Drew Estate Charity Event at the Wooden Indian in Havertown, PA

Yesterday was The Wooden Indian‘s annual Drew Estate event with auctions benefiting TECHO, who helps build affordable housing in Esteli, Nicaragua.  Chris Stone and Pedro Gomez of Drew Estate were there as well as the local Xikar rep, Rich.  Both companies contributed many items for the raffle, which, according to Chris Stone, raised $5000.  This kind of money can build houses for three Pedro_WI 08102013families in Nicaragua!  For those who don’t know Pedro Gomez, he has been working at Drew Estate for seven years, and running

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the Cigar Safari for the last five years.  Pedro knows everyone in Esteli, keeps the tours running smoothly and serves as the translator and tour guide.  Pedro recently moved to the US to do events as the Drew Estate Factory Spokesman. It’s an opportunity that only a few folks from Esteli get, and he’s dedicated to bringing the same professionalism to the events in the US t

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hat he brings to the Cigar Safari.  Fortunately for Cigar Safari attendees, he will be back in Nicaragua for the three months a year that the run the tours!  I’m not sure if the Safari would be the same without Pedro’s expert guidance!

 

Auction_DE-WI 08102013In addition to the company reps, this event brought people from far and wide.  There were Drew Estate Ambassadors, several members of the Facebook C.A.T.S. (Cigar Aficionado Trades and Sales) group and others.  As I said before, they raised $5000, and the two big ticket items were a custom Humidor finished by Jessi Flores, the creative director at Subculture Studios at the Drew Estate Factory in Chris Stone_Humidor08102013Esteli,and a basket loaded with rare and unusual Liga Privada cigars.  The Humidor went home with our local Cigar Rights of America ambassador (and Emilio Cigars rep) Alan Price.  There was a group who conspired to win the basket, four gentlemen from the C.A.T.S. group who called themselves The A-Team, complete with t-shirts! They were smoking Liga Privada A’s at the event (which were eventually replaced by more A-Team 08102013when the won. They had a bundle of No. 9 Tubos (these were Steve Saka’s pocket cigars from what I know, so I guess they didn’t need them anymore!), a bundle of Velvet Rats and various other rare and unusual Ligas.  Quite a score, and I hope they didn’t have any fights over anything there was fewer than four of! Congrats to all the winners, and a job well done to Dave Mayer and his Crew at the Indian, the folks at Drew Estate and Xikar.

 

HE_UCWhile I was at the event I picked up a few more Joya de Nicaragua Cabinetta Lanceros and smoked on while there. This is a sentimental favorite as it will forever remind me of my first trip to Cigar Safari, as Jonathan passed around a bundle on the bus before they were released, and we watched them rolling them at the Joya de Nicaragua factory.  It’s also a darned fine smoke suitable for any time of day and should appeal to a wide range of tastes.  Later that evening I pulled out a Herrera Esteli Lonsdale which was equally as fabulous as the Cabinetta.  This burned perfectly and was sweet and smooth and delicious. This is another cigar that’s appropriate at any time.  Loaded with flavor!  As I write this I’m working on an Undercrown Corona Doble.  Certainly larger than I usually smoke, but great for a gorgeous Sunday afternoon on the deck typing away.  Whereas the JdN Cabinetta and the Herrera Esteli are loaded with complexity and subtlety, the Undercrown is dark, rich and bold.  All great cigars!

 

La-Gloria-Cubana-Gilded-Age-Toro-CigarsDon’t forget to go back to Friday, August 9th’s post and enter to win a box of La Gloria Cubana Gilded Age Toros courtesy of Famous Smoke Shop!  There’s only another 5 days to enter, and I know this is longer than most of my contests, but I wanted to give plenty of people a chance to enter.

 

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

 

CigarCraig

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La Gloria Cubana Gilded Age by Famous Smoke Shop Contest!

The La Gloria Cubana Gilded Age is a terrific new cigar made exclusively for Famous Smoke Shop. I’ve had the pleasure of smoking several samples in the robusto and Churchill sizes and ave really enjoyed them. The cigar is beautiful to look at with it’s Ecuador Sumatra wrapper and the enormous Art Deco style band. It’s got a little bit of sweetness and is a solid, well made smoke.  You know I’m a La Gloria Cubana fan since I have a humidor dedicated to the brand!

La-Gloria-Cubana-Gilded-Age-Toro-Cigars

Famous Smoke Shop is sponsoring this month’s cont

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est with a box of La Gloria Cubana Gilded Age Toros. Leave a comment on this page to enter,

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and I’ll draw a random comment on Friday, August 16th.  The usual ru

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contest, everyone is eligible to win!

