I Goofed, I Didn’t Use My CigarMedics HumidiMeter!

Sunday my wife and I went into Philly and saw the Philly Pops presentation of the Beatles Abbey Road with a Beatles tribute group called Classical Mystery Tour. I can do without the Beatles tribute part, it would have been fine with the Pops

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orchestra and a band a good singers playing the material. It was still an entertaining show, I’ve seen a lot of Beatles tribute bands and always have trouble with ones where the Paul character can’t be bothered to

Too High!

learn to play lefty. Anyway, traffic sucked coming home, as per normal, and I was quite ready for a cigar, and grabbed a recently acquired RoMaCraft Aquitaine Knuckle Dragger. Here’s where I made a critical error. One of my pet peeves is when I light up a cigar that ends up being over-humidified and it doesn’t burn right, it smolders instead of burns and doesn’t give you a great experience. It’s so hard to tell when you light a cigar what it’s going to smoke like. This particular cigar I had hoped would be a sure thing, and it turned out that it just wasn’t ready, it hadn’t been in my humidor long enough, and the shop I bough it from was new to me and their humidor is obviously a little high. Here’s where the Cigarmedics HumidiMeter tool comes in! I’ve been using this for the last month. You might remember my video with Steve Saka from the 2017 trade show when I encountered him after the show floor closed for the day checking the next day’ sample stock with an industrial version of this sort of device. 

 

 

Just Right!

Steve’s device costs thousands of dollars, and reads absolute humidity, the Cigarmedics HumidiMeter converts the results to numbers which we, as regular cigar smokers, understand, relative humidity numbers. I went back and check the other Knuckle Dragger I bo

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ught at the same time and my suspicions were confirmed, the readings were higher than what I like to see, which have been in the low 60s at the foot, and the mid 60s at the head. I’ve been checking every cigar, and if the numbers are higher than the mid 60s at the head of the cigar I’m putting it back and picking another cigar. Cigars are funny, different tobacco’s hold moisture differently, Broadleaf holds a lot more moisture than Connecticut shade, and all of the filler tobaccos have different properties too. My larger humidor has variations from top to bottom too, so there are a lot of variables. With this device, I can save myself from not only wasting cigars, but wasting my time and pleasure! 

 

I can tell you that many of my friends and colleagues have reviewed this device. Most recently I would recommend the inaugural episode of the I’d Tap That Cigar Show from just this past week where they have discussed the device in detail. I tossed the idea of doing a video review of this, but it’s been done to death. I do agree with what everyone says about this, it’s one of the better new cigar tools I’ve gotten, and I’ll be honest, I was moments away from buying one of these when the folks at Cigarmedics reached out to me, it was in my shopping cart. Thank you to Tom at Cigarmedics for the information and support. 

 

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

 

CigarCraig

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Villiger Cuellar Black Forrest and Assorted Cigars

I’ve been smoking some random favorites this week, along with revisiting some cigars to re-evaluate my opinions on them. I spent a while with my web host’s support folks trying to iron out some back-end issues I’ve been having and I think something got fixed with the RSS feed and Google indexing. The e-mails seem to be going out again and searches don’t seem to be coming up in Chinese anymore! That was annoying! Spending ten years creating content, I’d like my legacy to be properly preserved in google searches! So it’s all sorted out, I think. I’ve been looking at new WordPress themes too, I’ve been using the same site design since 2012, and it might be time to refresh it a bit. When I find the right layout, you’ll know it! Anyway, Here’s some of my thoughts on some cigars I smoked

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this week. 

 

Southern Draw Jacob’s Ladder Brimstone – I love the shape, it’s perfectly constructed, and I really want to love the cigar, and it’s great, but I think I like the regular Jacob’s Ladder better. There’s something about the regular line that is richer, maybe the added strength of the Brimstone overpowers he blend for me. If I had smoked this before the regular line I might have had a different opinion, but I feel a little disappointed when I smoke these. I want it to be a better Jacob’s Ladder, and for me it just isn’t, something gets lost. 

