Monthly Archives: July 2016

IPCPR 2016 Overview and Some Notable Cigars I Smoked

IMG_3491OK, I’m back from the 84th IPCPR Trade show and it was a good trip. I wasn’t sure what to expect, but while the FDA was a big topic at the show, the seminars were reportedly well attended. Attendance was reported to be 30% over last year, but I think last year was about 30% under the year before, so it was typical Vegas numbers to my mind.  I thought the booths were busy, but the aisles weren’t very crowded, which tells me retailers were there with a purpose and not browsing. Certain booths were constantly packed. Rocky, Saka, Caldwell, My Father and Tatuaje come to mind immediately, Others I’d walk up to empty and they would tell me it was the first time all day they had a break.  Despite rumors otherwise, I think it was a good show and a lot of exhibitors were successful. What will follow here are some of the interesting things I saw, cigars I smoked, and things I did. Check out some of my friends in the blogosphere for the interviews and in-depth coverage, and please feel free to leave comments with links to site where you saw some good IPCPR stuff!

 

Hammer & Sickel

Although it looks empty, the booths were pretty busy. This is a photo from someone who didn’t want to be credited for whatever reason. A friend actually picked me out in the shot…

Sunday evening we (and when I say “we” I’m referring to my son Corey who attended the show with me), went to the Gala Opening Reception.  This is always a fun time to hang out with certain folks who decide to attend, and it’s a select few manufacturers who make an appearance every year. I had the opportunity to hang out and chat with Dave Garofalo and his crew (daughter Gianna and Mr. Jonathan) from Two Guys Smoke Shop and The Cigar Authority for a while, and it’s a good thing because every time I went through their booth which featured United Cigars and Selected Tobacco’s Byron and Atabey cigars, he was either busy or not there. A couple of downsides of the evening was the very short window of opportunity to get the meager appetizers that were offered and the very high prices at the bar (water was $7, even for Fiji that’s exorbitant.) I suppose whoever the sponsor was gets the blame for that, and it wasn’t clear to me who Coreythat was, and I’m not going to name them anyway. Previous years were much better. I smoked cigars I brought with me as cigars are not usually distributed at the opening gala. We finished the evening at the Circle Bar in the Venitian talking to Michael of Whiff Industries and Ricky and Ed from General Cigars who shared the new CAO Consigliere with us. This was a very nice cigar and is supposed to be the same blend as the Sopranos and has the same band.

 

IMG_3490Monday was a whirlwind of activity at the show. The breakfast meeting was very well attended, Jon Taffer from the TV show Bar Rescue was the keynote speaker. In years past the speakers have been entertaining, this was a motivational speech which was short on entertainment value, although I was not the target audience not being a retailer. I took the opportunity to make a contribution to the IPCPR PAC so I could get in to the show an hour early like media used to be able to do a few years ago. This turned out to be advantageous as I got to talk to some people I recluse_Amadeusrarely have the opportunity to see. I figured the money was going to a good cause too. We had some appointments through the day and saw a lot of people. The one cigar I smoked on the show floor was a Recluse Amadeus Habano Lancero which was very, very good. Corey smoked the Connecticut which he enjoyed also. I did the one interview for the week with Z from Cordoba and Morales cigars which I posted Tuesday. I streamed that live on Periscope and I would have done more of that but I was limited by bandwidth and storage Davidoffcapacity. That evening we went to Davidoff’s Lounge at the Fashion Show Mall, a free-standing lounge with outdoor seating right on the strip. They debuted the new Davidoff Yamasa, which was an OK cigar, it’s hard to properly experience a cigar in a packed area, temps in the hundreds and music blaring. I guess I’m a curmudgeon, but I can never figure out why people have social events and have a DJ basting dance music. People were there to talk to one another, I didn’t see anyone dancing. At least Matt Booth was there. We finished the evening in a very crowded and loud Palazzo bar talking with Stace and Jon Saka from Dunbarton. I think I sampled the new La Gloria Cubana Serie R Esteli Maduro which shows a lot of promise.

