Tag Archives: Serino

Cubanacan, Serino and Lighthouse Cigars and an Editorial

I did some wandering through the humidors this week and came across a few older cigars that I smoked, but first I selected a cigar that came from the TPE show, a Cubanacan Habano Toro. Interestingly, Eddie Tarazona introduced me to Cubanacan at a Delaware Cigar Festival back around 2013 or 14, I guess (as will be a recurring theme in this post, dates are fuzzy for me today). I’m not sure what his involvement was at the time. Lawrence Miltenberger, who is a principle at Cubanacan, was also at that Delaware Fest, but with another company, so I’ve known him for a while, so when I saw him at the TPE, he laid a few samples on me to try. Now, it seems to me I’ve heard some not great things about Cubanacan’s business practices, but I can’t confirm those rumors and have no first hand knowledge. It seems to me that they’ve had a rough time over the past several years. I’m sure someone will let me know one way or the other if I’ve crossed a line. I smoked the Habano Toro, and it was pretty spectacular. The construction was right, it burned straight as an arrow and the draw was perfect. The flavor was really nice with some sweet notes and nuttiness. I dug it and would smoke it again. 

 

Speaking of cigar companies that have had issues, Gurkha seems to have crapped where it eats over the last week. I’m not going to recap the incidents, check Halfwheel, Coop or other sites for the blow by blow, but I have a few observations. First, Gurkha has always been polarizing. They have a side that has cheap, bundle cigars that are marketed like they are super-high end cigar that are the best deal ever in the catalogs, on the other hand, they have some really nice cigar that are good quality, made in the same factories that a lot of other great cigars are made in and are perfectly good. Heck, they have a new cigar (that I haven’t smoked) that’s made by Aganorsa that is supposed to be great. There have been quite a few of their cigars that I really liked, Cellar Reserves, Ghost, Seduction. The first mistake they (the Company and Kaizad Hansotia, and I’m not convinced the two can be separated) made was claiming that the Kaizad’s social media account was “hacked” and the racially insensitive posts were not his own. They should not have made that claim. When that BS wasn’t bought into, they went with the distancing tactic. Kaizad steps down and removes himself from day to day operations of the company, and they even go so far as to claim he’s selling his interest in the company. I’m going to be so bold as to speculate that if he owns 50% of the company, the other 50% is owned by a company that’s owned by him. Conspiracy theory: he sells his 50% to a holding company that is owned by one of his other companies. I doubt I’ll be getting any more cool Gurkha swag.  He’s a smart guy, he’s built a large, successful brand that sell a ton of cigars and has a large following. Here’s the other thing, for as many people saying they won’t buy another Gurkha cigar because of the perceived racism, there’s a whole opposite side that is giving up on them because they “caved in to the liberals”. Gurkha had a diverse following, apparently they alienated two sides. The positive side of this is that only a small percentage of cigar smokers pay attention to what’s going on on the internet, so maybe this won’t really hurt the bottom line too much. There are good people who work for Gurkha, I’d hate to see them suffer.

 

I have a shelf in the NewAir humidor that has a bunch of coffin boxes, and one that’s been there for a while was a Lighthouse Special Edition that came from an IPCPR show back in 2014 0r 15 (see above about the dates). All I can remember about this interaction was being approached in an aisle while walking by, as happens at trade shows, by a salesman who thought I was a retailer. Small outfits sometimes don’t read badges, and I always explain to these guys that I’m media and I’m not buying and it’s probably not worth their time talking to me. However this interaction worked, I ended up with this cigar and no information about it or the company survives. I’ve just been moving it around all these years until I finally decided there’s no reason not to smoke it. I hoped it was going to be a decent cigar and not a waste of my time, while also hoping it wasn’t going to be a great cigar that I was going to regret never being able to smoke again. It was a darker cigar, 6″ x 50ish, and as you might imagine, the flavors were predominantly cedar. Not a big surprise after five or so years in that little coffin. I’m thinking now I should pay attention to some other cigars on that shelf, and making a note to date cigars like that moving forward. I’m not a huge fan of the mostly woody flavors in cigars, it’s OK, I like a sweeter profile. The cigar was well behaved, it smoked very well, and was pleasant and satisfying, leaving me neither disappointed, nor wishing I could find more. I wish I had more information, and I don’t think this had anything to do with the cigar store in New Jersey. 