Thanks to Travis at Famous for organizing the contest!  Good luck to all.

Until the next time,

CigarCraig

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IPCPR 2013 – Flor de Gonzalez Cigars with Yadi Gonzalez

I’ve been sampling through the range of cigars by Flor de Gonzalez over the last few days.  I have smoked a few of their mixed filler line and enjoyed them, they make a tasty Churchill and large torpedo in the $2 range.  I won a 5-pack of the 90 Miles robustos a few years ago and enjoyed them quite a bit.  I was introduced to Yadi Gonzalez at the IPCPR show by Antonio Lam of Reinado Cigars and got to sit down with her for a few minutes and hear about what’s new.

Flor de Gonzalez

I was  interested to try the 1980. When Yadi said it had a San Andreas wrapper AND an Ecuador Broadleaf binder I was very interested.  It was a darned good smoke, although maybe I jumped the gun smoking it so soon after bringing it back from Vegas. It will be an awesome smoke all the way through in another month or two.  The one I smoked was incredible up until the last third,  which had a hint of ammonia, which is

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why I think another few months in the humidor will benefit the cigar. I’m looking forward to smoking more of these.

 

The Reserva Selecta in the No. 4 size (5 3/4 x 48) has a neat pigtail cap and is a very smooth, subtle and refined smoke.  This one gave me a lot of enjoyment sitting on the back patio on a sunny Saturday afternoon. It burned perfectly and I easily could have lit another one right away. I thought this cigar was very different from the others in it’s delicacy and complexity. This is the cigar you smoke in a tuxedo, although I thought it was darned good in the shorts and t-shirt I was wearing.  Very good!

 

The 90 Miles Churchill was a longer version of the robustos I’d enjoyed in the past. One thing that struck me while I smoked this was how I’ve come to feel like a 7” x 47 cigar isn’t a really big cigar any more.  The 60+ ring gauge cigars obviously dwarf what used to be considered a large cigar, and I guess I’ve become desensitized.  Funny that a corona doesn’t seem like a toothpick or anything, but the 47-52 rings seem smaller.  That’s neither here nor there, the  90 Miles Churchill is a nice, solid smoke for any time of day.

The Q-ban Fuerte is a full bodied Nicaraguan cigar.  The foot of this cigar had a dark core, likely the ligero, that comprised about half of the cigar.  I really enjoyed the flavor, but again some humidor time is going to do wonders for this cigar.  If I had to line these up in order of preference, this would come in in the middle, with the 1980 being first, the regular l

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ine being fourth, and the Q-ban and Reserva Selecta exchanging places depending on my mood. All four lines were very enjoyable and cigars I’d reach for again and again, and would be happy sharing with friends.

 

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

 

CigarCraig

 

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IPCPR 2013 – Acid Shorty, Natural Shorty, San Bajito Robusto and Shorty Rossi

IMG_0701The IPCPR show always seems to have it’s share of celebrities, Arnold Schwarzenegger was spotted at the show on the first day (not by me!) as well as Mike Ditka, and previous years have seen the likes of Ron White and Dennis Rodman walking the floor.  Shorty Rossi, the star of Animal Planet’s Pit Boss, has also been a fixture at the show for a few years. I met up with him this time and he took a few minutes to tell me about some of his new cigar offerings being distributed through Meier and Dutch, which is the wholesale arm of Cigars International.  I had the opportunity to smoke a couple of them this week, here’s what I thought:

 

DE Acid_ShortyThe Acid line isn’t one I gravitate to, I can usually smell them a mile away, and except for a late night Kuba Kuba Maduro in Nicaragua a few years ago, I haven’t really had too much to say about the line.  I’ve been to the factory, I’m confident that they use the finest materials, and I know they are rolled very well. So I was a little hesitant to choose the Acid Shorty Friday evening for my walk, after a long week I usually select a “sure thing” from the humidor.  This is a IMG_0819[1]4″x 60 cigar with a very sweet cap, candy sweet, diabetic coma inducing sweet.  It also had an herbal aroma off the foot.  It turned out that this was a very nice cigar.  It didn’t have the cloying incense, aroma-therapy kind of flavor I expected.  It was medium bodied with a nice, sweet tobacco flavor.  I enjoyed this cigar once the sweet cap was gone.  I’d smoke this again.

