Archive | September, 2015

Cigar Review: Las Calaveras Edición Limitada 2015 LC46

8 Sep 2015

While a top-notch, limited edition cigar rolled at a major factory with a price tag under $10 isn’t a black swan, it might qualify as a gray one. These days, the $20+ My Father LE and Davidoff’s $30+ Year of the Sheep may seem more the norm.

CalaverasAnd with only 30,000 of each of the three Las Calaveras vitolas released, this year’s edition may no longer be easy to find, but it is one smoke worth the hunt. I praised its sibling, LC52, in a Quick Smoke earlier this summer. Picking up a five-pack of the LC46 gave me the opportunity to smoke, and enjoy, more.

This cigar, rolled for Crowned Heads at the My Father Cigars factory, is 5.625 inches long with a ring gauge of 46. The wrapper is an Ecuadorian Habano Oscuro, and the binder and filler are Nicaraguan.

They combine for a complex smoke that began with roasted nuts, dry cocoa, and a little back-of-the-throat spice. By the start of the second third, that spice had mellowed, and I picked up notes of cinnamon, cedar, and leather. Pepper joined in during the final third. Throughout, the flavors were even, smooth, and well-matched.

Construction and burn were excellent, the ash held tight, and the smoke was rich and ample. I did find the draw a bit tight, especially when I used a V-cut. I’d highly recommend opening up the head by using a guillotine cutter instead of the V or a punch.

The first incarnation of Las Calaveras debuted to high praise last year, and Crowned Heads plans to make it an annual release with a different blend each time. In addition, for 2015, Crowned Heads introduced some different sizes. Bands clearly note the year of issue and display some different colors, making it easy to distinguish between 2014 and 2015.

By now, though, noting the difference is likely to be more of a test at home than on the shelves. The Las Calaveras, whose name comes from an image related to Mexico’s Day of the Dead holiday, has been a sales success both years.

I can’t wait to see what 2016 brings. For 2015, I rate the Las Calaveras LC46 four and a half stogies out of five.

[To read more StogieGuys.com cigar reviews, please click here.]

–George E

photo credit: Stogie Guys

Quick Smoke: Alec Bradley Coyol (CRA Sampler Edition)

6 Sep 2015

Each Saturday and Sunday we’ll post a Quick Smoke: not quite a full review, just our brief take on a single cigar.

Alec Bradley Coyol CRA

Coyol debuted at last year’s IPCPR Trade Show, but this one came in the 10-cigar sampler I received when I renewed my Cigar Rights of America membership. It features wrapper, binder, and filler from a Honduran farm called Coyol, along with a second binder and additional filler from Nicaragua. Once lit, you’ll find toasty notes along with leather, clove, and a slight dried fruit sweetness. It’s a medium-bodied and well-balanced blend, an enjoyable cigar with excellent construction.

Verdict = Buy.

–Patrick S

photo credit: Stogie Guys

Quick Smoke: Tatuaje Anarchy 2015

5 Sep 2015

Each Saturday and Sunday we’ll post a Quick Smoke: not quite a full review, just our brief take on a single cigar.

Anarchy

This recreation of Smoke Inn’s original entry in its limited edition Microblend Series is a winner. It is a lovely cigar, showcasing a bun at the cap, an oily Ecuadorian Habano wrapper, and a figurado shape that runs from a 48 ring gauge to 52 along the 6.25-inch frame. As you’d expect from Pete Johnson and My Father Cigars, Anarchy kicks off with strong pepper notes, then provides plenty of other flavors along the way, from wood and leather to coffee. With production limited to 666 boxes of 15 (about $10 a stick), you’ll need to move quickly.

Verdict = Buy.

–George E

photo credit: Stogie Guys

 

Stogie Guys Friday Sampler No. 446

4 Sep 2015

As we have since July 2006, each Friday we’ll post a mixed bag of quick cigar news and other items of interest. Below is our latest Friday Sampler.

Welcome to New York1) Lawmakers in New York are considering a bill that would prevent Empire State hotels from offering smoking rooms. While many hotels are voluntary smoke-free, only four states—Vermont, Michigan, North Dakota, and Wisconsin—have passed laws preventing smoking in hotels. The measure has been introduced by Assemblyman Kenneth Zebrowski. According to CNN: “’I travel and spend a lot of time in hotel rooms,’ Zebrowski said. ‘I’ve noticed that if you’re above, below, or next to a smoking room, the smoke readily travels through the ventilation system.’ Zebrowski said the legislation was in line with the current focus on improving public health.”