 

FonsecaYou’ll notice that I didn’t really smoke a lot of cigars, I think I smoked 3 a day the time I was there. There are a couple of reasons for that. First, when I’m on the show floor I think it’s a bit rude to talk to one person about their cigars while smoking another vendor’s cigar. I also have other things I need to do that distracts me from the cigar. It’s also not a good environment to judge a cigar and many times the cigars aren’t at their best either for various reasons. Fortunately the few I did smoke on the show floor were excellent. In addition to the Recluse, the other cigars that I smoked were the Fonseca Nicaragua from Quesada and the Maya Selva Flor Mayade Selva Box Pressed Toro. The Fonseca was a really good smoke, I look forward to smoking it again under better circumstances. The Flor de Selva was the cigar of the week for me. I think I smoked it for the better part of four hours, I kept letting it go out and every time I re-lit it was still amazing. So I got lucky with the cigars I smoked on the show floor.

 

FableTuesday was another day on the floor. We spent some time hanging out with Pilar and Robert from Arandoza Cigars, and some other folks. After the show closed we weaseled our way into the RoMaCraft hospitality suite in the Palazzo. The had a really nice suite with a large outdoor area which was oddly not overbearingly hot. This was an oasis. Finally a comfortable place to smoke that was within walking distance and filled with friends. While it was unnecessary, we were provided with a Fable Fourth Prime Doc, a petite robusto with a PA Broadleaf wrapper that is made at Nica Sueño, Mike and Skip’s factory. We had the pleasure of RoMaSuite Viewmeeting Mitul Shah, who in addition to being behind the Fable brand, works at Mom’s Cigar Warehouse in New York.  The Fable Doc was a great little cigar, very strong to start out with but settling down. Excellent smoke, but of course it’s from the RoMaCraft guys so one would expect as much.  I’d like to thank Mike and Skip for hosting us, it was a great place to hang out. I also smoked Steve Saka’s new Mi Querida in a toro while there. This is going to be a great MiQueridacigar, it has all the markings, I hope I have another one floating around. While it’s not a Liga Privada, it’s along the same lines with the Broadleaf wrapper, but it seems to have a little something special. Again, not the place to properly evaluate a cigar, but I have a good feeling about this one.

 

Wednesday was more of the same on the show floor, we were able to meet with some people I hadn’t really gotten time with in the past, which is good. There were a couple Tatuajeof the interesting things we saw that were not cigars, and it’s notable the lack of vape and hookah booths this year. Last year they had them segregated, and stories from the year before got around about how aggressive the vendors were in the aisles, shoving their wares down passers by’s throats, so to speak. I explained to the one vape guy I saw and talked to that his product doesn’t really fit with a cigar blog and he understood and seemed to be running a very good operation. Xikar’s booth was huge and they had some interesting new things, including the very cool XO cutter which has gears to make sure the blades track together perfectly, and Xikar branded Boveda systems. There was a booth with high-end, flavored tooth picks. There were smoking jackets and the usual canes and lots of pipes, of Sakacourse. To me, there was less “crap” and more cigars this time. After the show closed at 5 we heard Nick Perdomo playing the custom drum set he had made by Pearl Drums and went to watch, some of you may have caught the live streaming video I  broadcast on Periscope. Wednesday evening we went back to the RoMa suite and hung out, if they were handing out cigar at the door we didn’t take any, I’m not one to push the weasel factor any further. I was grateful to have a cool place to chill out among friends. I smoked a couple of cigars I brought from home. I did get to meet the winner of the IPCPR’s contest, an enthusiastic young dude from Alabama (I think), who brought his dad along. He was excited to meet his heroes, I think the right guy won, although I would have liked to see one of my readers win.