 

Cornelius and Anthony Daddy Mac – As everyone

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should be aware, I have a fondness for everything in the Cornelius and Anthony line, except, maybe the Daddy Mac. I’ve always said I liked it, but it was my least favorite in the line, and the second half of that statement id certainly always been true, but it’s time to stop sugar coating it and just give up on the Daddy Mac. The cigar just doesn’t appeal to me. That’s not to say it isn’t a good cigar, and there are plenty of people who love it, it’s got that leathery, earthy profile that I don’t personally dig. I need to reach out to Steven Bailey and ask him what the future of Cornelius and Anthony looks like. I’ve been seeing a lot of posts from this weekend’s LaZonaPalooza and the name C&A hasn’t come up. Inquiries at a recent visit to El Titan de Bronze, where my favorite Cornelius is made were not exactly positive. I need to know how I should ration my existing stock. 

 

Speaking of cigars made at LaZona, I also smoked a La Sirena King Poseidon, the brand’s 6″ x 60 vitola. This is another small brand that I’ve had a long time affinity for. The 6″ x 60 siz

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e was an experiment, and I like it a lot, but I think I like the Trident, the Churchill size, better for a large vitola in this line. I love the Trident and Devine (belicoso) sizes the best in this line.  I still have a couple of the Tridents from a box that was made in the My Father factory, they are Devine…no that’s the Belicoso…you know what I mean. La Sirena’s family of brands, including Merloin, Oceano, and the 10th Anniversary, have a little something for everyone, and I enjoy the heck out of them. 

 

Let’s talk about this new cigar from Villiger, the Cuellar Black Forrest. This is made at the Tabacalera Palma in the Dominican Republic, which is where the Cuellar Krēmē is made, as well as one of my favorite Villiger cigars, the long gone and poorly named Trill. It’t box pressed and has a San Andrés wrapper and Dominican binder and filler and has a really interesting aroma out of the box. They often send samples in really nice little boxes of two or three, and while the presentation is top notch, one can’t help but think they might be better served saving that expense. Just a thought. This is a

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beautiful smoke, and everyone has been smoking this and raving about it. It was different from what most think of San Andrés wrapped cigars. It didn’t have the heavy earth that is associated with Mexican leaf, but would still qualify as earthy I guess. It was solidly in the medium category and smooth, consistent with it’s Cuellar Krēmē sibling, it compliments it well as the maduro counterpart if that is the intent. I can recall smoking a Krēmē at the Rocky Mountain Cigar Festival in 2014 and really enjoying it, and I might have one of similar vintage someplace in the humidor. This was a nice smoke that I’ll look forward to smoking again.

 

That’s all for today. until the next time, 

 

CigarCraig

 

 

 

 

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News: Ventura Cigar Company Still Strong After Recent Layoffs

This was reported a couple of days ago by a popular outlet (whom I consider to be friends, by the way), in a rather over the top doom and gloom manner, and subsequently defended on social media as being the end of the company. Maybe it’s best not to rely on recently released employees as 100% credible sources of information, there might be some emotions involved. Their sources are purely speculation on my part, but we have some responsibility to report things accurately. Clearly, the folks at Ventura are vehemently denying that they are going away. Considering Kretek’s involvement in actively bringing premium cigars into the Tobacco Plus trade show lately, I couldn’t imagine them divesting themselves of their premium cigar brand, especially one that’s been gaining traction. How this effects other distribution arrangements remains to be seen. 

 

Ventura Cigar Company Still Strong After Recent Layoffs

Kretek International, Inc., Parent Company of Ventura Cigar, restructures in anticipation of FDA Action within Overall Tobacco Industry.

 

Ventura Cigar Company has just announced the restructuring of its national sales organization in advance of new FDA regulations expected to hit the tobacco industry in the coming months. In a continually evolving environment, Ventura Cigar Company, through Kretek International remains a strong and profitable company and will continue to deliver high quality products and service to our valued consumers and customers.

 

Michael Giannini, General Manager of Ventura Cigar Company said “Making tough decisions has kept Kretek International strong throughout the decades, and I commend the company for recognizing the changing market landscape and taking necessary steps to remain an industry leader. We are grateful for the contributions of our employees and wish everyone well as they continue their journeys.”

 

For more information about Ventura Cigar Company, please visit venturacigar.com.

