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Tuesday, December 27, 2011

Holiday Cigars on tap

In a gigantic break from protocol, I went away for a 5 day vacation in North Carolina without a single cigar.  It says something about where I have come from and less about where I am going.  I started smoking cigars in 1988 with some old El Productos while I drove a moving van from somewhere to somewhere.  It didn't take me long before I realized that I needed to move up a few notches, less than the time it took to smoke half a cigar I think.  I smoked a lot of Dominican H. Upmanns and some Arturo Fuente cigars of various sizes and quality.  It was not uncommon for me to smoke 5-8 cigars a day on the weekends, it became a part of enjoying the night air after work.  But as I have progressed on to havana cigars, I have taken Zino Davidoff's advice to smoke fewer cigars, and of greater quality.  I knew that my trip was likely to be spent in large part indoors avoiding rain, mist, cold or other inclement Christmas weather.  I was right.  But there was also a time when my brother in law would come out onto the porch and smoke with me, something he no longer chooses to do.  So there was no reason to bring along smokes, or so it seemed upon departing. 


So now I look forward to a year which will begin with a bang, as I fully expect LSU to dominate Alabama in the college football National Championship game that almost no one wants to see.  They secretly DO want to see it, but they are upset by the team chosen to play LSU and they are making themselves heard.  Exactly ONE fan base wants to watch Bama play the Tigers.  But, they are a large fan base.  And whiny.


I also have a job, which in and of itself is a real plus in a tough economy, but now I am actually making the kind of money that makes the job worth doing, and that is worth celebrating.  I am looking at a menu of cigars for New Year's Eve.  I know that I will smoke a Partagas Serie du Connaisseur No.1.   I have a box of these and a few people want to sample them, so there is no reason to try to hold them intact. 


I will also smoke it's doppelganger in a different band, the Montecristo Especiales No.1.  It will be interesting to see how these smokes do.  I LOVE them short and thin and long and thin.  Not so much in between, nor so much larger in ring gauge. 


I will also burn up a metric ton of fireworks, mostly mortars and large scale candles with  big pops of burning magnesium in the sky.  It should be a great new year.  Hope things are better for all in 2012.

Saturday, December 10, 2011

2007 El Rey del Mundo Choix Supreme

This is the first time these cigars have seen the light of day.  I have a few cigars.  I can afford to buy a box of cigars and wait 5-6 years to smoke them, and I often do.  But these have been calling out to me for years.  I do not smoke as many cigars in a year as I used to, so they are welcome to call away, it's unlikely their cries will be heard.  But today was the day that they would have their day in the sun.  I raked up a couple hundred pounds of wet and muddy leaves out of the gutter, and in 40 degree weather, I sat out in the sun in a T-shirt with a Hop Wallop and a freshly lit Choix Supreme. 




I must be on a real roll, because right from the first puff, this cigar was impressive.  In fact I would say that I BELIEVE them when people OFTEN say that the Choix Supreme can be the equal of the Cohiba Robusto on any given day.  I think that this is true, the cigars obviously share some similarities in blend, but what I think shows itself in the end is the INTENSITY of elegant flavor of the Cohiba robusto that is not quite there in the Choix.  But certainly the two cigars start out very similarly.  VERY CREAMY, sweet and spicy, with a gigantic core of toasted tobacco flavor.  The cuban twang was  just outstanding.  And CREAMY??  Man, what a creamy stick.  I was knocked out by the constant stream of great flavor.  it was extremely balanced and mouth-watering.  The burn was a little more rugged than my recent CORO,  but the burn was manageable and the draw was superb.  As I smoked into the core of the cigar near the middle of the stick, I was shown what the real difference is between the two cigars.  The wonderful flavor was  there, but there was a distinct lack of the chcolate and coffee in this cigar.  It was still loaded with vanilla, baking spices, butterscotch and toasted tobacco.  But creamier than the CORO.  I like that....a lot.



The burn was a little crooked, but not out of control and it did not affect the burn or enjoyment.  I have a lot of these smokes put away, and I think I might smoke every one. WOW, what a great little cigar.  I score this one 91 points!