 

recluseThat’s the basic wrap up, I’ll have a load of new cigars to smoke in the coming weeks, so stay tuned, and I’ll be posting my special “secret question” project mid-week, hopefully. The photos are interspersed throughout the article are fairly random. I didn’t really take a lot of photos this time. Feel free to ask any questions in the comments and I’ll answer. Another trend I noticed was bright-colored packaging. Yes, we all know that the new Toraño bands look like Camacho bands, but the bright colors is something we noticed several places. One wonders why it’s taken so long for that to happen? That’s it for now, until the next time,

 

CigarCraig

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Cordoba & Morales Cigars at IPCPR 2016

I have heard about Z and Emille from Cordoba & Morales Cigars for a while, but never seemed to connect with them until a guy who started a blog back around the same time I did was doing their PR and asked if I wanted to schedule an appointment. I’ve kept in touch with Dave Payne over the years as he got away from writing CigarSage.com, and it was a great pleasure to finally meet him face to face. But this isn’t about meeting someone I started corresponding with in 2009, it’s about a small cigar company and what I think is a powerful message. Here’s the video which originally aired live on Periscope yesterday (hint, follow me on Periscope, I’ll be doing some more today…)

 

Periscope saves the video in fairly low resolution, so if the quality isn’t up to standards, that’s why. I don’t recommend watching it on a 42″ TV (but how many of you are?).  Thanks to Z for talking with me, his lovely wife Emille, and Dave for setting this up. Best of luck to Cordoba & Morales cigars!

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

CigarCraig

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Merlion, Undercrown, Rocky Patel, Viaje and RoMEo Cigars

Pre-IPCPR post, by the time you are reading this I’ll be either on my way to Las Vegas, there already, or home, depending on when you happen to read. I’m anticipating a busy show, and have made some appointments, but there’s literally no way one can schedule meetings and get to visit everyone one wants to visit, there’s not enough hours in the day. I’ll do my best to bring you something different than my esteemed colleagues in the cigar blogosphere, whom I’m hoping to commune with as well. I’ve got packing to do, so I’ll try to keep this brief! Here are some interesting cigars I smoked this week:

 

Merlion_Sea Lion_maduroOne of the cigars I’m looking forward to at the IPCPR show this year is the release of the Merlion Maduro from La Sirena Cigars. A few years ago I got my hands on one of the limited edition boxes of the Merlion Se Lion, which came in a box with nine Sea Lions and one Maduro Sea Lion. The Sea Lion is a unique shape, it’s a 5½” x 47 perfecto with a shaggy foot and a very pointy head. It was all I could do not to smoke this when I go them, as you can well imagine.  It has not gotten tot he point where they are releasing a regular line of the maduros, so I figured it was time. These are made at La Aurora, and the cigar smoked beautifully. It was rich and full of all the great flavors I look for in a cigar. I can’t wait to smoke this is other sizes, but the Sea Lion size is unique and interesting to smoke. They only produced 500 boxes of these, so I imagine the chances of getting more are nil.

 

Undercrown_ExclisivamenteI have been playing around withe the Drew Diplomat app, and I just don’t get it. I can’t figure out how to really interact with people, find people, or anything. I think there are much better “community” apps out there, and I get that this is a marketing tool. So I’ve been choosing Drew Estate cigars to smoke and log on the app a little more lately, which I suppose is the point of the app anyway. I picked out the Undercrown Exclusivamente, which is a square pressed toro exclusive to Corona Cigar Co.’s Drew Estate Lounge in Orlando. There are several cigars presented in this form factor for the lounge, including a Liga 9, a couple of the Tabak Especiales, Natural and Herrera Esteli. In addition to being sharply pressed, they have a flat cap, which lends itself well to punching with a reasonably large-bore punch.  I’ve smoked a lot of Undercrowns, and I think this was my favorite size/shape of the bunch. Sure the Corona Viva is the stand out in the line to me (better yet, the larger Dogma, a Cigar Dojo release that’s long gone. I haven’t smoked a Manifesto yet), but I think this surpasses even those. It’s a terrific smoke, a fun shape, and quite worth picking up if you find yourself in the Orlando area (or on the Corona Cigars website).

