Tag Archives: Tarazona

TPE2022: The Brands of Sutliff Tobacco Distributing, Patina, Emperors Cut, Etc.

No video this time, I should have done some videos in the Suliff booth, but it was the first day when I visited, and it was very busy. On Wednesday, the first day if the show, my plane landed around 11:30 and I got an Uber right to the show, I think I was on the floor by 12:45. I actually wasn’t really planning to get to the show at all on Wednesday, but things worked out better than I expected. I decided it made more sense to go right to the Convention Center than to try to check in the hotel early and goof around with that sort of stuff. It also helped that I ran into Mark Weisenberger, of Box Press Sales and Marketing, on the plane and shared the Uber with him to the show. So I used Wednesday to get my bearings and come up with a plan for the next couple days. Back to the Sutliff booth. I’ve known Anne Dinkins at Sutliff for years, she used to be my contact at Villiger Cigars years ago. I make a point to stop and say hello to her if nothing else. She, in turn, introduces me to the brands that Sutliff distributes. This year there were a few new ones that I didn’t know much about, and a few I had known for a while. 

 

One brand that was there that I really like was Patina Cigars. I was happy to meet Mo Maali, I hear him all the time on his Sultans of Smoke podcast so I feel like I know him. I may have met him before…I feel like he knew who I was. Social media can blur the lines between what’s real and not sometimes. I feel bad that I didn’t spend more time with him, and regret not circling back and doing a video with him. Patina is a great line of cigars. They are made in the same factory that Saka’s Mi Querida cigars are made in, NACSA, so the quality is top notch. I smoked a Patina Habano that I had in my humidor when I got home and it was spectacular. It had that cane sugar sweetness that I love. I know it’s one that I’ll be grabbing at Son’s the next time I get over there (which needs to be soon). Mo handed me a Maduro, which I definitely need to sample. I’m a big fan, I hope he gets out this way for a visit one of these days, I know he works with several stores in the Philadelphia area. 

 

There were several brands in the Sutliff booth that I’ve featured on these pages before that I was able to put faces with names finally, Desiree from Drunk Chicken Cigars and Steve Zengel of Los Caidos Cigars. There were also a few people I’ve known for a long time, like Enrique Seijas of Matilde cigars and Eddie Tarazona of…what was the name of his company? Oh, right, Tarazona Cigars 😁.  I finally met Marcel and Henderson of Adventura Cigars, who might have had the busiest corner of the booth. Henderson gave me a Queens Pearls, which has been getting a lot of buzz, and I smoked it this week and it was OK, I may have to pick up another one to give it a second shot. A friend gifted me a Kings Gold which looks more to my liking. Honestly, it takes a heck of a Connecticut cigar to get my attention. 

 

Anne seemed most anxious to introduce me to Greg Willis of Emperors Cut Cigars. It turns out that Greg had e-mailed me several years ago about advertising and I was, let’s say, diplomatically dismissive. We had a good laugh. I smoked the Natural Pleasure Gan Robusto yesterday.  This was a 5½” x 56 cigar made in Nicaragua, with a Colorado Maduro wrapper, Ecuadoran binder, and fillers from Estelí, Nicaragua. It was an earthy Nicaraguan blend with very little sweetness. It was very different than what I expected. I think it was more on the umami side of the flavor spectrum that what I typically am drawn to. That being said, it certainly performed well and it wasn’t off-putting in any way. I enjoyed it as a change from what I typically enjoy. Make sense? Maybe not, but I look forward to trying the Jazz series cigar Greg gave me. 

 

Sutliff’s booth was very busy when I was there, of course they are also, probably primarily, a pipe tobacco company, so there was a lot of pipe tobacco displayed in the booth as well. As I don’t care about that, I don’t cover it. I always enjoy seeing old friends and meeting new people though! I hope I didn’t miss anyone. Thanks again to Anne for taking time to show me around.