 

DE Natural_ShortyAlso from the Drew Estate factory is the Natural Shorty. This is a 4″x 50, a little more manageable than the 60 ring, and the perfect size for a rainy Saturday afternoon walk.  Again, the sweet gum on the head was overwhelming.  This is “short and sweet” taken to the extreme.  I’ve smoke a few of the Naturals, but none recently, and I remember them using some fairly unique tobaccos, Turkish, maybe some Perique or something from Louisiana or something. This is one that I wished was longer, because it was a nice smoke, again, once the sweet cap was gone.  Unique, for certain. Again, I’d smoke this again, but I’d probably try to wipe some of the sugar off first…it’s just too much for me.

 

San Bajito_RobustoShorty Rossi made his first entry into the cigar world with Cigar International‘s Diesel Shorty.  I didn’t have any of those, although I like the Diesel line in general.  He does have a line called San Bajito, and Niko of Meier and Dutch (and also a regular on the Over a Cigar show on Blogtalk Radio) was kind enough to provide me with a 4½” x 60 robusto.  I enjoyed this cigar after dinner on the patio.  This cigar is made in Nicaragua, and was a really nice, smooth, flavorful smoke.  I got a nice sweet tobacco flavor at one point, no sweet cap on this one, just nice, sweet tobacco.  I want to smoke more of these, especially after a few months time-out in the humidor.  Shorty did a nice job blending this cigar.

 

 

Have a look at the video, Shorty give us some insight into how he ended up in the cigar industry as well how he got into the dog rescue business.

 

One of the things I appreciate about all Shorty’s cigars is that a portion of the proceeds go toward his Pit Bull rescue. The dog pictured above, the one I walk every night, is actually my youngest son’s dog.  She is a Pit Bull/LAb mix that we got from our local SPCA.  She’s a sweet dog whose enthusiasm can be mis-interpreted as aggression, but she really just loves everyone. We think she may have been given up because, we were to find out, she has seizures, and is now on medication to control them.  So I believe in Shorty’s Pit Bull mission, and wish him continued success.  His dog, Hercules, was there throughout the show and provided some comic relief at one point when he cleared the booth with a gaseous emission. I wish I had the video recording for that!

 

Until the next time,

CigarCraig

 

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IPCPR 2013 – Sindicato Cigars with Abe Dababneh

hex_figuradoWhen I got back from Las Vegas I had a package waiting for me from Sindicato Cigars, the company made up of a group of retailers and headed by Jim Colucci, formerly of Altadis.  Of the three cigars debuting at the show, I have to say that the Hex intrigued me, so I had to light one of those up first. Vitola-wise it looked just like the Smoke Inn Micro-blend Tatuaje Anarchy Apocalypse, a 5¼” x 52 perfecto with a curly pigtail cap. It very much looked like a cigar I’d love, and I wasn’t wrong.  This cigar burned perfectly and was delicious!  It was dark and loaded with all the flavors I like, the espresso/cocoa/dark dried fruit types of flavors. It will be hard not to smoke the other sample and dig through the trade show samples in search of more.  Seek out the Hex and give it a try.

 

Affinity_RobustoNext up was the Affinity. This is a Ecuador Connecticut wrapped cigar that I believe Abe described as a Connecticut Shade with some strength to it. Now, I try not to be cynical (I don’t try too hard…) but this has been the theme for the last couple years, the Connecticut shade wrapped cigar that’s not the typical mild shade wrapped cigar. Nish Patel’s Zen, E.P.Carrillo’s New Wave Connecticut, everyone seems to have the Connecticut Shade wrapped cigar that is not your typical mild cigar. Anyway, the Affinity is a really nice cigar, nothing really surprising, but an enjoyable smoke that was quite satisfying and the biggest problem I had with it was the Robusto size was too short!  This may not be too different from other cigars out there, but it’s very good.  Well made and tasty.

 

Casa Bella_CoronaLast night I tried the economy offering,  the. Casa Bella.  This was a corona sized cigar, which fit well into my schedule.   This is a bundle cigar, hand made in the Dominican Republic, with an Ecuador Connecticut wrapper.  This has a really low price point, I think Abe says the 6″x60 is under $3.00!  It’s mixed filler, but it was a tasty smoke, although I had a little problem keeping it burning in the middle of the cigar. Maybe it was a construction issue, but more likely it was my impatience in lighting it up a couple short weeks off the truck.  For a two dollarish cigar it was pretty darned tasty.

 

It seems like

the group of retailers known as Sindicato know what they are doing and have produced three nice lines. The Hex blew me away, and I enjoyed both the premium and budget Ecuador Connecticut offerings. If you see them in your local shop give them a shot. I don’t recall, but I don’t think these will be available on line at all, just in brick and mortar tobacconists. Here’s the video of

Abe Dababneh telling us about the company and the three lines:

 

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

CigarCraig

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