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Review: Camacho Tripple Maduro Robusto

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Category : Cigars, Review

IMG00030-20091203-1300 I received five of these beauties in the mail from Camacho as a prize for a contest on twitter and I couldn’t wait to smoke one as its the perfect size for an after lunch smoke (I can finish it in the amount of time it takes me to drive back to work from lunch). From the moment I first fired it up, I knew this was going to be a bit different then anything I had tried before.

The Triple Maduro is made up of all Maduro leaf tobacco grown on the Camacho farm in Honduras. The coloring can be a little intimidating for those new to cigars and the flavor can be perhaps a little intimidating as well. Julio and Christian Eiroa, the father and son team behind Camacho cigars, are happy to introduce the first ever Triple Maduro cigar. This ALL MADURO is the result of almost a full years work blending five different maduro varieties. Since they started producing this line in 2007, the blend has remained secret.

From the moment I started the Triple Maduro, I noticed an intense spice that lightened a bit as I continued to smoke, giving way to some nice woody flavoring that makes this cigar pretty enjoyable. One thing to note is that the cigar, even in it’s short size (its only a 4.5″ x 50 stick) it packs a pretty powerful punch that could give even the most seasoned a good buzz.

The sticks are pretty well made, firm, they have a good draw and once lit seem to burn fairly evenly. The ash on the Triple Maduro holds its own pretty well as well. Draw on the stick wasn’t an issue, even with the smaller hole made by the CigarSpike that I used, it was a nice, even draw which is exactly what you want in a cigar.

Over all, I’m impressed with the triple Maduro. I won’t make this a daily (or perhaps even weekly) smoke, as its a little strong for me, but for a special evening, or an evening outside around a fire with a good drink, this stick could provide that little extra kick I’m looking for. I wouldn’t recommend this to someone new to cigars or the “one a month” smoker, but those who have a cigar for breakfast, lunch and dinner might appreciate the Triple Maduro on a more regular basis. Especially if you’re looking to change things up a bit.

Brand:Camacho
Line:Triple Maduro
Vitola:Robusto
Origin:Honduras
Wrapper:Honduras Maduro
Binder: Honduras Maduro
Filler: Honduras Maduro
Flavor: Full, Spicy/chocolate/earthy undertones
Strength: Full
Price: $9 – $12 a stick, around $200 a box
OverAll: (4/5)

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Perfect Cigar Lover’s Gift Set @ Tinderbox.com

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Category : Deals, Gifts

media.nlJust in time for the shopping season I got this awesome deal in the email from Tinderbox.com. The Cigar Lover’s Gift Set is normally priced out at $301, but its on sale for $129.99 with free shipping. This set is pretty good as you get only the most delicious, rare cigars are featured in this set, from Graycliff 1666 (Retails for $22 per cigar), Gurkha Master Select (Retails for $10 per cigar), Rocky Patel, Don Pepin and the limited edition La Herencia Cubana!

Cigar Lover’s Gift Set includes:

  • (5) Don Pepin Garcia Cuban Classic(5×50)
  • (5) Graycliff 1666 Presidente (7×48)
  • (5) Gurkha Ltd. Master Select #4 (6×52)
  • (5) La Herencia Cubana Toro (6.5×52)
  • (5) Rocky Patel Vintage ’90 Robusto (5.5×50)
  • (1) Yukon Humidor (40 to 50 capacity)
  • (1) Humi-Care Crystal Humidification Jar (4oz)

If my wife wouldn’t kill me for buying for myself, I’d have already ordered one of these sets just for the cigars!

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How To Store Cigars

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Category : How To

Author: Mike Keesling

Cuban cigars originate from the Caribbean, which has a tropical climate very different to Europe. As a natural product, your Havana cigars need to be kept carefully. They are used to being in a warm climate with a relatively high humidity.

Therefore they will need to be protected from extremes of temperature and humidity (particularly low humidity). This is particularly difficult to achieve in air conditioned and centrally heated buildings, where the air tends to get de-humidified and cigars can dry out very quickly. Some cigars come in aluminum tubes which can help preserve them in dry climates, however they tend to mature at a much slower rate than ‘naked’ boxed cigars.

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How Do Cigars Get Rated?

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Category : Cigars

Nicaraguan Blend Sampler

Nicaraguan Blend Sampler

Author: Garson Smart

The cigar ratings supplied by publications like Cigar Magazine and Cigar Aficionado form an important part of the modern cigar industry. For cigar smokers, these ratings provide guidance in a crowded market.

