Thursday, 28 February 2013

Does Santa Smoke a Cigar or a Pipe?

Author: Alan King

There is a debate raging among cigar and pipe aficionados as to whether Santa smokes a cigar or a pipe. That's right--the world is being held in suspense over what the Man in Red prefers to smoke with. The debate has the country divided and the opposing parties are at odds grappling over the issue of pipe vs. cigar. The pipe faction, encouraged by the poem "A Visit from Saint Nicholas" by Clement Moore, believes that Santa smokes "the stump of a pipe he held tight in his teeth, and the smoke it encircled his head like a wreath." The pro-pipe group remarks that Santa would be better off smoking a pipe. They submit the idea that if Santa were a cigar smoker, he would leave ashes and cigar butts in homes when he takes his breaks to eat all those cookies that are left out for him. They also insist that Santa stops for a cookie break every 3,000 miles, when he changes the reindeer harnesses and gives them some of the carrots that children leave out for them, and that he would have to leave at least some clues behind in the form of cigar ashes during these frequent stops. The cigar faction reasons that Santa, being a practical yet sophisticated man, would definitely enjoy a good stogie. Imagine, they argue, the changing of reindeer harnesses while wielding a pipe! No, that image calls for a fine cigar like a Winston Churchill 10 or an Avo Domain 60. These are cigars designed for a workingman who is intent on getting the job done. Besides, they say, cigars are biodegradable and easy to stow away on a long sleigh ride. My staff called the North Pole and interviewed elves that occupy key positions in Santa's workshop and warehouses, but the findings were inconclusive. The elves agreed that only Santa and Mrs. Claus know what he prefers, though they did allude to the fact that Mrs. Claus shops online for purveyors of fine cigars and pipes.The debate was finally resolved by a council of retired senior elves and Santa's worldwide agents. They took a vote, and here was their conclusion: Santa smokes cigars while traveling the world south of Miami's latitude point. Santa smokes pipes when he travels north, with a few exceptions: England, where he often smokes Churchill 10's, and California, where he smokes anything he darn well pleases. So have a jolly holiday! Oh, and leave out some carrots for the reindeer.
Article Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/business-articles/does-santa-smoke-a-cigar-or-a-pipe-683658.html

About the Author
For access to the best Fine Cigars and Cigar accessories available check out the great deals available only on the authors website - http://www.davidoffmadison.com

Wednesday, 27 February 2013

Cigar Families

Author: Scott Shemtov

The art of growing tobacco and leaves and rolling cigars has been around for thousands of years. The knowledge has been passed down from generation to generation. A father gives his son his first stick as a passage into manhood and acceptance or they teach their daughter how to roll or smoke a fine crafted stick. Families have been hand rolling and producing some of the finest smokes and the business and industry has become a family one. A lot of sticks you see are named after the families and sell the most in the industry. Here are some famous cigar families.

A well known brand and family is the Fuente family who makes Arturo Fuente cigars. The company is run by grandson, Carlos Fuente Jr. and his two daughters. The family has been making hand rolled sticks since 1916. Arturo grew up in Cuba and learned how to cultivate tobacco with his father. He then learned how to hand roll and immigrated to Florida to roll sticks in America. He continued to produce the finest of cigars. His son Carlos followed suit and lived in the cigar factory with his parents. He was literally born into the industry and learned from his father. He then passed on his knowledge to his son Carlos Jr. Carlos Sr. moved the family to the Dominican Republic where they have a famous tobacco plantation where the best tobacco and leaves are cultivated.

One of the oldest American cigar families is the Newman Family. J.C. Newman started hand rolling cigars in 1895 and the brand has had continued success. His mother paid him to be an apprentice and learn all about the industry in Chicago. He hand rolled sticks for another company until he was laid off, and then his entrepreneurial spirit kicked in and started his own company. J.C.'s story is truly one of the American Dream. He was an immigrant who started and maintained one of the most successful American cigar companies. His two sons joined the business after serving time in the military. Their sons also entered the business, so three generations of Newman men were running the operation.

Years down the road after the two companies had their own success; the Newman and Fuente families joined forces and produced top selling premium cigars. The Newmans have also bought and sold other cigar names; yet work closely with the Fuentes. Not only do both families hand roll some of the best sticks, they also share their success with a charitable organization they founded. They founded the Cigar Family to showcase their talents and the charity is called the Cigar Family Charitable Foundation.
Article Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/hobbies-articles/cigar-families-2059138.html

About the Author
Arturo del Rio, cigar aficionado, of Famous Smoke Shop which sells premium cigars. Famous Smoke Shop offers cigars, humidors & cigar accessories at unbeatable prices. For more information, visit http://www.famous-smoke.com
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Tuesday, 26 February 2013

The Difference Between Handmade And Machine Made Cigars

Author: Scott Shemtov

There are many different types of cigars ranging in size, shape, filler, and taste. This is why the smoking culture is so unique. You simply cannot say that all sticks are the same. Every one you smoke will be different and unique in flavor. Some of the differences will be very subtle and some will be more distinct because of the different fillers and binders used. However, one difference between a good stick and a great stick is whether or not they are hand rolled or machine made. Could this possibly make such a distinctive difference? Ask any connoisseur and they will say it does.
There are ways in which you can determine if the stick is handmade or machine made based on the look of the cigar. Looking at the outer construction of the cigar, the wrapper, will show and tell you a lot about the stick. The wrapper from a handmade stick is very smooth and tight. It will also be a little bit oily when you touch it. When you smoke a handmade one, it will have a very even burn because the wrapper is stretched and wrapped so tightly.
Machine made cigars' wrappers will be a little different. They are duller looking in appearance. Machine made sticks do not have all natural wrappers because the materials have to be able to withstand the power of the machine. A machine made cigar will not taste as good because of the way it is wrapped.
The filler of cigars give it their distinct flavor and it is where most of the flavor is drawn from. This is one of the most distinct characteristic traits of a handmade and machine made cigar. The fillers in both types are very different. Handmade cigars have high quality fillers that run the entire length of the stick. Machine made ones use lower quality fillers that consist of chopped up tobacco that usually includes the stem and other undesirable scraps. The draw and burn quality of a machine made stick is really affected because a long filler is not used.
When you are purchasing cigars, there are giveaways that will help you in determining whether the stick is handmade or machine made. Because the quality and the time it takes to produce a handmade stick the price is more expensive. It is better to spend the extra amount on a good quality smoke. Machine made cigars are also packaged quite differently. They are usually sold in cellophane wrappers and can be found in most convenient stores. If you are interested in smoking a good cigar, never buy one from a convenient store. You can purchase premium cigars at smoke shops both online and in person. Ask any connoisseur and they will tell you to smoke nothing but handmade.
Article Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/hobbies-articles/the-difference-between-handmade-and-machine-made-cigars-2113316.html

About the Author
Arturo del Rio, cigar aficionado, of Famous Smoke Shop which sells premium cigars. Famous Smoke Shop offers cigars, humidors & cigar accessories at unbeatable prices. For more information, visit http://www.famous-smoke.com
.

