Tag Archives: Vintage Rock-A-Feller

Art of Magic, Terra Nova and Casa 1910 Cigars

This week I smoked another Secret Santa gift and a couple cigars from the PCA show.  My Secret Santa sent me a bunch of fantastic cigars, all but maybe one of which I hadn’t smoked before.  Some might think this is no easy feat, but there are actually a lot of limited editions and regional stuff I don’t get because I don’t chase them down. Considering my friendship with Steve Saka, there are a bunch of his cigars I haven’t smoked.  The Vintage Rock-a-FArteller Art of Magic cigar is a cigar I hadn’t smoked, although I could easily have picked up some last year.  A percentage of sales of this cigar helps out Jessi Flores and his daughter’s health issues. He is responsible for the artwork as well. This is a toro, 6″ x 52, with a San Andrés wrapper, Nicaraguan binder and fillers. I though it had some earthy flavors with a lot of cocoa notes.  I liked it a lot.  Kevin Schweitzer is the owner of the company, and  in addition to a background in finance, is a magician, hence the name.  This cigar made me think of my friend Frank Seltzer, who passed away last year. I actually thought I was going to have a hard draw on this pre-light, but it was fine, although it inexplicably got tight for a stretch around half way through. 

 

I’ve been putting off smoking this brand since the PCA show, mostly because I was so thoroughly unimpressed with its sibling brand, Montosa.  I found both Montosa examples I smoked to be incredibly sub-par, and was surprised when Two Guys Smoke Shop/The Cigar Authority named it their cigar of the year.  So I was concerned that the Terra Nova would give me a similar experience.  I have both the Terra Nova Dark Fired Kentucky and the Arapirique blends in a torpedo shape, so I chose the Dark Fired first.  The wrapper is an Ecuador Connecticut, the binders are Bahia and Sumatra (actually I’m guessing its a double binder, maybe it’s Brazilian grown Sumatra?), and the fillers are Dominican, Nicaraguan, Brazilian and Dark Fired Kentucky.  I took a good whiff o this before lighting, expecting the campfire-like aroma one gets from a Drew Estate Kentucky Fire Cured.  I found no such aroma, thankfully.  I find that heavy campfire aroma off putting.  This was a woody tasting blend, but a sweet wood, and it wasn’t bad!  I kinda liked it and look forward to smoking the Araparique.  

 

 

The Casa 1910 brand is fairly new to the market. Someone encouraged me to visit their booth at the PCA show, I don’t remember who I was with at the time. I came across this sample of the Chuchillo Parado, which is a 5″ x 50 robusto and seems to be only available in this size.  It’s a Mexican puro, with San Andrés Negro tobaccos wrapped in a Mexican Sumatra wrapper.  It was a very nice looking cigar, not at all like the Mexican puros I started out smoking in the 90’s.  Nor did it taste like those cigars, which were almost a dirty flavor.  This had a unique spice component, which stuck to the palate, almost, like licorice, but not licorice, if that makes sense.  This cigar smoked really well, and was quite satisfying.  I’d pick up more if I saw them.  

 

The giant guitar sculpture I talked about last week made its way to Joliet, Il and was affixed to the front of the Rock and Roll Museum and Rick Nielsen was there for the lighting ceremony. Rick Nielsen is a cigar smoker, and his son actually works with the Cigar-Coop team. My wife met him quite a few years ago and gave him a cigar, and we ran into him six years ago when we were at the NAMM show. I would have loved to have been in Joliet for the ceremony. That’s all for today, until the next time, 

 

CigarCraig

 

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JFR and Vintage Rock-A Feller Cigars

Among the many cigars I’ve been smoking this week, I smoked a couple of cigars that were handed to me at the  TPE show back in January, when life was relatively normal. Normal being relative, at the time, I was still jobless, although I thought I might have an opportunity in the works. Sadly, that opportunity fell through, although who’s to say what would have happened as the months passed. Anyway, as I’ve been self-medicating with premium tobacco, I’ve been searching for a new cigar here and there to include in a post, and I selected a cigar that Terence Reilly handed me while I was visiting with him at the Aganorsa kiosk. He was one of eight sharing one of the several “pods” they had, and was the lone representative of Aganorsa Leaf, and seemed to be having a good show. I enjoyed a brief conversation with him, mostly personal stuff. He gave me a JFR Connecticut Super Toro, which is a 6½” x 52 Parejo wrapped in tissue paper. This cigar had a pigtail cap on it’s Ecuador Connecticut wrapper covering Nicaraguan Aganorsa binder and fillers. This is a relatively inexpensive cigar, under $6 in lower tax states, and well worth the price. It’s got a smooth, creamy flavor, with some wood and pepper. It’s not without some body, I put it in the medium range. This is actually the first JFR I’ve smoked, and I’d certainly be interested in trying the Corojo and Maduro versions.

 

The other cigar I selected was the  Vintage Rock-A-Feller Dominican Blue Line Churchill. Rock-A-Feller Cigars was another one of the Pod-dwellers at the TPE, which seemed to be a great set-up for a lot of the vendors. This setup had a counter and displays pre-built, and all the vendors had to do was bring in their wares and put them on the shelves and they were ready to go. No paying porters, renting furniture or any of the major expenses of traditional booth space. It kind of discouraged customers from hanging around, they did their business and moved along. I met Craig Roth, the sales manager for the company, and naturally, we developed an instant bond. I might have beat him to the “CigarCraig” moniker. Anyway, he gave me this cigar, and I decided to give it a whirl. The blend is as follows from their website:

Filler: • LIGERO-PILOTO-TIPO CUBANO: A Cuban seed Grown in the Dominican Republic.
• SECO SAN VICENTE: A Cuban seed Grown in the Dominican Republic.
• OLOR DOMINICANO: A Dominican Seed Grown in the Dominican Republic.
• LIGERO DE NICARAGUA: Nicaraguan Seed Grown in Nicaragua.

Binder:
• Olor: A Dominican Seed Grown in the Dominican Republic.

Wrapper:
• Habana: A cuban seed Grown in Ecuador.

The Churchill is 7″ x 48, close enough, and if I remember correctly, it had a box press. The burn and draw were exceptional, although the burn meanders a bit in the final inch, and by then it was just about finished anyway. This is a medium bodied cigar, and fairly middle of the road in flavor. It had some woody, and earthy notes, with a bit of coffee.  It was a good cigar, although less in my wheelhouse. I’ll seek out the Nicaraguan line and see how that lines up with my preferences.

 

That’s all for now, back to social distancing and quarantine. Until the next time, 

 

CigarCraig

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