This just in from Rocky Patel!
[iframehttp://bit.ly/1Ryrhlm 100% 1000px]
httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rkyFLfQYPvI
httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TRkttIv2RcA
Until the next time,
CigarCraig
This just in from Rocky Patel!
[iframehttp://bit.ly/1Ryrhlm 100% 1000px]
httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rkyFLfQYPvI
httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TRkttIv2RcA
Until the next time,
CigarCraig
Filed under Review
It’s contest time!  I was going to post a mid-week review but the cigar I was going to feature didn’t do it for me. It was something I bought a few months ago on a recommendation,  but it was unimpressive so I’m going to forget about it and move on!  My friends at Famous Smoke Shop have offered to run a contest with me this week instead. Use the Rafflecopter below to enter to win a Famous Smoke Best Humidor Jar Sampler containing the following: 1 - Asylum Straight Jacket 50×5, 1 – Carnage Robusto, 1 – Romeo y Julietta House Of Montague Toro, 1 - Immortal Toro, 1 - La Gloria Serie RF No. 13, 1 - Room 101 El Mas Chingon No. 2, 1 - Vudu Dark No. 13 and 1 - Cigar Monster Humidor Jar 1.3L.  Seven cigars and a Humidor Jar, retail value is $70.40.
Thanks to the folks at Famous Smoke Shop for providing this great prize! Contest ends Wednesday, April 6, 2016. You must be of legal smoking age in your jurisdiction, and the winner will be selected by the Rafflecopter thing…so your bribes will not help this time :-).
That’s all for now, until the next time,
CigarCraig
Filed under Review
I smoke a lot of different cigar across a wide spectrum, I try not to discriminate based on size, country of origin or manufacturer. So in the latter part of the week I found myself leaning toward the milder end of the spectrum
for some reason. Maybe it;s the onset of Spring, I don’t know. Anyway, I started off with an Avo XO Legato, the toro in the line. It was Avo Uvesian’s 90th birthday this past week, so I thought it would be appropriate. This cigar came in a sampler from Davidoff from last year’s IPCPR show, which included some other Avo cigars, some Camacho, Room 101 and BG Meyer cigars. The Avo XO Legato is 6″ x 54 with an Ecuador Connecticut wrapper. The rest of the cigar is Dominican, and it was a nice, creamy cigar with a bit of sweetness. I’ve not been a huge fan of a lot of the Avo lines, but this was a really nice, well-balanced and enjoyable smoke. I see some more Avo sampling in my future.
Friday evening my wife and I took a trip up to Famous Smoke Shop‘s Leaf Cigar Bar in Easton, PA. It was about an hour and a half drive, but Steve and Cindy Saka were in town visiting, and we wanted to stop in and say hello. I purchased some of Steve’s Sobremesa Robusto Largo and El Americano cigars as I hadn’t yet sampled the Robusto Largo size yet. Over the course of the evening I smoked said Robusto Largo and a Cervantes Fino generously gifted by Cindy, and thoroughly enjoyed them both, as well as the
company. Both of the cigars were superb, with the Robusto Largo (5¼ x 52) having rounder, smoother flavors, much like the El Americano toro, and the Cervantes Fino (6¼ x 46) having a little sharper edge. The Leaf bar and restaurant was hopping, with excellent service. The place is in the same building as Famous Smoke Shop’s enormous warehouse (which I’ve been promised a tour of one day), and it’s located outside of Easton in an industrial park, it’s an odd location for a retail store and lounge, but it still draws a crowd. It was noisy, which taxes my ability to hear conversation, but we had a great time catching up with Steve and Cindy. Later this year it will have been twenty years since the first time I talked to Steve on the phone, back when he was holding the Monthly Officious Taste Test on the alt.smokers.cigars Usenet group, of which I was a part.
Yesterday I relaxed on the
porch after a busy day with a cigar that has a special meaning to me, at least over the last year. I selected a My Father Connecticut robusto. From the website (which has music that plays automatically, which I really don’t like):
My Father Connecticut is going to be an extension of the already existing line My Father and My Father Le Bijou; the cigar is blended by Jose “Pepin” Garcia and his son Jaime Garcia at the My Father Cigar Factory in Nicaragua : It features an Ecuadorian Connecticut wrapper, Nicaragua Corojo 99 Binder and Nicaragua Habano-Criollo filler, all the tobacco coming out of the Garcia’s farms with the exception of the wrapper which comes from Ecuador.