Monday, 25 February 2013

The 411 On Purchasing Cigar Humidors Online

Author: Steve Matin

red_wood_cigar_humidor.jpgThere is a certain amount of risk associated with purchasing cigar humidors online, but there are also many benefits associated with it as well. It is true that you will not be able to view the cigar humidors in person or physically touch them. However, when you find a reputable vendor online, then it can be an ideal scenario. Cheaper Humidors is just one such example of a reputable vendor of cigar humidors, as you will quickly see for yourself.
When it comes to purchasing cigar humidors online, the first step you will need to take will be to ensure that the vendor offers a money back guarantee on the product they sell, either from the website directly or from the manufacturer. In general, the type of warranty that accompanies a cigar humidor will be an indicator of how much confidence a manufacturer has placed in the product they have created. If you are not satisfied with the humidor you have purchased, you should be able to return it without any hassles.
The next consideration you will need to take into account is the shipping charges that will be associated with the cigar humidors you are considering purchasing. When calculating the budget that you have to spend on a new humidor, you will need to include shipping costs in the overall cost. As a general guideline, the larger the humidor that you purchase, the more you can expect to pay in shipping. It will defeat the purpose of a low cost humidor if you must pay outrageous shipping charges.
Before selecting a vendor to purchase cigar humidors from, you will need to ensure that you are dealing with a reputable website. Read professional and consumer written reviews about the experiences that prior clients have had with a particular vendor. Additionally, even though you will be purchasing a humidor online, you can check with the Better Business Bureau to see if there are any outstanding customer complaints or pending legal action against a website. You must pay close attention to a vendor if you will be purchasing cigar humidors from overseas.
Next, look for cigar humidors online that have been lined with premium, kiln dried Spanish cedar. The inclusion of Spanish cedar is a humidor's composition is a sign that it has been constructed with quality and care. There are a number of advantages associated with using Spanish cedar to line cigar humidors, including the fact that it can repel tobacco beetles and is better at withstanding the effects of constant humidity.
There are numerous online retailers who offer cigar humidors for sale; however, you will be hard pressed to find an online retailer who is more dedicated to providing high quality merchandise at lower prices than Cheaper Humidors. They stand behind their humidors, and they will stand behind you as a customer as well. If you have any questions about purchasing a humidor through Cheaper Humidors, then you can contact their professional service staff via phone or email.
Regardless of whom you choose to purchase your humidor through, it is going to be a necessary investment in order to protect your cigars. Undoubtedly, you have invested a considerable amount of time and money, and you will want to protect your investment. By following a few simple tips and tricks, you will be able to choose a humidor that will provide you with many years of satisfactory service.
Article Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/gifts-articles/the-411-on-purchasing-cigar-humidors-online-6226185.html

About the Author
Cigaranado is a website where you can find different types of cigar's and also you can found cigar accessories & humidor accessories. Click on the link to see more services. http://www.cigaranado.com/

Sunday, 24 February 2013

Cigar Lighting With Cedar Strips

Author: Dave Sabot

Lighting a cigar correctly is vital to ensuring the best smoking experience. There are numerous steps involved in doing so and, oftentimes, smokers have as much of a preference in regards to lighting their cigar as they do toward which types of cigars they prefer. Cedar strips are one of the less-common ways that smokers light-up and they offer an interesting twist on enjoying one's smoke.
To do this, one needs the same devices they normally would require to enjoy a cigar: a high-quality lighter or matches, depending on one's preference; any one of the numerous types of cigar cutters available; a good cigar; and, of course, some time to enjoy the smoke. Actually lighting the cigar with cedar is no different than lighting the cigar with a match or a lighter; it is in the reasons for doing so that the rationale for the various techniques involved are discovered.
Most smokers who prefer this method have some degree of sensitivity to the taste of the chemicals used in both lighters and matches. Cedar burns fast and hot, has a pleasant, natural taste and, according to many cigar aficionados, imparts no unpleasant taste to their tobacco. For this reason, many individuals who prefer to light their cigars in this fashion also light the cedar strip itself with a match, eliminating altogether any chance of having lighter fluid or other substances discolor the flavor of their cigar. Of course, this method is not the most convenient and is usually something that is done when one smokes a cigar in their home as carrying around all the materials required can be somewhat cumbersome.
There are advantages and disadvantages to this method. Among the advantages are the lack of chemicals involved. While fluid-filled lighters can sometimes impart a taste to the first few puffs of tobacco and do burn with a scent, butane lighters and cedar strips do not. Cedar strips are also very inexpensive and most smokers will find that they can get a couple of lights off of one strip, depending, of course, on how hard their cigar is to get lit.
Cedar strips offer something different for one's cigar-smoking experience. The smell of burning cedar being immediately followed by the smell of high-quality, burning tobacco is really quite pleasant. If one is truly looking for a gourmet experience, cedar strips can be a nice addition to the smoking ritual.
Article Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/education-articles/cigar-lighting-with-cedar-strips-1160692.html

About the Author
Dave Sabot is the owner of an online specialty cigar lighters store. With expert knowledge of cigar accessories, including butane torch lighters, Dave also authors a premier lighter repair blog.