Cohiba Robusto....unbelievable

What do you think about a cigar that everyone holds up as the quintessential cuban cigar that you smoke and smoke and never find one that performs up to standards?  Not fake, just not the finest cuban cigar everytime.  My experience hasn't really been hit and miss, it's been MISS.  I have not had more than about ten in my life, but I have yet to have one that just belw me away.  Well, until Thanksgiving, anyway.  I have not enjoyed Thanksgiving with my family for 4 years.  I work a go-kart race that takes place over Thanksgiving, and while I am not a big fan of Thanksgiving, nor am I a fan of driving ten hours to see family for one weekend, then turning around and doing it again in a month's time for Christmas, I do miss having this weekend to myself.  And the stress of producing all this TV content doesn't make it much better..  So in a way, I have not missed Thanksgiving.  But I have missed my family.

I was sitting on a "balcony" at a Super8 Motel on Thursday night.  I had just finished producing a 90 minute live show from the race track and I was beat from a week of doing 3 other shows live, and had two 12 hour broadcasts coming Friday and Saturday night.  I needed a REAL cigar.  So I poured myself a few fingers of Basil Hayden and rocks, and cut and lit a 2004 Cohiba Robusto.  From the first puff I knew things were about to change.  And they did.  Loads of creamy sweet tobacco flavor with cinnamon and vanilla came bursting out of the smoke.  This went on for a full inch, then the cigar began to ramp up in strength and intensity of flavor.  As I smoked away into the second inch, I was assaulted by coffee, toffee, chocolate, toasty tobacco and cuban twang like no other cigar I had ever had.  I was speechless.  Mostly because I was alone, there was no one to talk to anyway...it was a cold rainy night, I was in sock feet and I was drinking cold whiskey.  But man, what a cigar.  I knew that AHnohld loves this cigar, although as California governator, he had had to sneak around a bit to get them.  But here was a cigar that I could enjoy.  Not a movie star, not a rich man, just a man with great connections and a love of havana tobacco.  As I smoked along, I experienced a tremendous, perfect draw, burn and flavor, all in one perfect smoke.  As the cigar drew near the end, it never lost it's fantastic flavor or its ability to put a smile of disbelief on my face.  I pushed the band up and continued until it just got too cold to smoke.  I slid off the band and threw it in my shaving kit.  I wanted to remember this cigar.  I have smoked a few of these and never once had this kind of experience.  If you listen to the communist propaganda, you would think it's like this every time you light a Cohiba.  I am here to tell you that's a lot of hooey.  but THIS cigar...wow.  An easy 95 points!!!

Thursday, December 1, 2011

At last, a new cigar - 1998 Le Hoyo du Depute'

It's been a while since I smoked a cigar that has not been smoked here before.  I am not very swift with the updates, and I don't smoke many cigars in a year, so oftentimes you will find that I have reviewed a cigar that I have tried 2, sometimes 3 times before.  Tonight I grabbed a old and beautiful cigar out of a fresh cabinet of 25, seemed a shame to break up the set. 




It provided a breezy draw from the slightest cut.  To me that spelled trouble, but I have had more trouble lately from stingy flows, so I lit it up quickly and drew the first, tasty puff.  At first I thought, man, this is a 13 year old cigar and it tastes like it came off the roller's table yesterday.  But after the first half inch, I realized that was just the power talking.  These are strong and woody cigars without much complexity.  Tasty, but not extremely interesting.  I had a hard time determining what intricacies I was experiencing in the taste.  I tasted crushed weeds and a mentholated cool, vegetal taste with a body of white wood.  The cigar burned extremely straight and reasonably fast.  Within a half an hour, I was pretty much done with this one. 


There was a full inch to go when I put it down, but I couldn't see much sense in continuing.  The cigar was good, but not compelling enough to take it to the nub.  On this cigars best days, they are really refreshing and mouth-watering.  I love em.  It's sad to see this one be a little blah.  If you can find a box of these you should really pick em up.  Don't be put off by this one.  80 points.