 

Finally, last night I smoked a Serino Royale Medio Robusto Gordo last night. Serino was up-and-coming a few years ago and I haven’t heard much about them lately, but they seem to still be available. I’ll be honest, when I posted this on Instagram and tagged Serino, I trolled them a little for comment on whether they were still in the premium business. I didn’t get a bite.  I’m not sure how this one escaped my notice for the last four years, as it came with it’s three siblings in June of 2016 in a sampler. This cigar has an Ecuador Habano Claro wrapper, very light, it almost looks like a Connecticut shade. The size was 5½” x 60, which is a strange size, so I guess Robusto Gordo is an appropriate name. Sadly, when I looked at the one retailer I knew carried these, this particular line wasn’t listed. This was a very tasty smoke. It was rich and creamy, almost like a shade cigar, with more body, less grassiness, and a nice sweetness. It burned perfectly and was a pleasure to smoke. I actually was looking for a milder cigar when I selected this and chose wisely, it wasn’t mild, but it was perfectly medium and suited me just fine. IF you run across one of these, give it a shot, and if you find the Maduro XX, definitely try it!

 

If you partake in Instagram, and follow @cigarcraig, please follow @cigarcrag1. I’ve been unable to log in to the original account for some reason, and IG’s support system sends me in circles. Until I get it sorted out I’ve decided to rebuild. Any help in this area is appreciated. I’d love to get my millions (or 1700ish) followers back! Anyway, that’s all for today, until the nex time, 

 

CigarCraig 

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Smoking Contenders and the Contest Winner

It snowed in some unusual places in the US over the last few days, but it’s not that unusual here. Yesterday it snowed a few inches in PA, so I painted a room, and managed to smoke a cigar in between coats. Unfortunately, I also smoked an entire cigar while on the phone with a major retailer trying to work out a delivery issue. I suppose the cigar prevented me from losing my mind…anyway, I spent this week smoking though 2 Guy’s Smokeshop‘s Cigar of the year contenders pack that I bought while I was there a couple of weeks ago. Included in the pack were: Aladino, Eiroa First 20 Years Colorado, Luminosa by Crowned Heads, The Oscar Habano, Perla Del Mar Maduro, Vegas Cubanas, Wayfarer by Serino Cigars, and The Wiseman Maduro. These are all in robusto format, except for the Wideman Maduro which is in a corona size, and is on the schedule to smoke today. Being slightly CDO (which, as we know, is OCD in alphabetical order like it should be), I smoked them in the order they were listed on the insert in the box. 

 

AladinoAladino: this is from JRE Cigars, Julio and Justo Eiroa, father and brother of Chrsitian Eiroa. The cigar is authentic Corojo grown on the Eiroa’s farm in Honduras. This was a 5″x50 robusto and I was really quite happy smoking this cigar. It was a great start to the pack, and was my favorite so far 😀.

Eiroa First 20 Years ColoradoEiroa First 20 Years Colorado: CLE cigars is the company Christian Eiroa formed after selling Camacho to Davidoff. This cigar celebrates his twenty year anniversary in the cigar industry. This was a 5″x50 with a severe box press, and was a beautiful cigar. Christian worked with his father on this cigar, a Honduran puro.  Vastly different from the Aladino, didn’t do it for me, which is consistent with my feelings on most of Christian’s cigars now.  Funny, I loved the Camachos when he made them, CLE and Eiroa don’t seem to fit my tastes.

LuminosaLuminosa by Crowned Heads: I’m not normally a fan of Crowned Heads, but I am a fan of Ernesto Carillo, so this one was  little confusing. I enjoyed the cigar, it had an interesting flavor, but the look of the cigar was “bundle-ish”. The orange band made me think of the Don Jose bundles from the 90s. Preconceived notions aside, it was a pretty good smoke, but to me it was just another Ecuador Connecticut cigar. I’m absolutely mystified that this cigar doesn’t appear on the Crowned Heads website, but the guys at 2 Guys felt is was in the running for their cigar of the year.

OscarThe Oscar Habano: Another cigar from Honduras, this typically has a candela leaf outer sleeve, along the lines of the Leaf by Oscar. The candela leaf was absent on the Contenders samplers, I’d be very suspicious if Dave Garofalo came out with a new Candela cigar in the near future. I know he’s a fan of the green leaf (…that’s a joke, son). The Oscar has jumped to the front of the line for me. This was a solid cigar with great flavor and just a darned pleasure to smoke. I have a toro floating around the humidor I think, and have smoked the 6×60 and really enjoyed them, but, like I mentioned to Oscar Valladares when I met him in an Elevator in Vegas, I’m a fan of his work.