Saturday, 23 February 2013

The Tobacco Beetle & Your Cigars

Author: Jim Bennington

Tobacco beetles can not only eat your cigars down to dust, they can cost you a pretty penny. While not a new pest for cigar lovers, it is the leading insect that threatens stored tobacco. These critters do not discriminate. They will attack tobacco at any stage of manufacturing, up to retail and travel to your humidor.

Though it is the most common, the tobacco beetle is not the only predator that preys on tobacco. Several other insects such as the tobacco moth, the tobacco worm and at least 12 other species of insects feed on the plant. Many of these insects were trapped either in tobacco factories, warehouses or found on cigars left in room temperature inside homes.
The tobacco beetle, which is larger than the cigarette beetle, is mainly a tropical species. It is identical to the cigarette beetle except that it is larger and is black instead of brown. The tobacco beetle attacks cured tobacco in much the same way as the cigarette beetle. The tobacco moth is sometimes a serious pest of flue-cured tobacco on the farm, farmers say. Infestation may begin even in the curing barn and continue until the tobacco is marketed. Most damage occurs in the pack-house, where the tobacco is bulked before being graded. Infestation may develop from moths flying from commercial storages or farms nearby, or it may be already established on the farm and carried over from year to year in scrap tobacco, peas or beans, stock feeds or other host foods. Tobacco dealers and manufacturers constantly practice insect-control measures and maintains damage-free on insect infestations.

Having a humidor is not a guarantee as friend from Davie found out. Despite stashing away his stogies in his safe haven, he returned and found his Cubans with holes like a strainer. That's because the illegal cigars were not properly cured and the insects were not destroyed before the cigars were put away, allowing them to multiply. "I couldn't believe my eyes," he said. He lost hundreds of dollars on the coveted cigars " For a while I thought someone had opened the humidor or I thought someone had sold me a dud." But a friend explained to him that Cuban cigars are the most prone to developing beetles because they don't fumigate their tobacco. The don't take the same preventive measures as the other countries do. But if you do have Cuban Cigars beware!

Below are steps to eradicate tobacco bugs in your humidor and how to prevent them from returning.:

1. First, double bag all the cigars that were in the humidor with the contaminated cigars, even those which don't have holes. They probably have eggs and larvae. You can also use tupperware containers. One inside the other (Because of the extra moisture produced by the freezing, the extra bag or container will act as a deterrent for the moisture the freezing might produce). In a regular frost free freezer the temperature should be 10 F. to 15 F. above Zero. If in a deep freezer the temperature should be -10 F. Keep the cigars in the regular freezer for 30 days and in the deep freezer for 15 days.

2. While the cigars are in the freezer, clean your humidor with a vacuum. Leave it empty and open for at least a week. The bugs will die without its food source, the tobacco.

3. When it is time to remove the cigars from the freezer, transfer them to the refrigerator for 24 hours. Then let your cigars reach room temperature as they sit outside for another day. Return your cigars to your humidor and humidify them again. Be patient, don't try to speed up this process.

4. When ever you come across Cuban cigars freeze them immediately, following the steps above. Better safe than sorry.
Long ashes everyone.
Article Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/hobbies-articles/the-tobacco-beetle-your-cigars-407739.html

About the Author
Jim Bennington has been caring for the cigar and pipe smoker for 30 years in Boca Raton Florida. For More information go to www.bocabenningtons.com



Friday, 22 February 2013

Tips on Ashing a Cigar

Author: Dave Sabot


Smoking a cigar is very unlike smoking a cigarette. The right time to ash a cigarette is when the ash becomes inconveniently long. The tobacco in cigarettes is cheap and hot-burning. Conversely, the tobacco in a cigar is expensive and burns best when it's kept at a lower temperature. This ensures the very best flavor.

Figuring out how much of an ash gives the best flavor will depend not only on the smoker's preference but on the cigar in question. Some cigars will burn hotter than others and, thus, need more of an ash. Remember that the first few puffs of a cigar will be the point at which the ash is at its hottest. Cigar lighters, such as Colibri lighters, oftentimes have a very hot flame and the first few puffs are not representative of the overall flavor of the cigar owning to the heat. Once an ash is generated, the real flavor begins.

While a cigar is certainly hot, it should not be so hot that it affects the taste of the tobacco. This is why very powerful lighters, such as the various Lotus torch lighter models, are held a bit away from the cigar during the lighting process. To burn, fire or embers require fuel, oxygen and heat. The ash regulates the amount of oxygen the cherry receives and, thus regulates the overall temperature of the burn. As any smoker is aware, the first puff off of a cigar is usually the hottest. The temperature of the smoke mellows as ash is generated.

The ash also affects how easily one can draw off of the cigar. Of course, a thicker, heavier ash means that it will be a harder draw for the smoker. No ash means that the draw will be very easy but also may mean that the ember will be burning too hot to ensure quality flavor. The art of cigar smoking involves finding a happy medium between the two. It may take some time but, then again, all worthwhile things have that quality to them.

The cigar ash may still have some very hot embers within it, so keep this in mind when smoking in outdoor locations. Especially in areas with dry grass or wood, this can pose a risk of fire. To make sure the ash is cooled, flick it first into the palm of the hand and then toss it to the wind once one is sure it's cooled off. Aside from determining the flavor of a cigar, the ash presents one of the hazards of smoking and should be watched.
Article Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/education-articles/tips-on-ashing-a-cigar-1160714.html

About the Author
Dave Sabot is the owner of an online specialty lighters store. With expert knowledge of cigar accessories, including cigar lighters, Dave also authors a premier cigar lighter reviews blog.
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Thursday, 21 February 2013

