News: J.C. Newman Cigar Co. Reintroduces Perla Del Mar

I’m pretty excited about this news. I really like the Perla Del Mar Maduro, and I look forward to trying the new Corojo. They are reasonably priced and well made and taste good. Always a good combination! I do have to say that I really like the old bands over these new ones. I think they remind me too much of another brand, and look too bundle-like. The old brands were elegant and classy! What do I know? 


A storied cigar from Cuba and Tampa is reborn in Nicaragua


Today, J.C. Newman Cigar Co. began shipping its new Perla del Mar cigars to brick and mortar retailers across the United States. Handmade at J.C. Newman PENSA in Nicaragua, the new Perla del Mar is a significant refinement of the Perla del Mar cigars that J.C. Newman launched in 2012.



“Although our Perla del Mar cigars were good, we were not totally satisfied,” said Drew Newman, general counsel and a member of J.C. Newman’s fourth-generation. “We wanted to make them better – and that’s exactly what we did. After two years of effort working to perfect the brand, we are thrilled to reintroduce Perla del Mar.”



Perla del Mar’s existing Shade and Maduro blends have been strengthened with aged Nicaraguan filler tobaccos, and a new flavorful Corojo blend, rolled with a robust Ecuadorian Corojo wrapper, has been added to the family. Perla del Mar cigars are now shaped in a classic Tampa-style press and packed with traditional bands and boxes. Each blend comes in four sizes with an MSRP of between $6 and $7.

 

 

“Although our family has been rolling cigars for 125 years, we do not rest on our laurels,” said Newman. “We are constantly working to improve everything that we do, and we are very pleased with the new Perla del Mar.”


Perla del Mar is a historic cigar brand that traces its roots to Cuba. In 1905, four Cuban brothers started hand rolling cigars using tobacco grown on their family’s farm in Cuba. They named their company Perfecto Garcia Brothers and called their cigars “Perla del Mar” because of the beautiful Caribbean waters that surround Cuba. As the popularity and demand for their cigars grew, the brothers built a large cigar factory next to J.C. Newman’s El Reloj factory in Ybor City, Florida. Perla del Mar was one of the leading premium cigar brands in the early 1900s. J.C. Newman’s new Perla del Mar cigars honor the brand’s historic legacy.

 

 

About J.C. Newman Cigar Co.


Founded in 1895 by Julius Caeser Newman, J.C. Newman Cigar Company is the oldest family-owned premium cigar maker in America. J.C. Newman rolls its El Reloj, Factory Throwouts, and Trader Jacks cigars by hand-operated, vintage cigar machines at its historic cigar factory in Tampa, Florida. It also hand rolls its Brick House, Perla del Mar, El Baton, and Quorum cigars at the J.C. Newman PENSA cigar factory in Esteli, Nicaragua. J.C. Newman’s Diamond Crown, MAXIMUS, Julius Caeser, and Black Diamond cigars are handmade by Tabacalera A. Fuente in the Dominican Republic. With its longtime partners the Fuente family, the Newmans founded the Cigar Family Charitable Foundation, which supports low-income families in the Dominican Republic with education, health care, vocational training, and clean water.

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3 Comments

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3 Responses to News: J.C. Newman Cigar Co. Reintroduces Perla Del Mar

  1. Patrick Hosler

    Craig buddy
    With all due respect.
    Why do I keep commenting, when there is no discussion or validation of my words.
    I’m talking to deaf ears.
    Chew on that thought…I love you…I love your observations, but without the feedback…
    Life is good

  2. Craig Vanderslice

    I rarely expect comments on news items. I suspect I could do better about responding to comments. I think Facebook is a better forum for conversation than blog comments.

  3. Patrick Hosler

    We agree to disagree. Face book is not an environment for give and take discussion.
    I have enjoyed the back and forth of a few blogs that promote and facilitate reader opinions. You kinda get a community.
    But I understand that you prefer not to put in the amount of time that would be needed. I wouldn’t.
    It’s just I love your style, I like talking with you, and you live to far away for the hangout thing. Additionally we have such similar palates and what we look for in a good cigar, that I want to discuss a lot of your observations.
    It was just a taser shot at you to get your attention, so I could maybe talk you into it.
    Bottom line, I won’t be posting here much if at all for the future.
    But I’m still going to read and reread what you write. Wouldn’t miss it for anything. But I’m sure your readers don’t care what I think. I just wanted to know I’m still here, just quiet…