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News: Emilio Cigars Reintroduces AF1 & AF2

Several years ago Emilio AF1 (and subsequently AF2) were all the rage.  If you search back through the CigarCraig.com archives you’ll find them mentioned plenty of times.  I believe I have a few squirrelled away in a humidor someplace still. I’m really interested to try this new iteration of the AF series, and I wonder if there might be a JB1 and 2 somewhere down the road (the AF was named for AJ Fernandez, the factory where the original was made, it was one of the early AJF collaborations)? 

Emilio Cigars releases into general production the AF1 and AF2; hand crafted in Esteli, Nicaragua at Fabrica Oveja Negra.

This is the first release of this line since the collaboration between Emilio Cigars and Black Label Trading Company (BLTC) was announced in January. The artwork and blending for these cigars has been done by James Brown.  Mr. Brown, owner of BLTC and Fabrica Oveja Negra, stated, “I am very excited to have these cigars hitting the market.  The AF1 & AF2 are classics that have been given the Oveja Negra makeover in appearance and flavor. Both are medium bodied with the AF1 highlighted by the rich, earthiness of the San Andrés wrapper and the AF2 is more spice forward with a Ecuador Habano wrapper.

AF1 and AF2 will be available at select retailers this month. 

AF1 Country of Origin: Nicaragua
Wrapper: Mexico San Andrés 
Binder: Nicaraguan Habano
Filler: Nicaragua 

                Robusto  5×50 (20 count) MSRP $9.50
                Toro  6×50 (20 count) MSRP $10.00
                Grand Toro 6×58 (20 count) MSRP $10.50

AF2 Country of Origin: Nicaragua

Wrapper: Ecuador Habano
Binder: Nicaraguan Habano
Filler: Nicaragua 

                Corona  5.5×42 (20 count) MSRP $8.50
                Robusto – 5×50 (20 count) MSRP $9.00
                Toro – 6×50 (20 count) MSRP $9.50
                Grand Toro– 6×58 (20 count) MSRP $10.00

Emilio Cigars is a brand with old school roots and new school attitude. With an eclectic portfolio, Emilio is sure to have something for everyone.

For more information contact info@OvejaNegraCigars.com.
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A Visit To Classic Cigar Parlor, an Emilio a NicaHabana and a J.C. Newman

Saturday was an absolutely stunning spring day, barely a cloud in the sky, and temps in the mid 70s. My wife had an event that she wanted to attend with one of her clients, the grand opening of Brad’s Raw Foods new facility in Pipersville, PA.  Neither my wife nor I are vegetarian/vegan/raw food people, but we like to try things now and then, and I must admit I like Brad’s Leafy Kale chips to snack on from time to time, weird as it sounds.  Anyway, that’s all beside the point.  I dropped my wife off and back-tracked a couple miles to Doylestown, PA, where I had stumbled across the Classic Cigar Parlor last year.  I wanted to get back to this shop and hang out and have a cigar, and this turned out to be the ideal opportunity.  The shop is reasonably small, but it’s in the second oldest building in Doylestown, dating back to the 1700s.  There are cabinet humidors lining the walls, and behind the counter is the original colonial style fireplace, and the ceiling has massive open beams.  It’s a cool looking place.  They have a hookah lounge upstairs, that I didn’t visit, as I just wanted to pick up a couple cigars and have a smoke.  Frank was working in the store and was a pleasure to spend an hour or so chatting with.  I shopped around a bit and decided to pick up a few Grimalkin toros, as I gave away my last Grimalkins a few months ago, and as I’m checking out, I see he last couple cigars in an Emilio AF1 box on the counter clearance priced at $5.00 each.  Temptation got the best of me, and I had to buy them all.  I fired up one of the AF1 toros and had a seat, enjoying the cigar, as well as talking with Frank and watching what the customers were purchasing.  The Emilio AF1 is a favorite of mine, rich, dark and delicious!  As I lit it I almost thought I was making a mistake, smoking this cigar in the afternoon, on a relatively empty stomach, but it turned out fine.  It’s a nice, strong cigar, but not overwhelming.  I did have to hold my tongue at one point, hearing Frank tell a customer who said he smoked Cohibas that they had the “original Cohiba family’s cigars that are involved in a trademark dispute” and showed him a box of Dominican, yellow band “Cohibas”.  Can someone please introduce me to someone named “Cohiba”, or, better yet, show me a pre-embargo Cohiba?  The word “cohiba” comes from the Taino Indian term for tobacco that Columbus heard them using 500 years ago, and the Dominican yellow band “Cohibas” have been a knock-off that General Cigar has been fighting with for, I’d guess, 15 years or more, and I’m surprised these still make it onto tobacconist’s shelves.  I suppose I shouldn’t complain about a cigar I’ve never smoked, but  I just don’t like to hear mis-information like that.  In retrospect I should have tried to educate Frank after the customer left, but I’ve tried to do that in the past and it didn’t end as well as I had hoped.  Still a nice visit to a cool little shop.