No More Stink or Carcinogens with Electronic Cigars

Author: Andrew Clayton

Now cigar smokers can enjoy the feel and taste of a good cigar without the stink or carcinogens by using an Electronic Cigar. If you are one of the many smokers who enjoy smoking a tobacco cigar, you have probably heard, repeatedly, that they stink. The residue from toxins and smoke is what makes your hair, breath, and clothing smells bad. If you smoke a cigar in your car or home, they also smell bad.
Overall, whenever you burn anything, there is a bad odor whether it is leaves, paper, or cigars. Some non-smokers compare cigar smoke with the foul odor of burning tires. There are numerous chemicals in tobacco cigars that when burned, turn into a toxic cloud of gas producing harmful secondhand smoke. When you stop smoking the bad odor remains for hours.
The e-cigar has no foul smell. Already, thousands of smokers are changing from cigars and cigarettes in an attempt to regain the health, which others enjoy. Even those who had to give up smoking because of respiratory problems are again enjoying good e-cigars. They simply leave out the nicotine while vaping.
Others, who are interested in quitting, are finding it is much easier with a good electronic cigar. Previously, your only choices in quit smoking aids were limited to medications, nicotine patches, and nicotine gum, which also had numerous unpleasant side effects.
Smokers are discovering that it is possible to receive controlled amounts of nicotine, which enables them to decrease their dependence gradually. Additionally, when using a water vapor it does not stink since there is no smoke, only the water vapor. The e-liquids used for producing the vapor, is also an ingredient found in toothpaste, in asthma inhalers, and even in foods as a food additive that are obviously safe.
The electronic cigar, designed to deliver a smoke-like water vapor without the stink, is an excellent way to help smokers reduce their cravings or quit entirely. Many online services offer low prices, including the specialty Cuban cigars, to give you the best kind to smoke. They also proclaim, "Just when you thought you would have to give up smoking cigars, the electronic cigar is a pleasant experience."
There are no substances in the type cigar that will yield the stinky toxic smoke that tobacco cigars produce. E-cigars provide the same satisfying pleasure of smoking a high quality tobacco cigar, without the toxic smoke. They relieve the psychological actions of smoking with the hand to mouth movement you are currently using and the use of nicotine.
E-cigars contain nicotine in several prepackaged levels or regulated by the person vaping, including no nicotine at all. Since you are always the person in control of the liquid nicotine levels you can taper the amount, when you are ready, to decrease your dependence on nicotine. Some ex-smokers use a little less on average days, alternate amounts when vaping throughout the day, or a little extra on days with a lot of stress.
Good e-cigars are much cleaner than tobacco cigars, there is no reason to have an ashtray with ashes and nasty butts, and there is no bad smell lingering for days. They look just like other fine quality cigars, simply with a much better flavor and minus the burning toxic gas so there is no stink with a good electronic cigar.
Article Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/quit-smoking-articles/no-more-stink-or-carcinogens-with-electronic-cigars-6478597.html

About the Author
Andrew Clayton writes, lives, and learns.  A life long smoker, now free from the dangers of tobacco and tar thanks to new technology.  Buy electronic cigarettes online and see for yourself how easy it
can be to enjoy nicotine without risking your health.

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Wednesday, 20 February 2013

As Cigar Bans Spread Worldwide So Does One Cigar Friendly Website

Author: Chris Spiek

In the United States in recent years, it's been harder and harder to meet up with friends at a bar or restaurant, and relax with a drink and a good cigar.  State after state has passed legislation prohibiting smoking in public buildings, including bars, restaurants (and sometimes even cigar stores).

Unfortunately these laws aren't unique to the United States.  The period between 2003 and 2005 saw most of Canada's providences pass no-smoking legislation.  Even in countries with some of the highest smoking rates such as Germany, smoking bans continue to be passed (and are often highly contested).  A full list of international smoking bans is available on Wikipedia at this address - http://cigarfriend.ly/smokingbans.

This week CigarPlaces.com introduced new features to allow cigar aficionados to easily add international cigar friendly locations to the site, and find cigar bars and cigar friendly restaurants all over the world.  CigarPlaces.com relies on users to add places that they know are cigar friendly to the map, so the introduction of these features is extremely important to the community.

On the "Add Location" page of the site, users will now be able to select the country that the cigar friendly place is in from a dropdown.  The site also features a "World View" which zooms the map of locations out to encompass the entire world.

As the community of cigar lovers that add locations to the site has grown over the years, many new users of the site have been asking for these features to be added.  Cigar lovers always have an affinity to their local haunts; the places that are welcoming to cigar smokers, and they're eager to add the spots to the map for others to enjoy.  Now with the introduction of these features, we can share locations from all around the globe.

Article Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/food-and-beverage-articles/as-cigar-bans-spread-worldwide-so-does-one-cigar-friendly-website-2107815.html

About the Author
CigarPlaces.com is an interactive map that allows cigar lovers to find a place to enjoy a cigar, and add cigar bars and cigar-friendly locations that they know of.  Visit the map and search for a city to find cigar-friendly locations near you.
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Tuesday, 19 February 2013

Women Smoking Cigars

Author: Daniel Beckitt

Although a mere one percent of the cigar-smoking public in the United States is comprised of women, that figure is rapidly on the rise. Women are no longer concerned about ancient and outdated taboos that are associated with cigar smoking, and they are dropping their more feminine cigarettes and reaching out in record numbers for cigars in public and in private. What's behind this surge in stogie puffing gals?

Reasons for Increased Women Smoking Cigars

While some women claim that smoking cigars is just another way that they can be perceived as free to do as they please (an offshoot of women's lib), others appreciate the health benefit of cigar smoking versus cigarette smoking. For those who enjoy nicotine, two cigars will provide a longer nicotine fix than five cigarettes – all without the detrimental health effects associated with inhaling smoke. Some women smoking cigars simply love the flavor or taste of the cigar or its unique aroma, and with the many different flavored cigars on the today's market, there is something for literally every taste. Others find comfort in the camaraderie that accompanies a good cigar among friends. And some women find the "shock value" that comes along with cigar smoking to be the main reason to fire up their favorite Cuban blend. So in essence, women love to smoke cigars for many of the same reasons that men do!

Celebrity Women Smoking Cigars

The growing popularity of women smoking cigars is perhaps due in small part to the number of female celebrities who have recently come out of the closet and lit up cigars in public. Famous faces that walk the Red Carpet and also enjoy a good blunt include Sharon Stone, Madonna, and Salma Hayek, just to name a few.