This is one of my favorite Connecticut wrapped cigars, not that the list of favorites is really short. There are a bunch that I enjoy, but this one is one I purchase and enjoy having in my humidor. As a matter of fact, there’s a My Father event this week at one of my local shops that I might stop in on and pick up a few more. It’s creamy, but flavorful and satisfying. I should make a note to buy some larger sizes, as this robusto was
nice, but was over too soon. The band and overall presentation is really classy too.
That’s all I got, off to making a big breakfast for the family and eventually getting some nice cigars in this afternoon. Until the next time,
CigarCraig
I know, when I hear Santiago de los Caballeros I think
of the city in the Dominican Republic, but it’s also the extended name of León Santiago de los Caballeros in Nicaragua. León is the second largest city in Nicaragua, it was founded in 1524 by Francisco Hernandez de Cordoba and was the original capital of Nicaragua. Last summer at the IPCPR show I paid a visit to Colin Ganley to sample his Twin Engine coffee, which I’d heard wonderful things about. While sampling his delicious iced coffee, as it was after lunch, he took me over to meet his friends at Santiago de los Caballero Cigars, a relatively unknown cigar company that he was very enthusiastic about. The folks there provided me with samples of each of their cigars, a Maduro, a Habano and a Connecticut in a classic robusto size. This week I finally got around to smoking them.
Of course, I started with the Maduro. The Maduro has a San Andrés wrapper, a Nicaraguan binder and fillers from Nicaragua and Mexico. The whole line is only available in robusto and toro, and I fou
nd myself wishing that I had the toro! This was a great cigar, full flavored, some decent strength, and a perfect draw. The robusto ended too soon! It was an earthy, chocolaty and creamy. I gotta find
some more of these.
Tuesday I smoked the Habano. The primary difference is the Ecuador Habano wrapper, which lends a nice spice to the
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no prescription pharmacyblend. I put this on the fuller side of medium also, and, like the Maduro and Connecticut, has a nice, soft box press. I had a little bit of a crooked burn, but it was windy and I was smoking it very slowly. A quick relight and everything was perfect. I smoked this to a finger burning nub, again, I want to try the toro.
Tonight I tackled the Connecticut. The wrapper on this is listed as Connecticut seed Talanga, leading me to believe that it’s grown in Honduras. The binder is Nicaraguan, and the filler is made up of Nicaraguan tobaccos from Jalapa, Esteli and Condega. I naturally expected a milder cigar, and it was milder than the previous two, but was still loaded with flavor. It burned perfectly, and I got to about a half an inch before I had to put it down. It had some sweet spice, nuts and a creamy texture, and was very good. I actually couldn’t pick a
favorite out of the three as they all have a lot to offer.
So, I’m asking myself why it took me eight months to get around to these trade show samples, and all I can say is that there’s a lot of great new cigars out there to try, and now and then stuff gets moved to the back of the humidor and overlooked. This is a line that shouldn’t be overlooked.
That’s all for now, until the next time,
CigarCraig
Filed under Review
Today is the first day of Spring and they are talking about snow! That’s some crap, isn’t it? Anyway, just like everyone else, I suppose, I smoked this years iteration of the Alec Bradley Black Market Filthy Hooligan on Saint Patrick’s Day. I like the idea of snakes being banished as we have a couple in our back yard now that my wife is fond of photographing for what I figure is solely to terrify me. I. Don’t. Like. Snakes. As long as they stay outside, I’ll stay in and it’ll be OK, I guess, but I’m rooting for the hawks on this one, eat them slithery bastards up please. Anyway, the whole Saint Patrick and snakes thing is BS anyway, but I appreciate the notion. I’ve quite enjoyed the previous Hooligans, but this year’s version was a twist on the original, fairly literally. They took the candela cigar and applied a maduro stripe to it to create the barber pole effect. This manufacturing technique became apparent as I was attempting to remove the secondary band, which, like the primary band, was affixed nearly permanently to the cigar. I only mentioned last week how easy band removal enhanced the experience for me. The one benefit to this was that I was able to smoke about an inch of the middle of the cigar as the original candela, and it’s rather amazing to taste how much difference that little strip of maduro makes in the flavor. the maduro takes the chlorophyll-like edge of the candela and smooths it out. I had been looking forward to trying this cigar, I like a candela once in a while, and I liked the similar looking Asylum Ogre line for many of the same reasons, the blending of the candela and maduro wrappers make a unique tasting smoke.