 

 

About Ventura Cigar Company

Ventura Cigar Company (VCC) is a unique cigar brand born in sunny Southern California that is on a mission to create memorable, complex cigar blends that excite the senses and reward discriminating palates. Their flagship Archetype, Case Study, Project805, and PSyKo SEVEN brands offer multiple award-winning blends that earned 90+ ratings in Cigar Aficionado, Cigar & Spirits, and Cigar Snob. And Archetype’s Axis Mundi won #13 Cigar of the Year for 2017 from Cigar Aficionado. Ventura Cigar Company also distributes Silver Dollar Nasal Snuff and the 4th Generation Tobacconist and Comoy’s of London lines of pipe tobacco products, extending its reach and tradition of offering top-quality tobacconist products. Pipes and blends under these brands are cultivated through generations of craftsmanship, making them longtime favorites of pipe tobacco enthusiasts. 

 

 

About Kretek International, Inc.

Kretek International, Inc., parent company to Ventura Cigar Company, DRYFT Sciences, LLC, Phillips & King, and Tobacco Media Group (TMG) is America’s number one importer, marketer, and distributor of specialty tobacco products sold by convenience, mass, and national retailers. For over 30 years, Kretek has enjoyed a strong reputation for providing exceptional customer relationships and top-quality goods. The company continues to offer standout brands like Djarum, Cuban Rounds, and Djeep Lighters to distribution channels across the United States and Canada, bringing value, high margins, and growth to retailers and distributors. 

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News: Herrera Esteli Norteño Edicion Limitada Released to Drew Diplomat Retailers

I’m a bigger fan of the Norteño than I am of the rest of the Herrera Esteli line, so I’m always excited about this edicion limitada. Don’t get me wrong, I like Willie’s work, I’ve known him a long time. I actually met him and Sean Williams at the same time at the 2011 IPCPR show when Willie was blending Sean’s El Primer Mundo cigars at El Titan de Bronze.  I felt short that day, and I’m six feet tall. Anyway, check out the poop on this year’s Norteño EL.

Drew Estate Announces the Limited Release of the Herrera Esteli Norteño Edicion Limitada

Drew Estate announces today the limited release of the Herrera Esteli Norteño Edicion Limitada Churchill to Drew Diplomat retailers nationwide. Originally released in 2015, this limited edition is a favorite among cigar connoisseurs and retailers alike.

 

The Herrera Esteli Norteño Edicion Limitada showcases extensively aged tobaccos from the Estelí and Jalapa growing regions of Nicaragua, coupled with a spicy Honduran binder and a rich, bold Mexican San Andrés maduro wrapper. Packaged in 15 count boxes, this 7 x 48 box pressed Churchill features a unique Norteño blend allowing for a smoother and complex smoke.

 

From La Gran Fabrica in Esteli, Drew Estate Master Blender Willy Herrera notes, “The Norteño Edicion Limitada is a killer stick bro, at all of my events consumers come up and ask when it is coming back. I am happy to say this limited release will satisfy some of the demand, but they better grab them quick before they disappear.”

 

The Herrera Esteli Norteño Edicion Limitada Churchill is available in 15 count boxes with an MSRP of $217.96. 

 

ABOUT DREW ESTATE

Founded in New York City in 1996, Drew Estate has become one of the fastest growing tobacco companies in the world. Under their mantra “The Rebirth of Cigars”, Drew Estate has led the “Boutique Cigar” movement by innovating new elements to the tobacco industry with their unique tobaccos and blending styles that attract new and traditional cigar enthusiasts. In their Gran Fabrica Drew Estate, the Nicaraguan headquarters, Drew Estate produces a variety of brands such as ACID, Herrera Estelí, Herrera Estelí Norteño, Isla del Sol, Kentucky Fired Cured, Liga Privada, MUWAT, Larutan by Drew Estate, Nica Rustica, Pappy Van Winkle Barrel Fermented Cigars, Tabak Especial, Undercrown, Florida Sun Grown, and Java by Drew Estate.