So what does this new trend say about the American woman? It says that she is liberated and doesn't care to go against the grain, and that she has excellent taste! Women smoking cigars are daring, they dance to the beat of their own drum, and they do not limit themselves to doing what is expected of them.
Article Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/hobbies-articles/women-smoking-cigars-2226924.html

About the Author
Authored by: Daniel Beckitt and Geoff O'Neill
www.cigar-place.com

Monday, 18 February 2013

Curing and Fermentation Make for Premium Cigars

Author: Alan King


Fine tobacco is the heart of premium cigars. Try a premium cigar like a Fonseca Vintage Lonsdale Tubo and taste the world's finest-quality cigar tobacco. The wonderful flavor and aroma of a great cigar will make you appreciate all the work that went into its creation, and work it is! First, high-grade cigar tobacco leaves are harvested and aged using a process that combines the use of heat and shade to reduce sugar and water content without causing the large leaves to rot. This first part of the process, called "curing," takes 25 to 45 days and varies substantially, depending on climate and storage conditions for the harvested tobacco. The curing process is manipulated based upon the type of tobacco and the desired leaf color. The second part of the process, called "fermentation," is designed to help the leaf die slowly. Temperature and humidity are controlled to ensure that the leaf continues to ferment without rotting or disintegrating. This is where the flavor, burning and aroma characteristics are finessed. After the tobacco leaves are properly aged, they are sorted for use as filler or wrapper, depending on their appearance and quality. During this process, the leaves are continually moistened and handled carefully to ensure its best use. The leaf will go through a continuous cycle of baling and inspection throughout its aging process. When the leaf has matured according to the manufacturer's specifications, it will be used in the production of a cigar.Fine-quality cigars are still handmade. An experienced cigar-roller can produce hundreds of very good, nearly identical, cigars per day.

The rollers keep the tobacco moist--especially the wrapper--and use specially designed crescent-shaped knives, called chavetas, to form the filler and wrapper leaves quickly and accurately. Once rolled, the cigars are stored in wooden forms as they dry, in which their uncapped ends are cut to a uniform size. From this stage, the cigar is a complete product that can be "laid down" and aged for decades if kept as close to 70°F (21°C) and 70% relative humidity, as the environment will allow. Once cigars have been purchased, proper storage is usually accomplished by keeping the cigars in a specialized box, or humidor, where conditions can be carefully controlled for long periods of time. Even if a cigar becomes dry, it can be successfully re-humidified as long as it has not been handled carelessly.Premium-brand cigars are made with different varieties of tobacco for the filler and the wrapper. "Long-filler cigars" are a far higher quality of cigar, using long leaves throughout. These cigars also use a third variety of tobacco leaf, a "binder," between the filler and the outer wrapper. This permits the makers to use more delicate and attractive leaves as a wrapper. These high-quality cigars almost always blend varieties of tobacco. Even Cuban long-filler cigars will combine tobaccos from different parts of the island to encompass several different flavors.

Article Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/business-articles/curing-and-fermentation-make-for-premium-cigars-688942.html

About the Author
For access to the best Fine Cigars and Cigar accessories available check out the great deals available only on the authors website - http://www.davidoffmadison.com

Sunday, 17 February 2013

Cigars And Music: A Natural Combination

Author: Ann Knapp

Arturo Sandoval
Perhaps it's because there's a close cultural connection between great music and smoky bars. Anyone who knows anything about jazz knows that its truly legendary improvisers - Coltrane, Bird, Miles Davis, Dizzy Gillespie - cut their teeth playing in bars so smoky that it's a good thing everybody was too busy improvising to need sheet music.

Or maybe it's because both cigars and music are contemplative pleasures. A casual smoker can get a quick tobacco-fix from a cheap cigarette, just as a casual music listener can enjoy the background hum of pop songs on the car radio. But to really enjoy a great performance, or a good tobacco, sitting still and paying attention are necessary.

In any case, music and cigar smoking seem to belong together, and some of the most famous musicians are (or were) cigar devotees - just as, it turns out, one of the most famous of cigar devotees is also a musician. Avo Uvezian, the maker of Avo cigars, is also a respected classical and jazz pianist, a Julliard graduate, and even the one-time official pianist of the Shah of Iran. After a successful musical career based first in his native Middle East, and then in the contiguous United States, Uvezian moved in the 1980s to Puerto Rico, where he opened a restaurant and bar and dabbled in cigarmaking. After customers at his Puerto Rico restaurant told him how much they enjoyed some cigars he'd had rolled himself, from a blend of tobaccos he hand-picked, he opened his own Dominican Republic-based cigar factory, working with noted cigar maker Hendrik Kelner. Now his company makes three million cigars a year, and Uvezian himself still makes music - his first CD, Legacy, was released in 2004.

For another example, consider the great trumpeter Arturo Sandoval, who smokes, by his own estimation, four or five cigars a day. Music allowed the Cuban-born Sandoval to rise to fame in his native Cuba - and to defect from that country in 1990, during a long stint playing concerts in Europe (he now lives in Florida). Sandoval has played the horn for Lionel Hampton and Dizzy Gillespie, Gloria Estefan and Johnny Mathis, Michel Legrand and Frank Sinatra. His technically flawless playing has resulted in his being the kind of musician whose work is often known by people who couldn't name him - he is brought in as a session musician by some of the world's finest and best-known (see above), and he often scores movie soundtracks. As his work with the BBC Symphony Orchestra and the Leningrad Philharmonic prove, he's even proved able to handle the rigors of classical music as well as jazz - sometimes doing both in the same concert.

The cigar-music connection is especially strong in Cuba, known as one of the world's cigar capitals. Both cigars and music are staples of island life (the cigar remains one of the island's most prominent exports), and the strength of both in Cuban culture depends partly on the nimble and intelligent blending of elements from everywhere - wrappers and fillers from different parts of Latin America, rhythms and melodies from the African coast, South America, US pop, Western European classical, etc. In other words, Cuban cigarmaking and Cuban music have both survived, and flourished, by mixing and melding.

For generations, cigar rollers were entertained by the sound of paid musicians or by music from the radio. (This tradition continues even now in the Dominican Republic, where workers at the Arturo Fuente factory, among other places, are treated to the work of performing musicians.) With this tradition in place, it's no wonder that some of Cuba's music legends got their start as cigar-factory entertainers; and since tobacco smoking has been a part of Latin American life far longer than it has in some other places - Columbus's sailors noted it being smoked in what is now modern Cuba in the year 1493, so there's many more centuries of lore to draw on its psychological and emotional associations are deeper and richer, providing better material for songwriters to mine. Thus famous Cuban songwriter Beny More, himself a former entertainer for the cigar-factory workers, touches on the song in a number of his classic compositions.
Article Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/music-articles/cigars-and-music-a-natural-combination-550555.html

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, Partagas, Gurkha and many more. Choose from more than 1200 different cigars! Other cigar products include cigar humidors, cigar boxes, and cigar accessories like Zippo Lighters.

