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Vicarias Negotiator and Cain F Lancero Cigars and a V-Herf

I finally dipped my toe in the V-Herf pool last night briefly. I was smoking a fairly old Cain F Lancero Tubo (having removed it from the tube, of course), and checked out the Smoke Inn Room on the Whereby app. It was fairly early, and there were only a few people there, but it was pretty cool, and I enjoyed it and will return for more virtual herfing. Perhaps I’ll try to pop in at various times of the day to see who might be in there. In all the years I’ve been interacting digitally with people, I haven’t just video chatted with people, so this was neat, and I’ll keep doing it. I usually just sit around listening to podcasts keeping to myself, but I’ll try to be more social. Suggest some other popular video herfs besides Smoke Inn. I’ve been trying to get in on the Jersey Cigar Lounge’s herfs on Discord, but they always seem to be too late for me! Oddly, by 8:30 I’m done with my cigar and on to other things!

 

On to cigars. The Cain F Lancero I smoked last night was spectacular. I had a ten count box I bought several years ago, and still have a few tubos left. It’s been a while since I smoked one, I tend to save tubos for some time that never seems to come because they are nice and portable and I can throw one in my pocket. I either forget to do that, or end up packing a travel humidor or case, rarely just taking one cigar. I end up with a load of tubos, I have a few that are pretty old. I won a box of Don Tomas Classico Tubos well over ten years ago and have two left, I should smoke them and see who they are. I really liked them. I think I still have a Montecristo Tubo from one time when I had lunch at JRs in Whippany, and that was 10 years ago.  I suppose that one is ready to smoke! Like I said, I save them for a time that never comes. Maybe that’s this week’s project for Wednesday’s post. Anyway, the Cain F had the Studio Tobac footband, and was generally the stronger of the Can line, but the lancero was not strong at this point, but a wonderful smoke, with a hint of sweetness and earthiness. It burned perfectly and I thoroughly enjoyed it, as I have every one over the years. I had sen several friends post pics of this cigar on social media recently, which inspired me to grab one. So glad I did. I need to rummage through my lanceros, I know there’s at least one Can Daytona in there, might be more! Oliva doesn’t list Cain or Nub on their website, are they even still a thing? I still see them around. We have Sam Leccia to thank for both of those great lines!

 

My new cigar of the week was the Vicarias Negotiator. I met Jay Clark at the TPE and he gave me his Negotiator cigar and told me the story behind it. He used to be a buyer in the metals industry, and I used to buy metal powders and steel, among many other things when I was a buyer, so we had some common ground. He would go into negotiations and had out this cigar, which is a box pressed, 5″ x 48 robusto (Hermoso?) with a San Andrés wrapper, DR binder and fillers from Nicaragua and the Dominican Republic. The negotiations would last the duration of the cigar, and if a deal wasn’t done when his ciga was finished, he would walk away. As a former buyer myself, I could relate to this story and wish I had used this tool in some negotiations myself! The only trouble I might have would have been that the cigar was so good that I might have been distracted from the task at hand! It was just the kind of cigar I like, dark, espresso flavors, good amount of strength, and a perfect burn and draw. The only thing I didn’t care for was that it wasn’t a toro, but that would defeat the purpose, right? No need for negotiations to go on for an hour and a half or so, right? I really enjoyed The Negotiator, Might not be easy to find, but really a great cigar.

 

Happy Easter to all who celebrate. A few months ago I removed a cigar from a tube I had put it in several years ago to see how long it would last in the tube before it would dry out. When I started the experiment I really had no way to tell how dry it would get. Through the miracle of technology, I have cince gotten a way to find these things out, the CigarMedics Humidimeter! I removed the cigar from the glass tube with the corks stopper, and the foot of the cigar read 35%, not good. Not 0, but certainly not optimal for smoking. So I labeled it and put it in the humidor. After about a month I checked it again and it was up to 54%. Getting there. I tend to think it might take longer than two months for a dried out cigar to rehydrate, but maybe not! It’s nice to have a tool to actually check without guessing. I do have a control cigar, one from the same box that’s been properly stored (for the last 8 years), when the time comes to smoke the cigar, I’ll see what effect the drying/restoring process had on the flavor. I should have started this project much earlier, it would have been appropriate to post the findings today. ( I think I’ve made that joke before…probably every year). Until the next time, 

