Tag Archives: Fonseca

My Father Fonseca Robusto and Some Other Fonseca Cigars

Last week while I was out and about, I picked up a couple of the new My Father Fonseca robustos. I’ve been looking forward to trying this cigar for a while. It was a bit of a surprise when Quesada sold the Fonseca brand to My Father, and it took a year of two before My Father came out with their version of this iconic brand.  I’ve personally smoked a bunch of Fonseca cigars over the years. I had a box of Havana Fonseca Cadet KDT many years ago that were really very nice. A few years ago I really got into the Fonseca Nicaragua, more on that in a bit. This new My Father Fonseca Robusto is 5½” x 52 and has a shade grown Corojo 99 rosado wrapper, and Garcia grown Nicaraguan fillers. At $9.50, it’s not an inexpensive cigar, but after smoking it, I certainly wasn’t disappointed! This was a really terrific tasting cigar, I think it captured the spirit of Fonseca quite nicely. It’s medium bodied, and has a delicious sweetness. It’s a nice, sophisticated blend, really nice. It’s got that hard candy sweetness I like. The Garcias did a really nice job with the Fonseca brand. 

 

I found a few older Fonseca cigars in the humidor, so I figured I’d see how they compared. I smoked the Fonseca Nicaragua toro, which was new a few years ago and was fairly inexpensive. This was Quesada‘s last iteration of the Fonseca I believe.  These were actually made by Placencia for Quesada, and had tobaccos from Jalapa, Esteli and Ometepe. I really liked these and smoked a bunch of them when they came out in 2016. I remember smoking one at the IPCPR show with Terrance Reilly in the Quesada booth and loving it, and seeking more out when they hit the stores. I smoked the 6″ x 50 toro and it had held up well over time. There were similarities to the new version, which is also Nicaraguan. It had that sweetness, it had some earthiness, and was as I remembered, a very good smoke. I enjoyed it and will miss these when I smoke the last of the few I have left! 

 

Finally, I found a Dominican Fonseca, and I  don’t even know how old this one was, where it came from or much about it at all. If I had to guess, I’d say it had a Sumatra wrapper, based on looks and flavor. There was a hint of that same candy sweetness that is in the new version that I love so much. This is another cigar that had aged well. The burn was perfect, it just was a pleasure to smoke. I wish I knew how old this one was, or where it came from! I’m just glad I had the chance to smoke it. I still have one Cuban KDT Cadets from the box that I had maybe in the middle of the 2000s. They were pretty strong little cigars, but I imagine fifteen years might have mellowed it out a bit. 

 

That’s all for today. Remember the CigarCraig.com Readers Poll.  E-mail me at craig@cigarcraig.com with your choice for the 2020 cigar of the year. I’ll compile the results and post them on December 31. Please be as specific as possible. It’ll be fun! Until the next time, 

 

CigarCraig

 

Share

2 Comments

Filed under Review

New Cigars I’m Anticipating, a Fonseca, a Diesel and a Tatuaje

I mentioned in my last post that as I’ve been seeing news come from the IPCPR one of the things I miss is getting my hands on some of the new products that come out, lots of times months in advance of them hitting the stores. As I get on in years (I think using the phrase “get on in years” is, in it’s self, proof that I am), I find my interest waning in obscure, new, little, unheard of, never again to be seen brands which always seem to find their way into the IPCPR samples, and I don’t miss having to wade through those, heck, I probably still have some from years past that I can’t figure out what they are and Google isn’t even a help. That might be a fun blog post, I guess I need to work on that. Anyway, several things I’ve either posted about in the lead up to the show through news items, or read about elsewhere, piqued my interest. From Drew Estate, really the notable cigar to grab my attention is the Liga Privada H99. The bundles the announced really don’t excite me, I think La Viaja Habana comes very close to playing in this space and I don’t understand the need, just expand that brand into the bundle space, but JD is the master of marketing, not me, he has a job and I don’t so who am I to say? The Liga 10th anniversary is cool but I’ve smoked it, been there, done that. But a Corojo wrapper grown in the Connecticut River Valley intrigues the crap out of me and I’m in. Same with Willy’s new Brazilian wrapped Herrera Esteli, and I’ll give the Ligas a shot in the Corona Viva sizes if the opportunity arises (or opportunities arise) and the Undercrown Dogma is a proven winner in my book. From the Joya side, of course I’m interested in the Cinco Dècadas, the Quatro Cinco was exceptional, and I’ve been a big fan of the brand for a long time. The Joya Silver is also on my radar, although the Red and Black in that series have not been in my wheelhouse for some reason (the Cabinetta having been added to that new age kinda series is still a little weird for me, it came out in 2010, still a favorite in the shade wrapped genré).