Saturday, 16 February 2013

Cigar Destinations: Festivals That Cater To Dedicated Smokers

Author: Ann Knapp

Cigar smoking is all about shared pleasure. After all, it swept Victorian England and became a national pastime in part because it gave men something to do with their hands while they talked after dinner. And it took off during the so-called "cigar boom" of the 1990s in part because new publications, online forums, cigar clubs, and other social venues allowed cigar smokers to talk about their passion.

So it's no surprise to find cigar-related events all over the social calendar of smokers around the world. In addition to the lavish, expensive Big Smoke conventions put on by Cigar Aficionado magazine - at least two a year, in Las Vegas and New York City - there's the Ybor City festival in Tampa, Florida, free and open to the public. And that's just November. Check out a few other, more-exotic possibilities from all over the globe.

The Dominican Republic is the world's largest source of premium cigars, surpassing even Cuba (from which many of the country's cigar-making families and technologies emigrated during the years after Castro). La Aurora, Davidoff, Arturo Fuente, and La Gloria Cubana, among many others, all operate there, and as of 2007, it has its own yearly cigar festival as well! Taking place in Santiago, the two-day Procigar Festival (the first of which took place March 5-7, 2008) featured cigar factory tours, visits to tobacco fields, chances to hobnob with some of the world's greatest cigar makers, and cigar-and-liquor matchups. Companies such as La Aurora, General Cigar Co., and Tabacalera de Garcia, among others, participated, and the inaugural bow was successful enough to motivate a second - to be held February 16-20, 2009.

While you're there, if you go, you may want to check out some of the other sights offered by this important Latin American cultural capital. The Dominican Republic was the first place permanently settled by Europeans anywhere in either American continent - the oldest cathedrals, universities, and European-made roads can all be found there. Santo Domingo, the country's capital, butts up against its southern coast, offering breathtaking views (the Procigar Festival takes place far further north, in Santiago, but the country is not super-large in total area). Four mountain ranges decorate the country; the Cordillera Central ("Central Mountain Range") approaches Santiago, so visitors to the Procigar Festival could also schedule a day trip to see Pico Duarte, the jewel of the Cordillera Central and the highest peak in the West Indies (over 3000 meters). And, of course, Santiago is itself located in the Cibao valley - between the Cordillera Central and Corillera Septentrional ("Northern Mountain Range"), which run parallel to each other - and it's this rich and fertile area that houses most of the country's farms, including its tobacco farms.

Or you could follow in author James Joyce's footsteps and visit Zurich, Switzerland, where the expatriate Irish modernist polymath-writer completed large sections of his surreal novel Finnegans Wake, and where the Whiskyship sails every November. (What is it with November and cigar events?) This whisky-tasting event, which also offers three hundred premium cigars for the sampling, allows those with sharp noses and tastebuds to enjoy single malt whiskies from all over the world, and to enjoy the companies of folks with similar tastes. The 2008 Whiskyship will be the tenth such event. Switzerland, of course, features all sorts of other attractions - among other things, there's the James Joyce Foundation, but also, you know, mountains and pristine lakes and thousands of years' worth of European scenery - and would be worth a visit regardless.

Another possibility - albeit somewhat closer to home, at least for North American smokers - is the Nebraska Cigar Festival in Lincoln. Taking place in late November (which pits it against the Ybor City Festival and the two CA Big Smokes in drawing the attention of Midwestern cigar fanatics who don't feel like going to Zurich), the one-evening event brings in cigars, munchies and a pair of drink tickets for those willing to shell out the admission fees and deal with early-winter Midwestern cold.
Article Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/art-and-entertainment-articles/cigar-destinations-festivals-that-cater-to-dedicated-smokers-568009.html

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, Partagas, Gurkha and many more. Choose from more than 1200 different cigars! Other cigar products include cigar humidors, cigar boxes, and cigar accessories like Zippo Lighters.

Friday, 15 February 2013

Using cigar humidors to restore dry cigars

Author: Linda Kent

Many people wonder if they can restore their dried out cigars. If the wrapper of the cigar hasn't unraveled or cracked significantly then it can definitely be restored. You need to keep in mind however, that once a cigar has dried out significantly, the flavor has most likely changed and it will not taste the same is it would have originally. There are a few ways to bring your cigars back to life. I'll describe them from my favorite to least favorite methods.
The first is to use a cigar humidor. Make sure that your humidor is not fully charged, otherwise you will ruin your cigars rather than save them! You should start with humidity levels well under 60%. If the humidor is completely dry, add some water to the humidifier to slowly add humidity to the box. Place your cigars in the humidor and close it. After a several days you can go ahead and fully charge the humidor. This will give your cigars the gradual humidification that they need.
If you don't have a free humidor, you could use a plastic container instead. Place a hygrometer and humidifier in the container along with your dry cigars. Add a little bit of water to the humidifier and close the container. For the next couple of days, you should check the hygrometer reading every 8-12 hours and keep adding water to the humidifier so that the humidity gradually increases up to 70%. Once it reaches 70% monitor the levels daily and leave your cigars in there for the next couple of weeks. Then transfer them over to your humidor.
Another option is to find a damp place such as a cellar and place your cigar box in there. Every few days you should go into the cellar and rotate your cigars about a quarter turn. Doing this for 3 weeks will be enough to give the cigars two full rotations and be evenly humidified. Make sure you monitor the humidity levels in the cellar though…you don't want it to be too humid.
Using a Ziploc bag method is also a convenient way. Puncture a Ziploc bag with little holes and then place your cigars in it and seal it. Then place that bag in a larger, non-punctured one. Dampen a sponge and place the sponge in the second, non-punctured bag and seal it. Again, the idea is to slowly humidify your cigars so that you don't inadvertently ruin them. Every couple of days, rotate your cigars so they are evenly humidified. After a couple of weeks, you can put them in a fully charged humidor.
Finally, the easiest but least accurate option is to dampen a towel and wrap the cigar box in that towel. Leave it for a couple of weeks and that should do the trick!
While there are other ways to salvage your cigars, these are the methods that I have used successfully in the past. Good luck!
Article Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/small-business-articles/using-cigar-humidors-to-restore-dry-cigars-2966582.html
About the Author
Humidors And More is a trusted retailer of cigar humidors and cigar accessories. Visit HumidorsAndMore.com for a fantastic selection of quality humidors and cigar related gear at prices that can't be beat!