2) Steve Saka, owner of the newly formed Dunbarton Tobacco & Trust (DTT), took to Facebook this week to share some details about the release of his first cigar, Sobremesa. A list of Sobremesa retailers will be posted on the DTT website next week. Given the overwhelming demand for Sobremesa—Saka says the IPCPR Trade Show orders were five times what he expected—these retailers will not be receiving their entire order initially, but will instead receive an equitable share with the balance fulfilled as soon as possible. “We are not ramping up our production schedule,” wrote Saka. “Great cigars are made with a steady hand on the tiller. My plan was always to make about 1,000 boxes a month until the second capa pilon was fully fermented and ready. DTT is not deviating from this plan.” In addition, Saka says he is scrapping the Belicoso Largo (6 x 52) vitola because something was off once the cigar aged out. Instead, he is introducing a Torpedo Tiempo (6 x 54). “Cigars are a funny thing sometimes, because I really preferred the Beli over the Torp prior to the 3-month mark, but after that I totally flipped.” Retailers who ordered the Belicoso Largo will have the option to receive the Torpedo Tiempo instead.

3) Read our Cigar Spirits articles and you’ll hear a lot about the bourbon boom. One result of the boom is a shortage of  barrels which are made from American oak trees. To give back, Angel’s Envy (which sells multiple bourbons and a rye) will be planting one American oak tree for every photo posted on social media of Angel’s Envy with the hashtag #AE4THETREES during September, which is National Bourbon Heritage Month.

4) Inside the Industry: Drew Estate has announced the Kentucky Fire Cured Fightn’ 69th. The new cigar is being produced exclusively for Alliance Cigar in Hauppauge, New York. “The new Fightn’ 69th is based upon the popular Kentucky Fire Cured blend, featuring Kentucky-seed tobacco, grown and fire-cured in Kentucky. The new size is a parejo (5.5 x 52) that will be presented in the typical ten-count soft pack packaging the Kentucky Fire Cured line is known for,” reads a Drew Estate press release. “The Fightn’ 69th will begin shipping in October 2015 and will have an MSRP of $74.95 per soft pack of ten. The cigar will be available to retail accounts exclusively via Alliance Cigar’s distribution network.”

5) Deal of the Week: Tatuaje fans may want to jump on the opportunity to pre-order the limited edition Tatuaje TAA 2015. Smoke Inn is taking orders now for shipping next week with boxes of 20 selling for $200 and 5-packs for $55.

–The Stogie Guys

photo credit: Flickr

Cigar Spirits: Wild Turkey Diamond Anniversary Bourbon

3 Sep 2015

wild-turkey-diamond

Like the cigar industry, the whiskey industry isn’t one to let an anniversary go unnoticed. And also like the cigar industry, a limited-edition, super-premium product is usually the result.

Wild Turkey released this bourbon last year to celebrate Master Distiller Jimmy Russell’s 60 years with the company. Russell is one those larger-than-life characters that bourbon seems to produce, and Jimmy’s son and co-Master Distiller Eddie Russell (who has been with Wild Turkey for over half of those 60 years) selected the barrels that made up this tribute to his father.

The Diamond Anniversary Bourbon is a blend of bourbons ranging from 13 to 16 years old. It is bottled at 91-proof and sells for the around $125 dollars.

The copper-colored bourbon has a fantastic nose with notes of pecan pie, vanilla, baking spices, and burnt brown sugar. The palate is rich with buttered pie crust, leather, spice box, wood, and dried fruit. It’s simultaneously rich and flavorful but also surprisingly light and balanced. The finish is relatively short and clean, with a light wood that lingers.

While Wild Turkey has a bit of a rough and aggressive reputation, Diamond Anniversary is an entirely more nuanced type of bird, and the more I sipped it the more I appreciated it. Yes, the price is steep, and I wish they could have offered this in the more traditional 101-proof format, but there is still a lot to like.

As for cigar pairings, the Wild Turkey Diamond is extremely versatile. I enjoyed it with both a full-bodied Drew Estate Liga Privada No. 9 and a more mild- to medium-bodied Illusione Epernay, so basically any good cigar will feel right at home with this celebratory bourbon.

–Patrick S

photo credit: Stogie Guys

Cigar Review: Agio Balmoral Añejo XO Rothschild Masivo

2 Sep 2015

You could be forgiven for not being familiar with Royal Agio Cigars. But while the Netherlands-based company may not be a major player in the U.S. market (at least not yet), Agio has a huge presence internationally and has recently achieved the milestone of over 800 million cigars sold in a single year. That’s a lot of cigars.