Perla del MarPerla Del Mar Maduro: this is a budget line from J.C.Newman, and it a nice smoke.  I like a maduro, and this is a good one, although maybe I’m becoming a snob, but it just didn’t have anything special enough to warrant COTY consideration. I wouldn’t pass one up, it’s a solid choice for someone who can’t or won’t spend a lot on a cigar. That said, I wasn’t left disappointed or unsatisfied.

Vegas Cubanas_InvictosYesterday I smoked the Vegas Cubanas and  Wayfarer Cigars. The Vegas Cubanas is an old brand from Don Pepin Garcia that was re-issued last year. It’s got a Corojo Rosado wrapper and Nicaraguan fillers. This is the cigar that prevented me from losing my cool on the phone with customer service. This was another Wayfarer by Serino Cigarsenjoyable cigar, the presentation is beautiful, and the cigar smoked well.  The Wayfarer is the latest from Serino Cigars. It’s blended to be similar in profile to the cigars out of Havana. I can see that to some extent. It was a 5″x52 robusto with an Ecuador Corojo wrapper. This is an interesting line in that they use some construction details that are reminiscent of the Cuban cigars. I enjoyed the cigar, although I like the cigars in the Serino Royale line better.

So that leaves us with The Wise Man maduro, which is the maduro version of the El Güegüense from Nick Mellilo’s Foundation Cigar Co. I smoked the Toro Huaco a couple of weeks ago and it was fantastic. I think, for me, it’s going to come down to this or the Oscar for my vote, not that my vote carries much weight. 2 Guys COTY is based in part by votes, but also in part by sales in their three stores and on-line.  I’ll be interested in hearing about the winner, which will be announced on The Cigar Authority. Will they get it right?

 

Contest!

Caliber 4RIt’s time to pick a winner of the Western Humidor Calibur 4 R digital hygrometer, courtesy of my friends at Cigar Oasis. I’m a little annoyed with myself, Chaim of Cigar Oasis gifted me a really nifty lighter in celebration of their anniversary, and it, along with my Xikar MTX scissors, were put someplace that I can’t remember! I rarely lose things, I know I packed it someplace for a trip and can’t figure where. Anyway, the winner of the hygrometer is Christopher Brose.  Please send me your address so I can ship this out! I need to get my Secret Santa packed up and shipped too! Thanks again to Cigar Oasis for the cool prize!  

 

That’s enough for today. Just so you know, the stuff about 2 Guys and their COTY and Cigar Authority are unsolicited. I bought their contenders pack with my own money and the opinions expressed are my own. Heck, none of the contenders are even advertisers. I’ve got no skin in the game, just thought it would be fun to see how my thoughts match up with theirs and throw them a bone!  Until the next time, 

 

CigarCraig

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A La Aroma de Cuba, Serino Cigars and Cornelius & Anthony’s Daddy Mac

Happy Father’s Day! I have a special cigar lined up for later, it’s been a tradition since esperanza2000 that I  smoke an Esperanza para los Niños every year. I’ve written about this cigar before, long story short, it was made by Christian Eiroa in 1998 to benefit the children orphaned by Hurricane Mitch, and was pretty much blended by and for members of the Usenet group alt.smokers.cigars. I still have a few left, one from a box I bought and some from the generosity of my friend Mike. Of course, this week I started a new job, which has occupied my thoughts, but I was able to enjoy some great cigars.

 

LaAromaDe Cuba_NoblesseTuesday I posted the great contest sponsored by Holt’s, and I went looking for a La Aroma de Cuba and the only one  found was a Noblesse which was a birthday gift from Will Cooper a few years ago.  He shouldn’t have, but he did and I quite enjoyed this cigar. The Noblesse is the top of the line La Aroma de Cuba, it’s got a Habano rosado wrapper, a double binder consisting of Habano and Criollo, and an aged selection of filler tobaccos from the Garcia family’s farms in the growing regions of Estelí, Jalapa and Namanji (which is about a 45 minute drive east of Esteli). It comes in a 6½” x  toro and they only made 3000 x 24 count boxes in total. I found this to be an exceptional smoke, perfect construction and subtle and refined flavors from the well aged tobaccos, it had some sweetness and some spice, a really nice cigar.