Thursday, 14 February 2013

Ways to Prevent and Eliminate Cigar 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.

And cigar smokers have their own result of fun to consider. Specifically, the aromatic scent of their favorite cigar may attach to unwelcome places such as clothes. In fact, back when cigar smoking was the universal habit of Victorian gentleman, many of these smokers would maintain a separate outfit to wear when smoking, which would absorb the fumes. (Thus the terms "smoking jacket" and "smoking cap," which we still use.)

But it's the effect of a cigar scent settling on breath that some cigar smokers may find troublesome. The considerate cigar smoker is aware of this and plans accordingly. Here are some suggestions to help you pay for the enjoyment you've had-without paying too much!

1) Choose good cigars. This may seem like an obvious point, but the better-made the cigar, the less chemical the odor. Buy well-made, hand-rolled, long-filler cigars from a quality cigar outlet or online store.

2) For while you're smoking: Drink tea, or eat. (Mild-flavored teas are most recommended; as for foodstuffs, consider dark chocolates or other simple, strong-but-not-too-strong tastes.) "Cutting" your cigar with food or drink can help absorb both the aftertaste and the effects on breath.

3) Keep some fresh parsley on hand-or even a parsley plant in your kitchen or living room, or whatever room is nearest to the place where you smoke. This herb has traditionally come recommended for its odor-killing powers.

4) Chew gum. Mint-flavored gums are recommended, the stronger the better.

5) On that note, try chewing raw mint. As with parsley, you can keep it around in its herbal form and chew it undiluted after a cigar. You can also keep strong breath mints on hand.

6) Mouth sprays, as well as mouthwashes specifically intended for cigar smokers, are available commercially, and can be purchased from cigar stores or online cigar retailers. These are highly recommended. They're made by people who understand. Some of the anti-cigar-breath mouthwashes have the side benefit of clearing away the tar that might otherwise stain your teeth. If these mouthwashes aren't available, a typical mouthwash and a good tooth-brushing will be a lot better than nothing.

7) To avoid breath problems the next morning after a smoke: After a smoke, never go to bed without eating something. Even if it's just a tiny, simple snack, it "cuts" the cigar and reduces breath problems while seeming to absorb and clear away the odors in your mouth.

So, to recap: enjoy good cigars. Drink tea or eat while you smoke, or after you smoke. Brush your teeth like Mom said, and use a good mouthwash-perhaps especially a mouthwash intended for cigar smokers. And mint and thyme help too, especially for those days when you have to rush from your smoke to a work meeting or a date.
Article Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/health-articles/ways-to-prevent-and-eliminate-cigar-breath-578621.html
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, Partagas, Gurkha and many more. Choose from more than 1200 different cigars! Other cigar products include cigar humidors, cigar boxes, and cigar accessories like Zippo Lighters.

Wednesday, 13 February 2013

Spotting Forged Cuban Cigars

Author: kimberly valerio

Everyone knows that Cuban cigars are the most coveted cigars, renown worldwide for their smoothness and rich flavors.  Indeed, Cuban cigars are so prized that many illegitimate dealers have been known to sell fake Cubans to unsuspecting cigar smokers.  How do you tell if what you have is a fake or the real thing?  First, make certain that you purchase your cigars from a legitimate dealer.  Buying from your local tobacconist or a reputable mail order business can protect you from forking your money over for a box of fake cigars.

If you have an opportunity to purchase a box of purported Cuban cigars, but have your doubts, take the time to examine the box before purchasing it.  Here are a few tips to help you spot the fakes from the real thing.

The most important thing to examine is the box.  Authentic Cuban cigars will contain a green and white warranty seal on the left front side of the box.  The seal will contain an insignia that has a picture of a shield and a hat.  On the upper right hand corner of the box, you should find a white sticker that is placed diagonally with the word 'Habanos' printed on it.  The overall appearance of the box should be neat and clean.  If the box appears damaged, smudged, frayed, or marked, avoid it.  If the color of the box is dull, don't buy it.  Even if the cigars are the real things, their quality may have suffered in transport.  If you are in the market for Cohiba, Trinidad, or Q'dorsay brand cigars, know that all authentic Cohiba's will contain the green and white warranty seal on the right hand side of the box. 

On the bottom of the box of cigars, you should find a heat stamp with the words 'Habanos.'  The heat stamp should be impressed onto the bottom of the box.  Fake Cuban cigar boxes often find other ways to imprint this label, such as using rubber stamps or paper labels.  You should also find a factory code stamp at the bottom that is stamped in green, blue or black ink.  This stamp will tell you when and where the cigars were rolled.

If you can open the box, take the time to smell the tobacco.  Cuban cigars will have a deep, rich aroma, unmistakable to dedicated cigar aficionados.  If the smell is off, or very weak, chances are you do not have a box of authentic Cuban cigars in your hands.    The cigars should be facing the same way, and the top row may appear slightly flattened.  The caps on all the cigars should appear identical, and the foot of each cigar should be cut clean.  The bands on all the cigars should also be identical, and should be arranged so that they face the same direction.  If allowed, test the cigars out by pressing down on them.  Feel along the entire length of each cigar, checking for soft or hard spots.  The cigars should feel firm yet pliable.
Article Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/health-articles/spotting-forged-cuban-cigars-1344400.html