As pressed-for-time moviegoers may look to Roger Ebert for guidance at the multiplex, smokers use the magazines’ ratings to cut down on their in-store browsing time. For cigar makers, meanwhile, the ratings can be the touch of life – or the kiss of death. When Cigar Aficionado gave a high rating to a Fuente Spanish Lonsdale cigar, the magazine’s imprimatur helped to cause a run on the brand, rendering it scarce and highly sought-after and increasing the profile of Fuente’s cigars in general. Every cigar maker covets a 90-or-higher rating from these influential judges.

But where do these numbers actually come from? For staffers at Cigar Aficionado, the reviewing process starts at the store. While music and book reviewers are often given free “review copies” of CDs or books (a practice that makes things convenient for the reviewer, but also diminishes his or her independence), Cigar Aficionado tries to buy cigars at close to retail prices.

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The History (And Value) Of Cigar Bands

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Category : Cigars

Cigar Bands

Cigar Bands

Author: Garson Smart

For many cigar smokers, the small paper band encircling their stogy is just a piece of trash, to be discarded along with the shrinkwrap around the box. But for others that cigar band is a bit of history – a collectible that adds immeasurably to the romance and mystique of smoking.

What is the cigar band, and how did it become so important? As is so often true when it comes to cigars, the story begins in Cuba – early-19th-century Cuba, to be exact, when that island nation had already come to be recognize as the cigar capital of the world. At that time cigar packaging was minimal – often no more than a wooden barrel or box, with the manufacturer’s name inscribed. The cigars themselves were generally left blank. This situation, not surprisingly, created a cheat’s paradise, in which cheap European cigars were bundled in boxes with “Cuban” markings on them and sold, domestically, to unsuspecting customers who thought they were getting fine imported Cubans.

Gustave Bock, a Dutch immigrant who owned a cigar factory in Cuba in the 1830s, is credited with being the first to place a paper band around his cigars. (Bock’s “cigar band” was just a paper ring with his signature on it.)

Many other makers adopted this practice, to the point where, by 1855, most Cuban cigar exporters were using them. These bands cut down on instances of counterfeiting while giving cigar manufacturers a way to increase name recognition and loyalty.

The practice spread from Cuba to cigar makers everywhere, and its popularity was encouraged by breakthroughs in printing technology, which developed alongside changes in the economy of Europe and the Americas that favored cigar smoking. Specifically, cheap color printing (through chromolithographic processes developed in Germany) was made widely available during the latter part of the century, and paper-embossing followed in the 1880s.

Between the expansion of the cigar industry and the new possibilities developed by the printing industry, a “Golden Age” of cigar advertising was almost guaranteed, and that’s what followed. Cigar makers began working not only to manufacture their cigars, but to differentiate their products from others. The late 19th and early 20th centuries featured elaborate, distinctive cigar box and cigar band artwork, often produced by highly-regarded commercial artists. These well-wrought bands featured images of famous figures of the day, historical figures, nationalistic imagery, nature scenes and animals. As with today’s postage stamps, special bands would be made to commemorate special events.

And, also like stamps, the bands had that combination of ephemerality and workmanship that so often draws collectors. While they were often well-made, they weren’t intended to last – so they gave collectors a challenge, as baseball cards, comic books and cheap children’s toys would later in the 20th century. And they always gave off a whiff of nostalgia, reminding dedicated smokers of good times shared with a cigar and a friend.

Children also found these bands attractive, since they were often left discarded on streets during the height of cigar-smoking’s popularity. Manufacturers even made “albums” with blank pages in which a person’s cigar band collection could be displayed – the forerunner of those plastic display sheets that every sports-card collector knows so well.

Adding to the boom in band collecting, some cigar makers gave premiums to customers who turned in a certain number of bands – everything from a set of children’s silverware (50 bands) to a Scientific American subscription (600 bands) to a baby grand piano (180,000), according to the American Cigar Co. catalog of 1904. (Those of you who used to collect Marlboro Miles during the 1990s should be feeling deja vu right about now.)

After World War I, cigars fell in popularity relative to cigarettes. Cigar makers stopped putting as much energy into the production of attractive cigar bands, as it became more necessary to cut costs. Cigar bands – at least in the US – grew generic, boring. The cost cut wasn’t enough – many thousands of cigar companies closed up shop for good in the US during the ’20s and ’30s.

Band collecting continues in the US among a hardy group mostly consisting of old-timers and nostalgia buffs, but in Europe it remains a thriving hobby, and cigar makers there continue to print colorful but cheap bands, some of which come as part of a series (again like stamps), others of which are created specifically for collectors.

About the Author:
CigarFox provides you the opportunity to build your own sampler of the finest cigars that include cigar brands like Montecristo, Romeo & Julieta, H Upmann, Macanudo, Cohiba, Gurkha and many more. Choose from more than 1000 different brands! Other cigar products include cigar humidors, cigar boxes, and cigar accessories like Zippo Lighters.