Balmoral XO Rothschild MasivoAgio, which was founded in 1904 by Jacques Wintermans, has recently partnered with Drew Estate to bring its cigars to the American market. The Agio portfolio includes the Balmoral Añejo 18, which had a successful launch in 2014, limited by the rarity of the 18-year-old Arapiraca wrapper.

This year, Agio introduced Añejo XO, which is made in the Dominican Republic using well-aged tobaccos. The wrapper is Brazilian sun-grown, the binder Dominican, and the filler is a three-country blend from Brazil, Nicaragua, and the Dominican Republic. The new blend was on display at Drew Estate’s elaborate booth at the IPCPR Trade Show in New Orleans this summer. It is expected to be made available at a couple-hundred tobacconists nationwide.

Añejo XO is offered in three vitolas: Rothschild Masivo ($9.90), Mk52 ($10.95), and Petit Robusto FT ($8.50). The Rothschild Masivo measures 5 inches long with a generous ring gauge of 55. Kudos to Agio for including the name of the vitola on the foot band, though I don’t think there’s any way to confuse the three sizes; the Mk52 is a torpedo, and the “FT” in the Petit Robusto’s name refers to its “flag tail.”

The Rothschild Masivo is an oily specimen with a few prominent veins, a reddish hue, and a nicely applied triple-cap. The foot shows a cross-section of tightly packed tobaccos and exudes pre-light notes of damp wood and leather. The cold draw is stiff with the wrapper imparting a slight sweetness on the lips.

Right from the outset, the Añejo XO boasts a big, bold flavor of earth, raisin, black pepper spice, and rich espresso. The background note reminds me of black cherry. Full-bodied and strong, each puff coats the palate with thick smoke, and the aftertaste is formidable with a considerable concentration of spice on the tip of the tongue. There are few changes in flavor from light to nub.

Construction leaves a little to be desired given the burn line—which requires a few touch-ups along the way to stay even—and the moderately tight draw. But the ash holds firm off the foot and the smoke production is solid.

The Rothschild Masivo is a heavy-handed, blunt-force instrument with plenty of power and an interesting interplay between spice, earthy richness, and fruity sweetness. I’d recommend giving it a try on a full stomach after a large meal with a complementary beverage, preferably a sweet sipping rum. In my book, it earns three and a half stogies out of five.

[To read more StogieGuys.com cigar reviews, please click here.]

Patrick A

photo credit: Stogie Guys

Cigar Review: L’Atelier Imports Surrogates Cracker Crumbs

1 Sep 2015

One cigar I constantly find myself in search of is an inexpensive, small cigar that isn’t small on flavor. It’s a tall order since the small size limits the number of filler leaves and the ratios between them that can be used.

surrogates-cracker-crumbsAnother challenge small cigars face is that consumers don’t want to pay full price for what they perceive as half a smoke. That poses a challenge since although less filler tobacco is needed, the labor required is nearly identical to a larger cigar.

One savings cigar makers can get when making a smaller cigar like this, is that the wrapper can come from a second cut of each half leaf. Normally, a wrapper leaf (which is by far the most expensive tobacco in the cigar) is de-veined, which splits it in two parts, then each half is used as wrapper for one cigar. However, if the leaf is large enough, there may be enough left after the wrapper is trimmed to roll a second smaller cigar.

Whether that’s what L’Atelier Imports is doing or not, I can’t be certain, but it seems likely that’s taking place in the four small cigars L’Atelier introduced in 2014. Each—L’Atelier, El Suelo, Trocedero, and Surrogates—comes in a 4.5-inch, by 38-ring gauge size, which is then sold in soft 5-packs that retail for $15 each.

The Surrogates version is called Cracker Crumbs, and is a pint-sized version of the large Animal Cracker blend. It features a dark Ecuadorian Habano Oscuro wrapper around Nicaraguan binder and filler tobaccos.

Once lit, I find oak and bready flavors with a hint of leather. There are also slightly tanic notes that, at times, create a slight sourness, though that largely fades toward the final third.

Construction is notably excellent, especially the ash, which holds for nearly an inch before gently being tapped off. It’s not supremely complex, but there’s enough there to make for an enjoyable 20-30 minutes. (It should be noted that if you smoke slowly this will last far longer, and the flavors benefit when you do.)

That makes the Cracker Crumbs perfect for a variety of times when you don’t have time for a larger smoke, like a short walk or drive, or maybe a lunch break. In terms of value and construction, there’s a lot to like about the Surrogates Cracker Crumbs, and even though the size does limit its complexity, it still earns a solid three and a half stogies out of five.

[To read more StogieGuys.com cigar reviews, please click here.]

–Patrick S

photo credit: Stogie Guys