 

CigarCraig

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Vicarias Cigars: White, Red, Black and Blue

When I was in Miami last month I had the pleasure of meeting a gentleman named René Cardona, who happens to rep Tre J Cigars. His position within the cigar industry had nothing to do with my meeting with him, he is part of a group of folks I’m acquainted with through a Facebook group which is made of some folks I know personally, some long time readers as well as friends I haven’t met yet.  I was honored to meet René while I was there, and he ended up sending me a sampler of the Tre J range, which I smoked  through the Vicarias line this week. I still have to get to the Invictus, I just ran out of time. I’ll get to it in the next couple days.

 

I started out with the Vicarias White Connecticut Double Churchill. I know, I usually am compelled to start with the maduro, but it was early on a Monday that I had off, and we took a walk to the store and back so I had plenty of time to enjoy a cigar, so I grabbed the largest one of the bunch and it happened to be the Connecticut. Not a mistake at all, as this Conny had loads of flavor. It was sweet and creamy, and had a beautiful burn. We walked a mile or so to the local Target, Macha and I sat outside while my wife shopped, and then we walked home and it was a treat the whole time. I did allow it to go out about a half a mile from home (at about the two inch mark) so I could sit and finish it on the porch, as I’m fond of doing, and it continued to smoke well beyond the band without turning bitter. The size was 7″ x 52, and the blend was Ecuador Connecticut wrapper with Dominican binder and fillers. I found this to be quite a tasty cigar!

 

Of course, I couldn’t stay away form the maduro for long, so next up was the Black Label Maduro. This is called a Robusto, and is 5½”x 50 with a Brazilian Arapiraca wrapper, Dominican Olor wrapper and Dominican and Honduran fillers. This cigar had a unique flavor that I really liked, and I’ve tasted before, but couldn’t quite place. It skirts the borders of sweet and savory, this flavor reminds me of a hard candy, the kind you ‘d find in grandma’s candy dish, but I don’t quite know what it is. It’s delicious though,  and smokes like a dream. I dig it big time. I can’t wait to try the even darker Red Label.

 

Tuesday I smoked the Red Label Cubra. This comes in one size, the 6″ x 54 Toro, and had a Brazilian Cubra wrapper, which is fermented to a very dark and oily maduro. The binder is a Nicaraguan Jalapa and the fillers are Dominican Piloto Cubano, Pennsylvanian Broadleaf and Ligero from Jalapa. Under normal circumstances I would have picked this up first, no doubt, but I showed some restraint, and selected cigars according to the time I had available.  This cigar was totally different from the Black Label, yet so loaded with dark, rich flavors of espresso and cocoa. It, along with the others, had perfect construction, and smoked very well and provided two hours of satisfaction. So far the Vicarias line is three for three.

 

Last up was the Vicarias Blue Label Corojo. This was also a Toro, listed at 6″ x 54, although it felt smaller than the Red Label for some reason. I didn’t measure it, as I lit it up fairly late, but I would have thought it was closer to 50 ring gauge. This one had an Ecuador Corojo wrapper, Dominican Olor binder and fillers from the DR, Honduras and Columbia. There’s a reason cigar makers make a range of cigars in their lines, not everyone is going to like every type of wrapper, every size, shape, or blend. I have a fairly broad spectrum of likes (or low standards, however you want to spin it), but the Blue Label Corojo was my least favorite in the bunch. There wasn’t a darned thing wrong with the cigar, it started a bit harsh (the foot measured a little dry with the Cigarmedics Humidimeter, more on that in another post, which might have contributed to that), and the flavors just weren’t what I prefer. Perhaps the Columbian tobacco doesn’t do it for me, not sure. That’s not to say it isn’t a great cigar fr someone else, just that out of the four, I’m preferring the other three over this one. As always, your mileage may vary.  

 

That’s all for today, I need to get ready for a challenging couple of days of work. Thanks so much to René for sharing these great cigars with me, I need to put some of the Black Labels in my humidor, the unique flavor of those is intriguing! Until the next time, 

 

CigarCraig

 

 

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