 

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

 

CigarCraig 

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Hoyo de Monterrey Epicure Seleccion, Tarazona and Jacoubs Cigars

I’ve been a fan of Hoyo de Monterrey cigars for just about as long as I’ve been a fan of cigars. I used to splurge on a huge $5 Excalibur No. 1 from time to time, and have smoked tons of Rothschilds and Sabrosos over he years. I’ve enjoyed a great many of the recent iterations of the Hoyos from the AJ Fernandez collaboration as well. I finally got around to smoking the newest Hoyo de Monterrey, made at the HATSA factory in Honduras, the Epicure Selección. I smoked the No. 1, which is a corona gorda, 5 5/8″ x 46,  a size I really enjoy. They also make a No.2 (4.9″ x 50) and a Toro Especiale (6″x50). Certainly I’ll be seeking out the Toro at some point. This was a really good smoke. Very bold and straight forward Honduran heavy, dark tobacco. It was rich and earthy with some spice. I enjoyed it a lot. I didn’t find it to be complex, and it lacked any subtlety whatsoever, which is what I liked about it. It screamed “cigar” and was unapologetic. I dug it. I think Frank Llaneza would be pleased. Once again, neither the Hoyo, nor the new CigarWorld sites are updated with information about this cigar.

 

I ran into Eddie Tarazona at the TPE show and I hadn’t seen Eddie in a few years. I think I met Eddie in 2011 or ’12 at one of the Delaware Cigar Festivals that were held at Delaware Park racetrack. At the TPE he gave me a couple cigars, one of which was a Tarazona Guerilla 305 El Jefe Flaco. This is a 6 ½” x 42 lonsdale-ish sized cigar, with a H2000 wrapper grown in Ecuador, Sumatra binder and Piloto Viso, Criollo 98, Corojo Seco, Connecticut Broadleaf fillers. One does not often see Broadleaf in the filler blend. H2000 wrapper has come a long way. When it was developed in 2000 it didn’t burn. It was better suited for wrapping electrical wires or making jumpsuits for Indy car drivers than cigar wrappers. If those analogies need further explanation, the stuff was flame retardant, it didn’t burn. In the last twenty years the pre-industry tobacco folks have figured out how to ferment the stuff and now it works like cigar wrappers should work, and it tastes pretty yummy too. Platinum Nova Cigars uses it on a lot of their cigars and they are quite expensive and pretty darned good. Something makes me thing Saka used it one of his special editions, although I can’t bring it to mind, and I could be wrong. Anyway, the El Jefe Flaco was a nice smoke, it burned perfectly, and I was careful not to over-smoke it lest it heat up and get bitter. It was smooth and had a great flavor, medium bodied and nutty, with some sweetness, no doubt from the Broadleaf in the filler. It was a good smoke. Eddie’s a good dude, and he puts out some good cigars. I have another he gave me that I can’t wait to sample. 

 

My last cigar was a one-off that probably doesn’t even warrant discussion, because I don’t even know if it’s available and I don’t know much about it. I was rummaging around the humidor as I’ve been doing lately, just sort of selecting oddities to smoke that have been around a while, or things that I don’t need to write about, or are just random one-offs. This torpedo came from my first visit to a shop in Ridley Park, PA, which is about 5 miles from the Philadelphia International Airport, called Jacoubs. It’s a nice little shop with a lounge, take some change for the on street parking meters, it’s better than the airports cell-phone lot to wait for an airport pick up. It’s owned by a guy named, now get this: Jacoub. Weird, huh? This torpedo came from my first visit to this shop which was in the spring of 2016, so it somehow got buried for the last 4 years. I had the good sense to put a post-it on it with “Jacoubs” on it, so at least I had some idea of it’s provenance. Sadly, it was an exceptional cigar. I say “sadly” of course, because I’ll not have the chance to smoke it again. It’s not that big of a deal really, because, while it was a really great cigar, it wasn’t one that was particularly distinctive or different, know what I mean? It was a cigar that, while smoking one thinks “that’s a really good” smoke, but there’s no point where  you think, “gee, there’s a flavor I’ve never had in a cigar before, that’s really unique”. So it was a good, well aged, well made torpedo, obviously made with good materials. I suppose the next time I’m down that way I’ll ask Jacoub about it. 

 

That’s all for today. Don’t forget to go back to Wednesday’s post and enter the contest if you haven’t already. If you have, good luck, don’t enter again! Until the next time, 

 

CigarCraig

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