigar as the Cigar of the Year. As I think about it, I may dig out the one toro I still have and smoke it today. Oscar makes some great cigars, the Leaf by Oscar line is very good (there’s another Ecuador Connecticut cigar that’s really good!), it’s nice that he made something exceptional to put his name on (wait…his name is on the Leaf by Oscar isn’t it?) Great smoke, I hope 2 Guys Smokeshop makes the right call on this one.

 

FSG ToroFinally, I really can’t get enough of the Florida Sungrown from Drew Estate. This uses tobacco that’s grown on Jeff Borysiewicz’s (Corona Cigar Co.) Farm where he’s growing Corojo tobacco, the first time Cigar tobaco has been grown in Florida for something like 40 years. Willie Hererra blended the cigar using Nicaraguan and Honduran tobaccos with the Florida leaf adding that little something different in the flavor.  I have to admit, it was a toss-up between the FSG and the Undercrown Sungrown, both are exceptional and I really dig them, but the FSG has a great story and inches out the Undercrown by a hair. Drew Estate continues to bring new and interesting cigars to the market, I have to admit that I rather liked the new Acid Kuba Candela too. While I’m more of a traditional cigar smoker, this one was a treat, the bitterness of the candela wrapper offset the sweetness of the infusion. Good stuff.

 

That’s it for my five most memorable cigars of the past year. There were probably others that I thought were excellent but didn’t have the little extra to make them stand out. The La Palina El Año 1816 was on my list too, I just need to smoke a few more before I can make a strong recommendation (the La Palina Classic Maduro I smoked last night was really quite tasty too!).  Hopefully 2018 brings some new and interesting cigars. Once again, thanks to all the readers and sponsors, without whom I’d be typing for my own entertainment!

 

That’s all for now, don’t forget the contest! Until the next time,

 

CigarCraig

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Share

13 Comments

Filed under Review

CigarCraig’s Holiday Giveaways No. 2 – La Gloria Cubana Cigars and Humidor

Before we get to today’s giveaway, I better announce the winner of the last one!  The winner of the Gurkha Goodies Giveaway, as selected by the random number generator at Random.org is Jeffrey Martin!  Please send your address so I can get this shipped to you on Tuesday!

 

Contest!

 

La Gloria Cubana Contest 1A couple of months ago I attended an event at a local shop which featured Ernesto Perez Carillo, but was a General Cigar Event. It would be confusing if one wasn’t aware of Ernesto’s involvement with La Gloria Cubana, which was his baby until he sold it to General. It was a treat to see him and get to talk to him for a bit, and I talked myself into buying a box of the new La Gloria Cubana Coleccion Reserva, just to have Ernesto sign it for me. I don’t usually do that, but it was Ernesto, and I’ve been a huge LGC fan for decades. I love the cigars, so I’m in good shape there, and wanted to share some with La Gloria Cubana Contest 2a lucky reader. One of the “gifts with purchase” for buying the box was a cool La Gloria Cubana Serie R travel humidor, along with a fiver of the Coleccion Reserva La Robusto, and Rami, our local rep, threw in another fiver.  So there’s a travel humidor, ten great cigars, along with a couple of others from my humidor, a Serie R Esteli and a Serie N JSB.  As you can see the travel humidor will hold 11 cigars, but not 12. Thanks to General Cigars for helping me out with this one and giving me the chance to hang out with a legend in the cigar biz, as well as making great cigars!

 

You know the rules, leave a comment to enter and I’ll pick a winner next Sunday, which is New Years Eve. Today is Christmas Eve, so Merry Christmas to all. I’ve been smoking some favorites lately, and will pick out a couple of special cigars for today and tomorrow, no doubt.  So, until the next time,

 

CigarCraig

 

 

Share

72 Comments

Filed under Contest