 

Earlier in the day we had met my brother-in-law for breakfast and he had just returned from a trip to Tampa, and gifted me a Robusto from Nicahabana Cigars.  From what I gather from their website, they roll cigars on site, not unlike Cigar Factory New Orleans, and have a wide range of sizes and blends.  This cigar was a pretty thing, with a nice, dark, oily wrapper.  I probably should have let it rest in my humidor for a few weeks, but I impatiently fired it up.  It was a beautiful evening and I just wanted to sit on my front porch and enjoy a cigar.  Enjoy I did, although the wrapper turned out to be very fragile in the middle of the cigar and flaked away in spots.  Still, the flavor had a nice zing and was pretty strong in flavor.  It was rich and satisfying.  Thanks to Jeff for thinking of me on his trip, it’s always fun to try a new cigar.  Along the same lines, earlier in the week I had smoked another unbanded Nicaraguan maduro robusto that I picked up at my local shop, JM Cigars in Exton, PA.  He had these enormous 100 count chests of cigars that I had never seen before, and Jeff, the owner, told me that they were made by J.C. Newman.  It was a nice cigar, very well made and even flavored. For $3.75 it was a very nice cigar, and he said he’d been selling them like crazy.

 

That’s all for now, happy Mother’s Day.  If you aren’t one, you probably have or had one, so do something special for one today!

 

Until the next time,

CigarCraig

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CigarCraig’s Top Cigars Of 2011

Once again I’d like to thank everyone for making the 12 Days of Spectacular Giveaways a huge success.   I certainly couldn’t have done it without stuff to give away and people to give it to and  the great support I had at home.   It was tons of fun but it was a loads of work and quite tiring.  I’ll plan on doing it again next year but will do a few things a little differently on the back end.  Congrats to all of the winners and thanks to everyone for making it a great year on CigarCraig.com!

 

Everyone’s publishing their “Top Whatever” lists, and I’ve avoided doing anything like that over the years since I don’t really have a quantitative method of reviewing cigars, if you even want to call it reviewing.  I know what I like, I know how a cigar works and I also feel that nobody sets out to make a crappy cigar, so there must be someone, somewhere who likes a given cigar, no matter how offensive it is to me.  Also keep in mind that I’m not the kind of guy who runs all over creation looking for the hip boutique cigars, I’m just as happy with a Partagas Black as I am with some limited edition cigar that only comes out on arbor day and had 7 bands on it (happier, no doubt) So with all that in mind, let’s take a romp through what tripped my trigger over the last year!

 

You’d be hard pressed to find a list without the Tatuaje La Casita Criolla on it, and I have to concur, this is one of the cigars this year that really made me happy.  Broadleaf.  That’s all it is, Broadleaf.  I love Broadleaf.  I only smoked the corona size, but to me it compared favorably with the Liga Privada Serie Unico Dirty Rat in flavor and balance.  Tasty, tasty cigar!  I purchased these at a local shop and they weren’t too much more than $5 or $6 each.