Article Source: ArticlesBase.comThe History (And Value) Of Cigar Bands

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Review: Java by Drew Estate

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Category : Review

Java By Drew Estate Corona On a whim, I picked this up on a singles sale (notice a trend?) a week or so ago and I decided to give it a go the other night while sipping a Peach Tea and Vodka. Usually I stick to the rolled cigars as opposed to the box pressed ones, but the fact that this cigar promised coffee undertones was what lead me to it. How could you pass up two of the worlds great loves combined in one?

The Java by Drew Estate is a premium quality Nicaraguan cigar, gently infused with the rich, decadent flavor of gourmet java. Its billed as a Medium body cigar and compared to the MX2 by C.A.O., it certainly is lighter.

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Review: C.A.O MX2

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Category : Review

CAO MX2 Robusto The other day I had the opportunity to sample a C.A.O MX2 that I had picked up at a really good price through a singles sale on one of the online Cigar shops. I was a little concerned when I did some research on the MX2 as most of the other reviewers were quick to point out its Dark, somewhat oily wrapper (which comes from the well fermented Connecticut Broadleaf Maduro thats used) as I hadn’t smoked anything like it before (I tend to stick to the lighter wrappers). Still, not one to shrink away from a challenge, I went ahead and bought two of them and I’m glad I did.

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Ways to Prevent and Eliminate Cigar Breath

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Category : How To

bad-breath Author: Garson Smart

Newton’s third law puts it this way: For every action there’s an equal and opposite reaction. But the old ’70s soul song says it all much more colorfully: You always have to pay for the fun you’ve had.

No matter what your hobby or pet pastime, there’s always some undesirable aspect that has to be dealt with. If you’re an athlete, you may have to spend the occasional Monday morning icing a pulled muscle. Sports spectators have to deal with hard bleacher seats, cold weather, and possibly obnoxious bellowing from the guy in the next row-unless you catch the game on TV, where you just have to put up with odd camera angles. Or let’s say you like reading: Obsessive readers may end up with slight vision problems-in fact, graduate students in literature are often advised that they should expect (and be checked for) increased nearsightedness with each year of study. Too much TV can induce apathy and is positively correlated with depression and obesity (and with infomercials, a far worse fate). And most everybody enjoys video games, but if you enjoy them too much, you may-there are documented cases of this-incur a repetitive stress injury to your thumb. As for pet owners, well, let’s not even talk about all the poop-scooping that becomes part of your life.

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How to Choose a Cigar?

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Category : How To

SmokinAuthor: Denis K.

For the young Cigar Entrepreneur, choosing the right smoke can be the most difficult of matters. One has to know what one is looking for, as well as looking at. There is such a wide variety of high-profile cigars on the market today, that one just about has to have some instruction prior to that first purchase.

First, we will cover the subject of flavor. The layman would assume that all cigars are made from the same tobacco, as well as have the same flavor. The truth is, there is a massive variety of tobacco flavors available, each particular flavor having its own level of intensity. Your own personal favorite could very well be one that everyone else despises. Everyone has a different pallet for a cigar. Regardless, the actual mix of tobacco, the time elapsed since the making of the cigar, the condition it is in (storage, humidor, etc) and what you have drank or ate before or during the smoking of the cigar all have a bearing on the actual taste.

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1/2 Price Sale – Nicaraguan Blends Sampler @ Tinderbox.com

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Category : Deals

Nicaraguan Blend Sampler

Nicaraguan Blend Sampler

Got this AWESOME deal in the inbox this morning from TinderBox.com. You can get EIGHT (8) of The Best Nicaraguan Blends for $29.99!! Thats HALF OFF!!

Over 50% OFF The Best Nicaraguan Blends! Buying this sampler in a store would cost you over $61, plus tax, plus the gas used to get there, plus the time spent…….

Our Price: Just $29.99!!


Nicaraguan cigars are known throughout the world as being the closest in flavor to Cuban cigars. This sampler features four of the greatest premium cigars from the rich soils of Nicaragua. These ultra-rare Rocky Patel, Gurkha, Padilla and the mysterious Man O’ War cigars are nearly impossible to find in one place!
Nicaraguan Blends Sampler includes:

  • (2) Gurkha Park Ave Churchill (7″ x 48)
  • (2) Man O’ War Toro (6.5″ x 52)
  • (2) Padilla Habano Toro (6″ x 50)
  • (2) Rocky Patel Fusion Churchill (7″ x 48)

These Are some awesome CIGARS and you can get them for $29.99 for a limited time from TinderBox.com

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