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Tuesday, 12 February 2013

Cigars Quotes

Author: S. Barbu

Cigars



  • A good cigar is like a beautiful chick with a great body who also knows the American League box scores.
M*A*S*H, Klinger, Bug-Out
1976
  • A woman is an occasional pleasure but a cigar is always a smoke.
Groucho Marx
  • Ah, if only I had brought a cigar with me! This would have established my identity.
Charles Dickens
  • Eating and sleeping are the only activities that should be allowed to interrupt a man's enjoyment of his cigar.
Mark Twain
  • Given the choice between a woman and a cigar, I will always choose the cigar.
Groucho Marx
  • I drink a great deal. I sleep a little, and I smoke cigar after cigar. That is why I am in two-hundred-percent form.
Winston Churchill.
  • I have made it a rule never to smoke more that one cigar at a time.
  • Variation: I smoke in moderation.^ I can tell you that there was never one cigarettethat I ever smoked that was worth the price that we have paid.
    • Cigarette Anyone
    ^ We have made one trip to Boston, which is basically informational, and it has been decided to take more tests and set up appointments which take months to arrange.
    • Cigarette Anyone
    ^ I'm still the time bomb waiting to go off, even if I never smoke again.
    • Cigarette Anyone
    Only one cigar at a time.
Mark Twain
  • I smoke ten to fifteen cigars a day. At my age I have to hold on to something.
George Burns
  • If I paid ten dollars for a cigar, first I'd make love to it, then I'd smoke it.
George Burns
  • If I had taken my doctor's advice and quit smoking when he advised me to, I wouldn't have lived to go to his funeral.
98 year old George Burns
  • Cigars are like new life in a twisted world
James Francesco
  • Of course, I started as a collector. A true collector. I can remember as if it were only yesterday the heart- pounding excitement as I spread out upon the floor of my bedroom The Edward G. Robinson Collection of Rare Cigar Bands. I didn't play at collecting. No cigar anywhere was safe from me.
Edward G. Robinson
  • Sometimes a cigar is just a cigar.
Sigmund Freud
  • There are men here and there to whom the whole of life is like an after-dinner hour with a cigar; easy, pleasant, empty, perhaps enlivened by some fable of strife to be forgotten - before the end is told - even if there happens to be any end to it.
Joseph Conrad
  • There is nothing more agreeable than having a place where one can throw on the floor as many cigar butts as one pleases without the subconscious fear of a maid who is waiting like a sentinel to place an ashtray where the ashes are going to fall.
Fidel Castro
  • What this country needs is a good five-cent cigar!
Thomas Marshall, Vice-president of Woodrow Wilson
  • Cigar smoking is a hobby, not a habit.
Art Fuente
Article Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/culture-articles/cigars-quotes-5404912.html

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Monday, 11 February 2013

Plays And Movies For Cigar Lovers

Author: Ann Knapp

Anna In the Tropics
Since so many artists, writers, and other creative folks have been cigar smokers, it's perhaps no surprise that some wonderful - as well as not-so-wonderful - films and plays center on the world of cigars. Some of these works are already well-known, while others might require a little help reaching their audiences. A few of them may not even succeed with help. But for those who celebrate cigar smoking, these dramas (screen and stage) may be special treats.



The 2003 Pulitzer Prize winner for Drama, this play, set in 1929, gives viewers a rare opportunity to view the world through the eyes of those who make fine hand-rolled cigars. It concerns the daughters of a family of cigar workers, whose lives are forever marked when the factory's new lector - the person hired to read to the workers' reads Tolstoy's Anna Karenina to them. The book becomes part of the factory's life, inspiring love affairs, jealousies and fights. Hailed by critic Christine Dolen as "a passionate, explosive, tender play filled with poetic-evocative imagery, language that almost seems tactile," the play managed to beat out new works by the far-more-established Edward Albee and Richard Greenberg for the Pulitzer in Drama. For cigar smokers, it provides a glimpse of the industry's glory years before machine manufacture and the dominance of cigarettes, before Castro and the trade embargo.

The "lector," by the way, was a real position. Cigar manufacture is a laborious process requiring constant care, and for many years, for that reason, handmade cigar factories hired a lector (reader) to keep the rollers alert and entertained by reading books to them. Audio books have partly eliminated the need for lectors (at least in some factory owners' eyes), but other factories still use a lector - perhaps the best symbol of the mental attentiveness necessary to produce well-made premium cigars.

Smoke

This 1995 indie film rendered writer Paul Auster something like a household name - or as close to a household name as authors of existential detective stories get. It's also a virtual paean to cigar smoking, with its sprawling plot set at the Brooklyn Cigar Company, where owner Auggie Wren ponders the varied types of humanity who turn up therein. (His theory is that everyone in the world eventually shops at the Brooklyn Cigar Factory.) Within this framework, the movie ponders the random yet meaningful connections among disparate individuals - one of the themes of Auster's writing, and a theme of several important 1990s American art films, including Grand Canyon, Short Cuts and Magnolia. Auster's selection of a smoke shop as his setting renders the film, which is based on one of his own short stories, especially meaningful for diehard cigar smokers.

Smokin' Stogies

An entire movie about the search for some missing Cohibas? This 2002 low-budget crime film may not have won any awards, but with two of the stars of "The Sopranos" (whose swaggering, smoking mobsters have done their own bit to promote the smoking of stogies) and its cigar-oriented plot, the film ought to hold at least some interest for cigar lovers. It is described by Cigar Aficionado's David Savona as "B-level material, an R-rated, small-budget experience that nevertheless should appeal to cigar smokers." [it] serves up a subject matter palatable to aficionados. The movie includes the search for the mob's missing Cubans and a plot to put real Cohiba bands on a trove of horrendous counterfeit cigars. There's also a hilarious cigar-sniffing Doberman Pinscher who can tell a real Cuban from a fake." If only every cigar smoker in America had a dog like that...

Predator

OK, this eighties sci-fi opus is not about cigars at all - at least not on the surface. Rather, it concerns a scary invisible alien hunter-thing that crash-lands in a Central American jungle and cuts up an elite Arnold Schwarzenegger-led military unit after they're tricked into illegal Black Ops action by a corrupt major (Carl Weathers). (But what cigar smoker can forget the sight of Schwarzenegger's character, Dutch, lighting up the fattest imaginable stogie as he suits up?
Article Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/movies-articles/plays-and-movies-for-cigar-lovers-469311.html
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.

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