 

A group of cigars that have received favorable reviews everywhere and are on everyone’s lists are the Emilio and Grimalkin cigars from Gary Griffith.  The Emilio AF1 is a nice, dark, heavy, seriously yummy cigar, it’s sibling, the AF2 is different, perhaps a brighter flavor, but equally well made and delicious.  The Grimalkin is a different beast, subtle, complex, an orgiastic feast of the senses.  I have not had the occasion to purchase these, all of the samples I smoked were provided to me by Gary, but that doesn’t mean I wouldn’t buy them in a heartbeat.  Gary and his partners are producing exceptional cigars, and I’m quite happy to know him.

 

I have also been enamored with the La Gloria Cubana Artesanos Retro Especial and the CAO OSA Sol this year, both new cigars from General Cigar Co., and I’m not just saying that because I had the great fortune of visiting their Dominican factory.  One of the many eyeopeners on that trip, besides revisiting some of their classic cigars and finding them to be outstanding, was the time and passion that goes into making every cigar.  It almost has to be harder to make a million great cigars that are great year after year thank to make a batch of a couple hundred thousand that are gone when they are gone, right?  The La Gloria Retro has been excellent and tasty in all the sizes I’ve tried, cigar after cigar,  and the CAO OSA Sol seems to shine in the Lot 50, or robusto size, but is a nice enough cigar across the board.  Both are in the medium range with lots of flavor.

 

One of my favorite finds of the year has to have been Oja Cigars.  I met the brand owner, Luis Garcia, on my trip to Nicaragua, and we hit it off pretty good.  His cigars are made by Tabacalera Esteli, which is owned by Kiki Berger.  There haven’t been a lot of cigars from Cuban Crafters that have floated my boat, but the Oja line is really nice.  I think my favorite cigar of the year was a Connecticut Toro I enjoyed in the pool on a hot summer day, but that had as much to do with the circumstance as with the cigar.  The line is solid, full bodied (even the Connecticut) and tasty.  The Anniversary, with a Brazilian maduro wrapper outshines them all.  It’s a little more refined and complex.  I love the whole line and look forward to seeing them in stores in my area.

 

I should mention Adrian’s CroMagnon by Michael Rosales and Skip Martin, which is another cigar that’s been on everyone’s list.  I’ve only smoked a couple samples that Skip gave me, but they are definitely up my alley.  Also, for much different reasons, I really like the Berger and Argenti Mooch line, especially the Schnorr.  The name cracks me up, but the cigar is a solid, flavorful medium bodied cigar.  Also the Undercrown and My Uzi Weighs a Ton were on everyone’s list for good reason, and I enjoyed the samples I had.  Alec Bradley is making fine cigars, Toraño is making fine cigars, La Palina, El Primer Mundo, Oliva, everyone seems to be making fine cigars!  It’s a good time, there are so many choices!

 

That’s about all I can think of at the moment.  Honestly, there were a LOT of great cigars this year.

 

Until the next time, HAPPY NEW YEAR!

 

CigarCraig

 

 

 

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CigarCraig’s 12 Spectacular Days of Cigar Giveaways Day 10: AJ Fernandez/Emilio

We’re getting close to the end, I sure wish I could run contests every day, but I think 12 days in a row is enough for just about anyone.  We’ll go back to monthly (or as the spirit moves me) after the first of the year.  I can always find something to give away!  Now, once again we consult Random.org for a number, and that number is 3.  So would Brian please e-mail me so I can send you your gift certificate! (I save postage on this one!)

 

Today on CigarCraig’s 12 Spectacular Days of Cigar Giveaways we have a selection of cigar from AJ Fernandez!   We have two San Lotano Oval Toros and two San Lotano Habano Robustos.   Cigar Journal just named the San Lotano Oval as #2 best cigar of 2011, and it is a really nice cigar!      Co-sponsoring today is Emilio Cigars.  The AF series are made and named after AJ Fernandez and are exceptional cigars!  Gary Grifith has provided 3 each of the AF1 and AF2s.

 

Thank you to Clay Roberts at AJ Fernandez  and Gary Griffith of Emilio Cigars for their generous contributions, and to AJ for making exceptional cigars!

 

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

 

Until tomorrow,

 

CigarCraig

 

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