Tag Archives: Exile

A Carrillo TAA and More Exile Cigars

Last week I was dropping some things off at Goodwill and stopped in the Cigar Cigars store next door.  They are still rebuilding inventory after a change of ownership, so there wasn’t a lot new there, so I picked up an E.P.Carrillo 2023 TAA cigar that I hadn’t tried before.  This is a box pressed Toro, 6″ x 52, with an Ecuadorian Connecticut wrapper, Connecticut broadleaf binder, and fillers from the Dominican Republic and Nicaragua. I’ll be honest, the Ecuador Connecticut wrapper is a surprise for me, I looked up the blend after I smoked it, and I would have thought it was a Sumatra.  I likened it to the old La Gloria Cubanas, I really enjoyed it a lot, and thought to myself that I should go back and get more.  I seem to recall it being priced at around $14. I didn’t find it to taste like a shade wrapped cigar, and while I like the occasional shade cigar, I don’t gravitate toward them. Oddly enough, the three closest Goodwill stores to me all have cigar stores within spitting distance.

 

Speaking of shade wrapped cigars, I am still working through samples of the Exile line, and has an Ecuador Connecticut wrapper.  This is named in honor of the second shoe store opened by the Martinez family in Santiago de Cuba.This has the Ecuadorian Connecticut wrapper, Indonesian Sumatra binder & Dominican fillers. The cigar is medium bodied with notes of cream, nuts & subtle white pepper. I’ve smoked both the 5×50 Robusto & a 6×52 Toro. These have a dry wood kinda flavor to me, oddly I found the Robusto to be more well rounded than the toro, the robusto seems to have more depth. Weird stuff. I think the Toro was dryer throughout if that makes sense.  Again, all of these Exile cigar have burned and drawn perfectly.  

 

I also smoked the Exile La Dalia Edicion Limitada, the 5½” x 46 Corona (corona gorda?).  This has the same Mexican San Andrés wrapper, with an Indonesian Sumatra binder and & fillers from the Dominican Republic as the regular line.  I’ve always liked this size, although lately I prefer a longer smoke.  I found this similar to the toro, with a little more sharpness due to the reduced ring gauge.  I have the robusto yet to sample, but the La Dalia is likely my favorite in the Exile portfolio. 

 

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

 

CigarCraig 

 

 

 

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Sampling Some Exile Cigars

Rewind back to April of 2013, I was in the northern part of New Jersey killing time while my wife was at a Beatles festival, and visited Cigar Emporium in Lyndhurst.  I met up with a few people I’d been corresponding with in the cigar blog world at the time, one of which was Alex Martinez, a police officer who had a blog called StogieCop. Later Alex would retire and manage Mane Street Cigars in Woodbridge, NJ. He ended up being the first buyer of the LFD NFT cigars, maybe the second as well, as well as the Tatuaje NFT (or two).  Alex launched UnicornSmokes.com to sell NFTs and other hard to find cigars, and has recently started Exile Cigars, a brand celebrating his Cuban roots, and memorializing his father’s shoe stores in Havana.  I don’t consider myself a sneakerhead, but I like having a variety of footwear choices, I have maybe a dozen or so pairs of sneakers I rotate through.  Nobody cares about my footwear issues, let’s talk cigars!  

 

The first cigar that caught my eye was the La Dalia. La Dalia is named in honor of the first shoe store opened by the Martinez family in Santiago de Cuba. This had a beautiful, oily Mexican San Andrés wrapper, with an Indonesian Sumatra binder and & fillers from the Dominican Republic, where these are rolled at the La Union factory. I can’t find any info on this factory, as familiar as it sounds.  Perhaps Alex will weigh in.  I smoked the 6″ x 50 toro, of course.  I may get into the Limited Edition Corona Gorda later today.  I really like this blend. It starts with some pepper, then eases into a spicy espresso, just what I like in a cigar.  Kudos to the factory, this is a perfectly made cigar, burn and draw were perfect.  This was a really enjoyable smoking experience!  These run around $12 each, which is reasonable.  

 

I have a habit of smoking first, and researching later, which can be a good thing I guess.  I selected the M67 Habano knowing nothing about it.  This one has nothing to do with shoes, it’s named after a grenade for some reason.  This is a mixed filler cigar, with a Habano wrapper, Indonesian Sumatra binder with the fillers being the bench cuts from the La Dalia production.  I’ve become snobby in recent years and generally avoid mixed fill cigars, although there are certainly some decent ones out there. It’s my understanding that one out of every six cigars that comes out of Nicaragua is a Quorum from the PENSA factory, which is an astounding statistic, but I still favor a long filler cigar.  This M67, which also comes in a Connecticut version, was actually really good.  Except for a bit of a flaky ash, one wouldn’t guess it’s mixed fill.  This had what I perceive as a white sugar sweetness, which appeals to me, along with a subtle spice.  This is probably the best $5 cigar I’ve smoked in a long time!

 

Wrapping up this round of sampling, I went with the Edición Limitada 2025 Exile Alaska.  This is named after the third shoe store the Martinez family opened in Cuba.  Juno why the called it that, I don’t know, Alaska!  That joke doesn’t work well in the written form.  The cigar is a 6″ x 46 Corona (I call it a Corona Gorda, which would be 5  5/8″ x 46, close enough). I have always liked this size. This one has an Ecuadorian Habano wrapper, Ecuadorian Sumatra binder and  the fillers are Dominican. This is another perfectly made cigar, and it was quite delicious.  There’s an odd sourness to start, along with some sweetness, which seems contradictory, but it worked.  It’s creamy, in a coffee with cream and sugar kind of way.  Another winner.  I’m looking forward to trying the two Connecticut offerings, the M67 Connecticut and the Versalle.  Alex is doing a great job with this line. 

 

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

 

CigarCraig

 

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