 

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CAO Orellana and Fratello Navetta Inverso Cigars

Welcome to the first day of Standard Time, if you live in an area that messes with the clocks, which is most places I guess. I despise this time of year, shorter days, dark early, getting cold. It’s always a downer for me and it’s harder for me to keep a positive attitude this year! I’m still better off than I was a year and a half ago, head-wise, and I have plenty of cigars. On a positive note, Halloween was this week, and it’a always been one of my favorite cigar nites. When my kids were little I’d take a cigar along trick or treating with them, now that I stay at home I sit on the front porch with a cigar handing out treats. I always put the cigar down when the kids come to the door, and nobody ever complains. If the neighbors haven’t seen me walking the streets with a cigar in my mouth the other 364 days of the year, I can’t help them, ya know?  Lot’s of other houses to go to if they don’t like it. Anyway, I smoked a RoMaCraft CroMagnon Cranium for the entire two hours of trick or treating, and it was outstanding. 

 

I felt like I needed to give the CAO Orellana a try again after giving them some rest time. The first one I smoked was unimpressive, and I felt like I should have been impressed. This is the fourth cigar in the Amazon Basin trilogy, which I guess isn’t a trilogy anymore. I wasn’t really impressed with the original Amazon Basin

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, which everyone raved about,  however, the Fuma em Corda and Anaconda I thought were exceptional cigars. This Orelana, which is named after Francisco de Orelana the first European to navigate the Amazon river (is he th

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e guy we have to blame for ruining brick and mortar retail? 😁) has a Brazilian Cubra wrapper. I’ve enjoyed plenty of cigars with that wrapper before, mot recently the Vicarias Red Label. The 6″ x 52 toro also has a Nicaraguan binder and Brazilain Bragança, Columbian and Dominican fillers. I found this to be a good cigar, but fairly pedestrian and routine in flavor, nothing really interesting. I suppose it hit me much like the Amazon Basin did, I just didn’t see the big deal, it’s another good cigar. I’ll tell you one thing I really didn’t like about it, and I’ll preface this by saying that I’ve been rather fortunate in my long cigar smoking career to have not burned a lot of clothes, this cigar can burn a hole in your shirt. I got down the the “band” which is cords of tobacco, and started to smell an “off” room note, then I realized that a piece of the tobacco cord had dropped on my sweatshirt and was burning a hole in it. it pisses my off a little, actually, but it could have been much worse, as it’s an easily replaceable sweatshirt. Come to think

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of it, the only other time this happened was a closed foot on a CAO Flathead Sparkplug!  I’m seeing a trend here! I gotta have a talk with Ricky Rodriguez about this…So I guess the score on the Amazon series for me is a tie, 2-2, proving that not every cigar is for everyone. 

 

I go through this all the time, during the day I’ll think of a cigar I want to smoke, then by the time it comes around to smoking it, I’ve forgotten what it was I was thinking about smoking. This happened yesterday, I really should make a note someplace. Of course, every time after I’ve lit whatever cigar I settled on, I remember the cigar I thought of earlier and it’s too late at that point. Not that I would call it settling, but as I was rummaging around yesterday, trying to remember what cigar I had thought of earlier, I came across a Fratello Navetta Inverso Robusto and figured it would be a great cigar to smoke. I had smoked a Toscano Garibaldi last week from a pack I bough in Rome last year, I forgot about it until I saw an announcement that that line was going to be imported to the US, now they weren’t going to be special any more! It was a really good smoke, and I think I paid 8 Euros for the 5-pack or something. That really has nothing to do w

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ith the Fratello except that Fratello and Navetta are Italian words and it reminded me of that. The Navetta Inverso has a Habano Nicaraguan wrapper, Ecuador binder and Dominican and Nicaragua filler, compared with the Navetta, which has an Ecuadorian Oscuro Wrapper, a Dominican Binder
and Nicaragua Filler. Like most Fratello cigars, it’s made at the Joya de Nicaragua factory (the Oro is made by La Aurora in the DR). I love the flavor of this cigar, it’s solidly medium to me, with hints of sweet tobacco here and there. It was hard to put down, literally and figuratively. Fratello Cigars recently hired Robert Hernandez as the new Regional Sales Manager based in Florida and Georgia. I received a press release about this, but news about personnel moves and inside baseball sort of stuff isn’t the kind of cigar news I like to post here as a stand-alone news piece. I just don’t feel like my readers are that interested in that, I’ll let Halfwheel, the Industry’s Blog, handle that.  Anyway, always hard to go wrong with any Fratello cigar, and even better in the Boxer size, in my opinion! I really need to get a Boxer sampler one day!  

 

That’s al for today, until the next time, 

 

CigarCraig

 

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