 

RockyPatel_Edge_SumatraMonday evening I went with a cigar that was gifted to me last week by one of our friends who joined me for Desnudo Sunday. Nik is a noted local (Wilmington, DE) singer/songwriter/performer who is a cigar nut as well. It was a very generous and unnecessary thing for him to do, but I understand and appreciate his eagerness to share something that I hadn’t smoked yet. I can probably count the number of Rocky Patel Edge cigars I’ve smoked on one finger. Why this is, I have no idea. I’ve seen them on the retailers shelves for years, I just never picked any up. He gave me his favorite, with is the Sumatra 6″x 52 Toro, and it was very good with a savory, woody, leathery flavor with a little sweetness. It was well-behaved, and a very satisfying smoking experience. I’ll have to make an effort to further explore the Edge line. Thank you, Nik, for the great cigar!

 
Vieje_SummerfestI’m finding I have more to say than I thought, the downside of skipping my mid-week post.  I smoked a Viaje Summerfest 2015 that I bought last year at J. Shepherd Cigars in Louisville, KY. This cigar was interesting in that the first inch or so is without wrapper, so you smoke binder and filler only for the first 15 minutes, then there is a noticeable change. Viaje is another one of those brands I don’t follow closely, but I seem to recall the first release of theirs being the 50/50, which was designed with two distinct blends merged together in the middle. I never smoked one, but it sounded intriguing.  So this limited edition cigar was very nice, and it really did showcase the amount of flavor the wrapper gives a cigar. It smoothed out noticeably when the wrapper started burning. Fascinating. Of course, these are only released in the summer, and I don’t recall seeing anything about one coming out this year. I don’t think this was too awfully expensive either (or I probably wouldn’t have bought it!, and I bought two and smoked one there I think).

 

RoMEo AnejoFinally, last night I grabbed a cigar that I had been siting on for a year or more. When the RoMEo Añejo cigars came out I really wanted to like them. 2010 Connecticut Broadleaf for a wrapper, a 2008 Olor from the DR for a binder, and Nicaraguan and Honduran fillers from the 2009 crop.  The first few I smoked seemed over moist, they tasted great, but the steamy quality to the smoke and associated difficulty with draw was off-putting and frustrating. So, like a dummy, on the hottest, most humid day of the year, I forgot all that and decided to give this cigar another try. I was encouraged with the initial draw, but after a few minutes on the porch in the humidity, it started getting that steamy feel to it again. That thick broadleaf wrapper is like a sponge, I suggest putting these in your humidor if you have a humidity spike, as they will suck the moisture out in a short amount of time.  I still love the flavor, but one must be very careful about conditions in which these are smoked. I’ll keep trying as I’m a sucker for broadleaf.

 

That’s all for now, I’m off to Vegas, so watch for reports from the show here, and follow me on Twitter, Instagram, Facebook and Periscope for up to the minute reports. Until the next time,

 

CigarCraig

 

 

 

 

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Intemperance, La Aurora and a Laranga Cigars

I don’t have a lot of cigars to share with you this time.  I had a busy week with the video I posted and the various Leccia cigars I had to smoke for inspiration, yeah, that’s it…Bottom line is that the Desnudo cigars are really good, the Luchador line is also very good (the El Hombre is one of my favorites, the El Gringo line doesn’t excite me as much as the original line), whatever that Barber Pole cigar was was really good, and many of Sam’s other creations over the years have been to my liking. If we could just get him to dump the Penguins and become a Flyers fan…So I posted the video, and I posted Friday about the suit filed against the FDA.  I hope this is effective, I know a lot of thought and preparation went into it, and I can’t imagine taking legal action against the US Government is a comfortable thing to do. Someone has to understand that it just isn’t right for an un-elected, bureaucratic department to cost so many jobs in so many countries. It’s wrong, it’s completely a tobacco vendetta, and it needs to stop. Rant over.