 

Fonseca NicaraguaFriday evening I went back to a cigar that came out at the 2016 IPCPR show, the Fonseca Nicaragua Toro, a classic 6″ x 50 Nicaraguan Puro, with a Criollo ’98 wrapper from Jalapa, Jalapa binder and fillers from Esteli and Ometepe made at Placencia for Quesada Cigars. I smoked this at the show back in ’16 and was quite impressed and bought a bunch at a local shop when I got home. These are reasonably priced, I think the Toro being the largest and most expensive in the line in the $6 range online or in reasonable cigar tax states. This cigar continues to impress me every time I remember to smoke it, the flavors are kinda woody with some sweetness and a little coffee and maybe a hint of spice here and there.  Cigar Aficionado had this on their Best Buys of 2017 and I tend to agree, this is a good deal, and aged very well.

 

Of course, there were plenty of other cigars I look forward to trying from the show, and General Cigars has a bunch. The Hoya Black is one for sure, along with the new Punch Diablo, which I posted the news about back on July 6, both made by A.J. Fernandez. I don’t think there is one cigar media outlet that will tell you otherwise, General Cigar Co. rolls out the red carpet for media, and gives a structured, on time, tour of the booth, with supporting media, samples, whatever you need, and they are simply the gold standard when it comes to booth tours for media. I’ve been through their booths at seven of the eight trade shows I’ve attended (one was pre-blog) and have always gotten first class treatment. I missed seeing all my friends there too!  I look forward to the new La Gloria Cubana Esteli (different from the Serie R Esteli), the new Partagas Legend, CAO Nicaragua, and I’d happily sit down with my old buddy Sean Williams and smoke the new Cohiba Spectre, but at $90 a cigar, I’m not holding my breath!

 

Yesterday I was assembling and IKEA piece on the porch and I find that the best way to reduce the profanity during one of those projects is to have a cigar while doing it. It worked, and everything went together like it should have. The cigar I chose, the Diesel Whiskey Row, I chose while writing this piece in my head, because it’s the one new release from General Cigar Co. that had been released in advance of the show. Justin Andrews, who’s the brand manager and ambassador for the Diesel line is very proud of this cigar, he told me that it took him several trips to Nicaragua and well over a year to convince AJ to put his tobacco in bourbon barrels. I’ve since heard that AJ is now begging for more barrels, he’s so fond of the results. In the official press release, I found this one passage interesting:

AJ Fernandez says, “A lot of passion went into this process and I am very pleased with the results. Aging the binder leaf in the bourbon barrels added an unexpected layer of flavor and aroma right beneath the wrapper. When you smoke Whiskey Row, you get a unique and complex experience that engages the senses unlike any other cigar I’ve smoked.”

I imagine he said something more like this:

“Pasé un montón de pasión en este proceso y estoy muy satisfecho con los resultados. Envejecer la hoja de encuadernación en los barriles de bourbon agregó una capa inesperada de sabor y aroma justo debajo del envoltorio. Cuando fumas Whiskey Row, obtienes una experiencia única y compleja que atrapa los sentidos a diferencia de cualquier otro cigarro que he fumado “.

Diesel Whiskey RowOK, so that’s just my own twisted sense of humor, unless AJ’s English has gotten a LOT better since the last time I “talked” to him…anyway, the Whiskey Row is an interesting cigar. Of course, the burn is excellent, the draw is perfect, the ash is nice, but that’s the way cigars are supposed to be. As always, any spirits references are lost on me, but the base flavor to my palate is an umami I guess, I want to say, mushroomy, kinda savoryness, that is one of the few flavors that doesn’t really resonate with me in a cigar. There are obviously some people who are going to love the heck out of this cigar, and it’s not that it was offensive to me or made me want to throw up (that’s a mushroom story from the ’80s for another time), it’s just not my go to favorite flavor. Based on the blend, which is Nicaraguan Ometepe, Condega and Jalapa, each aged 5 to 8 years, bourbon-barrel-aged Mexican binder, wrapped in Ecuadoran Habano which is aged for five years, I don’t think I should be tasting what I’m tasting, and maybe I’m way off, maybe it’s just earthey and woody, but a, earth and wood I don’t care for. I like most nuts, but I can’t stand walnuts. It’s a solid cigar, it got me through my project with minimal swearing, and I did get to about the 1″ mark before I put it down, so how objectionable could it have been? I’ll have to get a series of bourbon barrel aged cigars together and see how they compare one of these days, is there any non-alcoholic bourbon so I can get an idea what the flavor of bourbon is? 🙂

