Wednesday, September 30, 2015

The Cigar Stop Reviews Puros Indios Maxima Reserve 2003




Name: Puros Indios Maxima Reserve 2003 “Anejado”

Origin: Honduras

Wrapper: Ecuador Sumatra

Filler/Binder: Dominican Republic, Brazil and Nicaraguan long-leaf 

Shape/Size: Churchill, Gordo, Toro, DBL Corona, Robusto & Presidente

Strength: Medium

Box/Bundle: Bundle of 20

Flavored: No

Price: $2.00 to $2.0 per Single – $39.99 to $50.00 per Box

 You know how we like a bargain and this is one of them, it falls into 2 categories for me. 1. Top 5 in my Budget Bundles list and 2. It is one of my favorite cigars to smoke.

 Puros Indios cigars have always been a favorite of mine but, this deliciously aged beauty with its Long-leaf Nicaraguan, Dominican and Brazilian fillers tucked in a snug mellow Ecuadorian Sumatra wrapper for a minimum of 5 years is the equivalent you sitting next to a wood stove on a cool morning, its warm and inviting, as soon as you light it your cares drift away just like the light smoke from this cigar dances in the air… Now that is some poetic stuff right there and you should try one for no other reason than to satisfy yourself after reading that description.

 Honest Injun folks try one, they are inexpensive they are tasty and they will make you a great friend until you have smoked them all… they are better than a pet … Just Try them.


 I rate this one a 6 out of 10. Good solid construction well worth the money, Rolando Reyes Sr. went out of his way to use his blending genius for you.

Until Next time

Monday, September 14, 2015

Cuban sandwich it’s not just a great meal




So as of late I am sure some of you have seen the trend and term of the “Cuban Sandwich” and it is not referring to that delicious meal.
Cuban sandwich refers to the filler in the cigar that makes up its body. For years long filler has been the term associated with handmade cigars, and short fillers or chop/short fillers were use to produce machine made cigars or very cheap cigars.

Well it would seem as of late more and more cigar factories have been producing cigars coined with  the term “Cuban sandwich” which is the short filler leaves inside and the long filler leafs wrapped around the outside of them.
I myself am not a fan of this particular sandwich and would like to put myself on a diet and stay away from it, but it is becoming common now. A couple reasons I am not a fan of short fillers are that it makes a mess when you smoke them. The ash is flaky and has a tendency to fall all over you and whatever you have near you, your car, desk, chair est. another down side is that it will have hot spots and could canoe on you (canoeing is when the cigar burn up the side and not even to look like a canoe). No matter what they tell you a Cuban sandwich is no different than using chop fillers and short fillers. Just because you wrap long leaves around them, it will not change how they burn (my opinion). You can mask a fart, but it is still a fart!
  I am without proof, but I am sure that most of the factories are producing Cuban sandwich style cigars to save money, but I have to be honest when they start losing momentum as cigar enthusiast realize that their cigars are being made cheaply and the price tag has not gone down near enough to warrant this practice they will need to drop the price, smarten up and change their ways. I hope. 


 With the Cuban embargo in a fragile state and trade beginning to open up I would be maneuvering myself to making a quality product and establish consumer friendly cigars and relationships, because let’s face it when free trade with Cuba starts, Cuban cigars will flood the market and for however brief or long the competition will be fierce.
This entry is all my own opinion and supported by a few decades of smoking cigars, check into things for yourself try a few Cuban sandwich cigars and judge them against the long leaf fillers and come to your own conclusions. Feel different about it or agree with this entry, drop me a line at CigarAsh@yahoo.com or post here on the Cigar Stop blog, I welcome your thoughts.
Until next time …



 

Saturday, September 12, 2015

Just relax

Sometimes you just need to relax

Saturday, September 5, 2015

The Cigar Stop Reviews the Gurkha Widow maker

Name: Widow Maker
Origin: Dominican Republic
Wrapper: Natural; Connecticut Broadleaf & Ecuador Broadleaf
Filler/Binder: Cameroon,Habano
Shape/Size: Gordo & Churchill
Strength: Medium - Full
Box/Bundle: Bundle of 20
Flavored: No
Price: Per Single Not Available – Per Box $60.00 to 79.00 U.S.D.

This one is an odd one gang, the name Widow Maker gives you the impression that this is a bad ass cigar that will send your taste bud to the morgue and keep you shaving your tongue as if it had more hair on it than a monkeys butt and I have to say the first 5 or 6 draws on this puffed up smolder stick keeps you in that train of thought, but then all of a sudden this cigar punks out like a school yard bully being confronted buy 3 of his victims. 


 
I have not seen this cigar many places and I am thinking the name is all about size and as we are not talking about porn this point is moot!
The cigar boasts that its wrapper is aged 10 years and that its fill is delicately aged for 7 and that it yields a creamy, spicy flavor backed by coffee notes, earthiness and a hint of toast and black pepper to the finish. I would agree with this but add in that you get all those in the first 5 to 6 draws and then you just have a mild shadow of its title widow maker.

I applaud their descriptive fortitude on this one as well as the name and all the tobacco aging that went into this over size thunder stick and I am very happy and appreciative to have smoke a few of these, however this is another case of the “Christmas socks” you are all excited to open up the big gift Christmas morning and when you do it’s a package of socks, you are disappointed, but they are socks and you needed them, same thing here you see the ominous fat cigar and read the name, you light it up and it doesn't live up to its name or description, but it’s a cigar and you still smoke it, because you like cigars and have that glimmer of hope the finish is as good as the first draw.

The cigar itself is well constructed with a very nice solid ash, burned nice and even and it rested well, however even after all that I can only give this cigar a 5 out of 10. Try one and you tell me what you think about it.

Until next time.

Thursday, September 3, 2015

Hello B.O.T.L.

Did I mention I like cigars this week?