 

Intemperance_RevengeFriday I decided I wanted to smoke something from Skip and Mike’s RoMaCraft line, and while rummaging through my meager selection, I came across a box pressed robusto bearing the Intemperance band. I recognized that this was the BA XXI iteration of the Intemperance line, but couldn’t place where I got it. Once I figured out that it was the Intemperance BA XXI Revenge, a store exclusive to Outland Cigars in Charlotte, NC, I realized that it must have come from Will Cooper. My memory is not what it used to be. This cigar is 5″ x 56, basically a box pressed version of The Breach of the Peace. The wrapper is a Brazilian Arapiraca, not so dark, kind of a medium brown. They use an Indonesian binder (I’m typically not a fan of Indonesian tobacco, never have been, but I think lately it’s a pretty neutral, flavorless leaf that only serves to hold the filers together), and fillers from Nicaragua and the Dominican Republic. It was a very well balanced cigar, flavors of coffee with cream and a little sweetness, some pepper and a little cedar. I think I have a Breach of the Peace in the humidor, and definitely need to grab some more of this line the next time I see them.  Congrats to Skip Martin on the recent birth of his third daughter!

 

LaAurora_Corojo_RobustoSaturday I busted ass around the house in the morning, when out for a late lunch, then settled into the smoking porch for a cigar or two.  I started with a La Aurora 1962 Corojo Robusto. I received a couple of these, along with it’s Connecticut counterpart, a few weeks back from Miami Cigar and Co. Regular readers may recall that I am a long time fan of the La Aurora brand, even though a great many of their offerings are not suited to my tastes. The first box of cigars I ever bought was La Aurora Bristol Especiales, which was under $40 at the time, my daughter still may have the box. Those cigars ended up having an odd, vegetable flavor that didn’t really do anything for me and taught me an early lesson about buying without trying. I do have a tradition of smoking a Puro Vintage 2003 whenever a granddaughter is born, but I can only accommodate two more granddaughters, not that we are expecting any more anytime soon. Anyway, my recollection is that the Corojo line has been around for a while, it’s made with Ecuador Corojo wrapper, Ecuador Sumatra binder and Dominican and Nicaraguan fillers. This example smoked a little wetter than I prefer, it was a humid day, but I enjoyed the flavor and will dry down the others and smoke them again. I must remember to open the bags before putting them in the humidor. I look forward to smoking the Connecticut.

 

Laranga_CoronaGordaA couple weeks ago I visited a local shop and the Espinosa Cigars Laranga Reserva caught my eye, and I hesitated to buy one until the shop manager came in a recommended it without any prior knowledge that I had been thinking about it. I’ll admit, the price played into my hesitation to try this cigar that I’ve heard a lot about over the last year. All they had was the corona gorda, which is a great size, so I lucked out. Still, a just under $10 corona gorda doesn’t sit well with me, but I guess I better get used to it. Probably at $8 I would have tried it long ago, but I have trouble getting past $9…cheap bastard as I am. Anyway, this cigar had a wide open draw, so I knew I wasn’t going to struggle with it like I did with the Aurora. I don’t know if it’s the reference to Orange in the name (Laranga is Portuguese for Orange, btw, and so named because the wrapper leaf has an orange tinge), or some other outside influence, but I really did get a citrus note. As with most cigars I’ve smoked from La Zona, and the list of cigars they make seems to grow daily, this was a really good smoke. It was well balanced with a ton of flavor.