Friday evening we went out to grab a bite, and I stopped for a haircut afterwards and brought along a 1502 Nicaragua Churchill for the walk home. I picked up a few of these when I saw Enrique Sanchez at the Wooden Indian for the 1502 XO launch event. The folks at the shop told me it was one of their best sellers, so I figured I’d give it a shot. This is a Nicaraguan puro, a tribute to Enrique’s young son. The last time I smoked a 1502 Nicaragua I was underwhelmed. I think the Black Gold, the Ruby and the Emerald were so darned good, each in their own ways, that I didn’t originally “get” the Nicaragua. Whether it was the vitola or just the cigar, I don’t know, but after a slow start of not “getting it”, it grew on me. It developed into a rich, sweet, dare I say “Cubanesque” cigar. The wrapper color reminds me of many Cuban cigars, which might have influenced that comparison, it burned MUCH better than a Havana! This was another great smoke from Global Premium and Enrique Sanchez, keep up the great work, amigo!
Saturday afternoon I sat down to watch the Flyers vs. Penguins game on the tablet out on the porch so I could smoke a cigar. For those who don’t know, this is a heated rivalry, us Flyers fans don’t much like the cross-state Penguins, and it’s usually a great game. I selected a cigar that Sam Leccia gave me when I saw him a few months back at Cigars International’s midget wrestling event. This was a cigar that Sam said he found a cache of aging in a factory somewhere (he declined to divulge any details), and was working on bringing to market. The shape of the cigar reminded me of the Cuban Partagas Presidente, the Cuban Vitola de Galera name of which is “Taco”, a 6″ cigar that tapered to around 48 ring gauge, then came to a perfecto foot. Whatever this was, it was pretty special, there were some sweet notes and it had a really clean tobacco flavor, obviously this had a great deal of age. If this cigar never sees commercial release by Sam, I’ll just assume he smoked them all, as I would be tempted to do, great smoke. Too bad the game wasn’t as good as the cigar, the Flyers turned in a lack-luster performance when they should have done the opposite. I still like Sam, despite his being a Penguin fan.
Saturday evening I took a walk with a cigar that’s been intimidating me from the depths of the humidor for several months. Back in the fall I met Lars Tetens at the Smokin’ Goose Event at Goose’s shop in Limerick, PA. Going back 20 years or so, to the cigar boom of the 90s, I remember seeing (and smelling) the Lars Tetens cigars in my local shop. They were the precursor to the Acid line, and there’s some controversy over whether one had anything to do with the other. There’s no doubt that parallels can be drawn between the cigars, as well as the apparent eccentricities of Lars and Jonathan Drew. It’s not for me to judge, they both seem to have done well for themselves. Lars gave me a couple of cigars, one of which being this large Serie D. It’s a 6½” x 52 toro, and was the least scary of the bunch. The unlit aroma didn’t offer any hints of flavoring or infusion, as the “Tropical Candy”, “Brief XTC” and “1980” cigars did, they smell very sweet, and I’m nervous about smoking them. I believe Lars told me that the “1980” was rolled by him in 1980, which would be pretty amazing but the aroma off the foot makes me skeptical (I wouldn’t expect any strong aromas off a 36-year-old cigar). The Serie D was a very good smoke, one I’d smoke again. It burned well, had a sweetness that I liked and was solidly medium bodied, despite the word “full” on the band. Once I screw up my courage, perhaps I’ll smoke on of the others in the coming weeks. Lars Tetens cigars are still out there, I’ve seen them in a couple of my local shops, and I know he visits Goose’s regularly. I hope to have another opportunity to hang out with him one of these days and pick his brain a little.
That’s all for today, until the next time,
CigarCraig
Filed under Review