 

Some other cigars I heard about at the show and look forward to trying are Foundation Cigar Co.s new The Tabernacle Havana Seed CT #142, another new strain to the Connecticut River Valley. Another I’m looking for is the Inch Ringmaster from EP Carillo, just because anything from EPC interests me, and I’m still exploring his line up. I’d say what everyone else is saying and put Dunbarton Tobacco and Trust’s Sin Compromiso on the list, but I’ve smoked it, and it’s fantastic (Oh yeah, the pre-release samples I smoked I was asked not to write about…they were really really good, the torpedo had pre-light nose of the wood fire curing that Saka talked about in an interview I heard with him recently, might have been on one of Cigar-Coop’s podcasts…an absolutely stellar cigar, I look forward to the regular production, although the price will up there!). Crux cigars is a line I need to familiarize myself with with the addition of my old friend Roy McLaren to the team. Except for the few Ninfa darks some time ago, I’m relatively ignorant of the brand. I can’t think of anything else off the top of my head, although I’m sure someone will remind me of a glaring omission.  Like I said, I’m on a rapid spiral to curmudgeondom, I could probably be happy smoking about twenty brands in rotation these days.

 

Tatuaje_ReservaBroadleaf_J21Last night I decided to treat myself with another cigar from the 2016 IPCPR show. I have vivid memories of stopping in the Tatuaje booth first think on the third day of the show and finding it empty, to my delight. For once, I had a chance to sit down with Pete Johnson uninterrupted, virtually unheard of. My first show as a blogger, Pete was the first person I met, and he gave me a La Riqueza Lancero, and, due to a scheduling snafu, I was only on the show floor for about 3 hours, so that was my only cigar of the show, and I didn’t meet too many people. So I was ready to get some great video and have a good conversation with Pete for a change. Dontcha know, Laura, who handles social media for the IPCPR, and should know better (yeah, I’m throwing you under the bus, Laura!), excuses herself to interrupt to introduce some middle-eastern journalist to Pete, who ends up monopolizing the discussion for about 20 minutes, introducing another guy, and it all went to hell. Pete had an appointment, I had an appointment, we were both (Pete and I) too polite to tell this guy to F-off), and I didn’t get my great one on one video (again). On the positive side, Pete did give me a couple of the Tatuaje Reserva Broadleaf J21s, as they were launching that huge $1200 100 count box collection of the Broadleaf wrapped Reservas at the show, and I smoked my last one last night. Boy was that a great cigar, and I’m envious of the folks who had the coin to drop on those cigars. I would have bought singles here and there, but the smallest quantity I was presented with to purchase was ten (one of each size) and I didn’t have the hundo in the budget at the time,  and I only wanted specific sizes.  This J21 with  two years of age was smooth, sweet, rich with everything I love in broadleaf, in Tatuaje cigars in general. Two years after release, are people selling singles now?

 

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

 