 

That’s it for now. A week from now I’ll be traveling to the IPCPR show in Las Vegas, and I’ll be trying to bring you news, although folks like Cigar-Coop, Halfwheel, Stogie Review and Cigar Federation will have more detailed information. I’ll try to put a different spin on things, and I anticipate it being a busy show with a ton of new releases trying to get on shelves before August 8. I usually do something fun and silly for the show, but this year doesn’t seem to be the year to do something like that. Anyway, that’s all for today, until the next time,

 

CigarCraig

 

 

 

 

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IPCPR, CAA & CRA File Lawsuit Against FDA Today

I don’t usually post press releases, but I thought this one was important enough to pass along. Posted from my phone, so pardon the formatting.

Three major cigar and tobacco industry associations file suit against FDA’s deeming rule

CAA, IPCPR, & CRA ask District Court of Washington D.C. for declaratory injunction

For Immediate Release: July 15, 2016

WASHINGTON D.C. – The three major cigar and tobacco industry associations filed suit Thursday against the United States Food and Drug Administration’s “Deeming Rule.” The Cigar Association of America, International Premium Cigar and Pipe Retailers Association, and the Cigar Rights of America are asking the District Court for the District of Columbia for a declaratory injunction “vacate, set aside and enjoin the enforcement of the final rule” because it is violates numerous federal statutes as well as the federal rulemaking process. A full copy of the filing, which details nine counts against the FDA and the United States Department of Health and Human Services, can be found here (note: the link was not included in either press release I received).

“Just over one month ago, our three associations pledged to work together to develop the appropriate response to the FDA’s new deeming rule. After a thorough and detailed legal review, we are challenging this unlawful regulatory action in federal court to protect the statutory and constitutional rights of our industry and its members. The fact that all three of our organizations are acting in one voice speaks to the urgency and seriousness of this action,” said Mark Pursell, CEO of the International Premium Cigar and Pipe Retailers Association.

The complaint challenges:

  • FDA’s improper application of the February 15, 2007 grandfather date to cigars and pipe tobacco, which subjects those products to more intrusive regulations than cigarettes and smokeless tobacco
  • FDA’s impermissible assessment of a tax in the form of user fees, and its allocation of these user fees only to cigars and pipe tobacco and not to other newly deemed products
  • FDA’s failure to perform an adequate cost-benefit analysis to take into account the effects of the Final Rule on small businesses as is required by the Regulatory Flexibility Act
  • FDA’s unjustified decision to require cigar health warning labels to be 30% of the two principal display panels of packages
  • FDA’s unlawful designation of tobacconists who blend finished pipe tobacco or create cigar samplers of finished cigars as “manufacturers,” which subjects those businesses to greater regulation than if they were “retailers”
  • FDA’s incorrect decision to regulate pipes as “components” or “parts” rather than as “accessories”

“The FDA ignored the law to craft these expansive and sweeping regulations and cannot justify many of the arbitrary and capricious regulations it purports to enact,” said Glynn Loope, Executive Director of Cigar Rights of America. “This lawsuit is a specific and detailed challenge to the FDA’s unprecedented assertion of rulemaking authority. “We are acting in one voice to protect the legal rights of our industry at all levels, from the manufacturer, the community retail tobacconist, to the adult patrons of cigars.”

Speaking about the lawsuit, Cigar Association of America President Craig Williamson said, “We all worked in good faith to inform and educate the FDA on the unique nature of our industry, its members and our consumers. We hoped the FDA would craft a flexible regulatory structure that accounted for the uniqueness of our industry. Instead, we got a broad, one-size-fits-all rule that fails to account for how cigars and premium cigars are manufactured, distributed, sold and consumed in the United States. The FDA exceeded its statutory authority and violated the federal rulemaking process when crafting this set of broad and sweeping regulations. This challenge asserts nine violations of federal law and rulemaking authority. We are asking the court to enjoin the enforcement of this unlawful regulatory scheme. We are confident that when the court reviews our case on its merits, we will prevail.”

Thanks to the CAA, IPCPR and CRA for their efforts to save the premium cigar industry.

Until the next time,

CigarCraig

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