 

SerinoRoyale_Maduro_BelicosoWednesday I dug into a sampler from Serino Cigars. The Serino Royale line is available in four blends, three of which I will talk about today (I didn’t get to the Medio blend, which is a Ecuador Habano Claro wrapped cigar). The cigars are made by Omar Gonzalez Alemán, who was the master blender at Cuba’s Partagas and La Corona Factories before starting the La Corona factory in Esteli (which may sound familiar as the factory that works which Hirochi Robaina, from what I recall). I started with the cigar that probably would have been the second cigar I chose, but the interesting size swayed me and fit the circumstance better. The Serino Royale Maduro in the Belicoso size is a 5½” x 60 figurado with a dark and oily Ecuador Habano Oscuro wrapper.  This was a great smoke with some of the dark chocolate and coffee flavors I like. I’d smoke this again.

 

SerinoRoyale_Connecticut_TorpedoThursday I went with the Connecticut Torpedo in the Serino Royale line. This is a classic 6 1/8″ x 52 torpedo with a Ecuador shade grown Connecticut wrapper. This medium bodied smoke was, once again, perfectly constructed and had fairly typical nutty, mellow flavors, but there was a lot of flavor so it was a very satisfying and enjoyable smoke. The entire range in the Serino Royale line has Jalapa binders and five years aged fillers from Omar Gonzalez Alemán’s own farms, and have been aging in La Corona’s aging rooms since 2014, and the age is apparent in the combustion and flavor of the cigars. These all seem to run in the $12-$13 area, so they are no cheap date, but worthy cigars none the less.

 

CorneliusandAnthony_DaddyMac_ToroFriday I took a break from the Serino line to enjoy a Cornelius & Anthony Daddy Mac Gordo. I’ve smoked a couple of these in the toro and gordo sizes and these appear to be another great cigar out of the La Zona factory. Actually, last Sunday I enjoyed a Cornelius & Anthony Cornelius toro again, but you can refer back to my past post about that great cigar. the Daddy Mac line has a Brazilian wrapper, Ecuador  binder and Nicaraguan fillers. As with all cigars from La Zona, the construction was right, the burn was right and it was a great smoke. I thought it was fairly chocolaty with some sweetness like a dried fruit and a little twinge of pepper. I have a couple of the smaller sizes in this line yet to smoke, but the 6″ x 60 Gordo was a very nice smoke. I look forward to catching up with the Cornelius & Anthony folks at the IPCPR show. I gotta say, I love the colors in the bands on these cigars.

 

SerinoRoyale_MaduroXX_SublimeWrapping up the smokes for the week was the Serino Royale I would have led off with under normal circumstances, the Maduro XX Sublime (6¼”x54). Once again, this is wrapped in a Habano 2000 Oscuro from Ecuador and is a fuller bodied blend of the Maduro from earlier in the week. After spending the day painting ceilings (vaulted, no less), this was a great way to end the day. The Serino Royale Maduro XX is a strong cigar with great flavors of espresso and cocoa. While it was strong, it was fairy well-balanced, which is a good thing. This is a cigar I’ll be looking for more of. Carson Serino, the VP of Serino Cigars sent me a nice letter and pricelist along with the sampler, which was presented very nicely in a classy cardboard box, which was very helpful, considering they don’t seem to have a website to refer to. I can make the same complaint about Cornelius & Anthony, but at least they have a “coming soon” page. I also will have to find Serino Cigars at the show and ask them to explain the “20th Anniversary” on the packaging, there’s nothing I could find explaining that. These are very good smokes, although a bit pricy, but we better get used to that.

 

Contest Winner

Thanks again to the folks at Holt’s for providing the great La Aroma/San Cristobal ’92-95′ Rated Assortment for this week’s contest! If you get to Philly stop in to their shop and hang out for a bit. They have a nice lounge in the back (and Ashton Cigar Bar is upstairs). Whenever I get in there I am overwhelmed with the selection, and generally walk out with way more cigars than I need. I think they always run a “buy 5, get one free” thing, so that gets me in trouble. Thanks to Lexi there for putting this together. I’ve selected a winner at random and will need Allinton /wattley to send me an address to pass on to Holt’s.  Thanks to all who entered and stay tuned for the next contest (probably won’t be quite as close together as the last two).

 

That’s all for today. Yesterday was the ceiling, today is the floor, followed by the Esparanza and we’ll see what else! Also, check out the special Bobalu Cigars is offering our readers for a limited time!  Until the next time,

 

Cigar Craig

 

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