CigarCraig

Share

Comments Off on New Cigars I’m Anticipating, a Fonseca, a Diesel and a Tatuaje

Filed under Editorial, IPCPR, Review

Another Bobalu Cigar, a Tabak Especiale, New Fonseca and Crossfire Cigars

We’re getting into my least favorite time of year, autumn. People can argue with me all they want, but I don’t like the cool crisp fall days and the leaves turning. Summer is too short, at least it goes by too fast, I’m not a big fan of winter, but at least you know spring is coming, Autumn gets me down. The only upside is that it’s not quite as cold on the cigar porch as winter is, so that’s something.  I still Bobalu_BoxPressedMaduro_Toroprefer sweating over shivering. Anyway, the seasons don’t much effect my consumption, I might smoke more robustos and coronas in the winter, but I always like my evening cigar, and the cooler weather has always made me want more maduros. I smoked a couple this week that didn’t taste too maduro to me, not that they were bad cigars, just not what I expected. First was a Bobalu Box Pressed Maduro toro with a Brazilian Mata Fina wrapper. As you know I’ve been working my way through some cigars I purchased from this US-based factory located in Austin, Texas. So far I’ve found the construction has been pretty darned good in all the cigars I’ve smoked from them and the service has been excellent.  While this maduro wasn’t what I expected it to be, it was better in that it surprised me with some interesting flavors.  The box press is very square, making the 52 ring gauge feel much smaller, it was very comfortable. Besides the Mata Fina wrapper, the rest of the cigar is aged Piloto Cubano (Dom Rep.) Ligero, Nicaragua Viso, Olor Viso (Dom. Rep.) Nicaraguan Ligero and Habana seed (Dom. Rep.)ligero. Considering the three Ligeros in the blend I found this to be medium in strength at best. I’m liking the offerings of this cigar factory, once again, it’s on my list of places to visit.

 

TabakEspecialeNegra_Exclusivamente DE LoungeThursday was some kind of coffee appreciation day, our regionally popular convenience store chain, Wawa, was giving away their coffee, so I figured it was a good excuse to smoke the Drew Estate Tabak Especial Negra Box Pressed toro, an Exclusivamente Drew Estate Lounge cigar. Drew Estate has several lounges, one at the Wooden Indian that I frequent, so they made a series of box pressed toros just for sale at those lounges. I want to say that they were originally just for the Drew Estate lounge at Corona Cigars in Orlando, but I think they’ve filtered out to the others. Two of the offerings are the Tabak Especial in the Negra (maduro) and Dulce (Connecticut). Of course, I chose the Negra, and I’ve occasionally enjoyed these coffee infused cigars over the past six or seven years, truth be told, I really like them. They have a sweet cap (something I could take or leave), and the coffee flavor that I really like in a cigar is there in abundance. What more can I say about this cigar but that it’s a good smoke with a sweet coffee flavor. I don’t like too many infused cigars, but I’ll smoke these all day long.

 

Fonseca_Nicaragua_ToroFriday’s treat was a cigar that I smoked on the IPCPR show floor (one of the few), and was really impressed with. New from Quesada Cigars this year is the Fonseca Nicaragua, made in Esteli by the Placencia factory with Nicaraguan tobacco from Ometepe, Jalapa and Esteli. This is a very reasonably priced cigar to start with, in the $6-7 range, and is really quite tasty. It’s got a nice spice and some good coffee/cocoa flavors. This actually made a Robb Report piece in early August of the five Nicaraguan cigars you have to smoke. While I don’t  necessarily agree with all five I think this new Fonseca is a must try. I was impressed at the show, and I am impressed at home. It’s a yummy smoke.

 

Crossfire_Maduro_MagnumFinally, yesterday I was looking through the dwindling supply of trade show samples that I consider interesting, and I came across a sampler from Crossfire Cigars. These guys have an interesting story, and do a lot of good things in the Dominican Republic with the proceeds of the brand’s sales. I should probably keep this to myself, but I have a cynical opinion when it comes to “faith-based” charities, I think doing good for the sake of doing good is the thing to do, which I always hope is the case. I guess some things feel like “I’ll do something good for you if you follow my way of thinking”. I could devote an entire site to this discussion, but if I were to start another site it would center around something way more entertaining than my religious opinions. Bottom line, there’s nothing wrong with helping people less fortunate, which is what this cigar is based around, and as long as they keep making good cigars, I’ll promote their brand. Off of my soapbox, let’s get back to the cigar. I really appreciate the new bands on  these which actually say what the cigar line is, rather than their old bands that had a secondary band.  I selected the Crossfire Maduro first, in the 6″ x 60 Magnum size. This was another maduro that was not a typical maduro. The Ecuador Habano sun grown wrapper was not very dark, but it did look like an Ecuador Habano sun grown, which is probably too much to put on the band. The smoke was smooth as silk and seemed like a very mild cigar to me, but it did build up in strength near the end. It has a bit of that sourdough bready flavor I get once in a while, which I find interesting. Binder and filler are Dominican, which I suppose explains the mildness a bit. This was a really nice smoke, I look forward to trying the other four varieties, especially the San Andrés.

 

That’s all I have for now, in fact, I’ve probably said too much. Until the next time,

 

CigarCraig

Share

3 Comments

Filed under IPCPR, Review