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how long should you age cigars?

Aging Cigars

A good cigar needs to be seasoned – this is a rule of thumb, which all true aficionados or those, who want to become like that, should follow. Of course, every stogie is aged at the factory in order to dry and normalize. This procedure will enhance the aroma, the burn and draw of a cigar. Usually, the process of stabilization lasts for 6 – 8 weeks which is considered to be sufficient; still it would be better for your cigars to undergo a longer ageing process as this will allow their fragrances melting and blending into a unique smoke.

However constant seasoning does not mean your cigar is doing well. Each stogie has a certain ageing period – once achieved a specific level, the cigar does not acquire any advantage from further ageing. Thus, here is our advice: keep the golden mean!

You should always check and know the age of your cigars. The younger the stogie is, the more intense is the influence of seasoning period on it. Remember: several months of ageing are beneficial to an immature cigar while the same period means nothing for a 15 year old stick.

So what’s the perfect time?

Of course, there is no certain time limit as every cigar box is unique and reacts to seasoning in different way. However, here are some approximate bounds:

1 year If you want to reach the so named Chincales type savor, you should smoke freshly rolled cigars over the period of several weeks they’ve been rolled; if not – season them all for a year at least.

2 years Best term to start smoking those wonderful Cubans. This is considered to be the culmination of the majority of light bodied smokes.

2-5 years These are top years for the major part of other cigars, especially for those full-bodied which become better with time, for example: Bolivars, Partagas, and Ramon Allones.

7-10 years The peak ageing for all cigars. After that period, most of them become overripe and loose the flavor.

10 and more Here we enter the period where most stogies loose all their useful qualities whereas some rare, vintage sticks blossom. They possess some special features, such as moldy smell, a savor which resembles snuff and sometimes even smelly cheese which one can feel before lightning. It may sound pretty odd but these cigars are very highly appreciated by aficionados chasing after vintage cigars. The one thing to mention here is that solely strong cigars are capable of becoming valuable smoking after years.

Of course the above system does not apply to every cigar. It is an approximate direction for use which you yourself decide to follow or not. You should know that every hand rolled stogie ameliorates with time, therefore prior to throwing away any stogie you consider unworthy, let it apart for a while. It will astonish you how beautiful and tasty these ‘bad’ cigars become with seasoning.

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If you havent had this you are missing out

After a long day this hits the spot

Rocky Patel has made some goods cigars but this one is truly a gift by suprise.  About a year ago Cigars Limited took some of our great customers down to Rocky Patels Factory and we got to visit the farms and fields to see how it was all put together.  Then at the end of the trip everyone got a chance to blend their own cigar.  Mine was horrible.  Others were… well not as bad as mine… Then out of the blue was my little brother Kirk’s blend that took everyone by surpise.

Captain Kirk

Nestor Plesencia invited me and Rocky Patel to his home in Honduras to have some lunch.  It was very interesting to me that nobody ever seems to conduct buisness over there during a time of gustation.

But after lunch we were invited to sit on some rocking chairs and have a cigar with the Godfather of tobacco and Rocky proceeded to hand all of us one of my brother’s secret blends.  After a few min of smoking and looking at the hillside, Nestor looks at Rocky and asked him what was this terrific cigar he was smoking?  Rocky just looked over at me and gave me a look that I knew ment I was going to stay in Honduras and create a brand, and box and a name that became Rocky Patel Maduro of Costa Rica.  And the rest is history.  See what Rocky has to say about this blend

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never left out

lovin it

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A letter from a soldier

Hey my name is  Nate, I am a Soldier in the United States Army Stationed at Camp Taji Iraq. I just wanted to say that I love your Store. Everytime I have Occasion worth celebrating i come to your store. when I turned 18, when my brother in law got married, when i enlisted in the Army. when I Married my Beautiful wife and when i left for my deployment to the middle east. you guys have always helped me celebrate the greatest moments in my life. I just wanted to say thanks for the help and that you have a customer for life. Thanks guys
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tatuaje cigar for cigar of the month

the man behind Tatuaje

Tatuaje cigars are Nicaraguan puros handmade in Miami, Florida by the most highly-skilled torcedors under the guidance of Cuban ‘maestro tabaquero,’ Jose Pepin Garcia. Created by Pete Johnson, each Tatuaje cigar is handcrafted with 1st generation Nicaraguan Cuban-seed tobaccos cured to perfection and finished in zesty Nicaraguan Corojo ’99 wrappers with a beautiful Cuban-style triple-cap. These medium to full-bodied cigars are perfectly balanced with a rich, earthy, and spicy complexity.

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still smokin

    Arnold Schwarzenegger: It’s a wrap

    Patt Morrison Asks

    January 01, 2011|Patt Morrison
    The governor who needs no introduction is now in need of a sendoff. Seven years after the flukiest of political events put him in Sacramento as the state’s chief executive, Arnold Schwarzenegger, arguably one of California’s quirkiest Republicans, is handing the top job over to one of its quirkiest Democrats — Jerry Brown. As befits a larger-than-life state, its over-the-top movie star governor has presided over immense budget deficits and scored some legislative triumphs, like the bill that mandates cuts in greenhouse gases. He has also, mirabile dictu, gotten Californians to use a word as long as his surname: “infrastructure.” As Schwarzenegger departs Sacramento’s 95814 and returns to the 90210, he leaves with approval ratings about as low as the man he booted from office, and with unflagging Schwarzeneggerian enthusiasm for whatever’s next. The big-picture matters of his legacy are under scrutiny elsewhere in this newspaper; this interview is about the details.

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    Avo Event over 200 attendance

    watch for our huge photo post of the Avo Event. It was a smashing sucess. Your biggest event to date. Thank you to everyone who has made Cigars Limited your cigar store. Over 200 people attended and I want to say thank you from the bottom of my cigar. Avo had such a great time and said he would like an encore later this year ???

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    AVO HERITAGE

    He may be 84 this year, but Avo Uvezian is still full of surprises. First it was the uncharacteristically portly and potent LE 10 that hit the shops earlier this year. And then, a few months later at IPCPR, it’s the Heritage. In addition to being fuller-bodied than his regular lines, it also carries the smallest price tag of any AVO cigar brought to the market in some time. Also surprising was how it quickly became one of the most talked about cigars at the trade show. AVO is a well established brand with a loyal following, it’s not the little cutting edge boutique that ordinarily generates this kind of buzz.

    The first shipments of the new AVO Heritage went out this week, so if your local shop doesn’t have them yet, they should very soon. And if they didn’t order them, you may be in for a roadtrip, because these smokes are a brick and mortar exclusive. When you do find them, you’ll have four choices: Churchill (6 3/4 x 48), Toro (6 x 50), Robusto (4 7/8 x 40) and Short Robusto (4 x 56). Now let’s see what all the buzz is about.

    Cigar Stats:
    Size: 6 x 50
    Wrapper: Ecuadoran Sungrown
    Binder: Dominican Republic
    Filler: Dominican Republic
    Smoking Time: 1 1/2 hours
    Beverage: Water

    The Pre-Smoke
    The Heritage is a little more rustic than your average AVO. Its oily reddish brown wrapper is both veiny and has a good number of marks and darker-hued streaks. At the same time, the cigars were nearly defect-free. The only problem I found in my review set was a hole in the cap of one cigar. And if you’re going to have an issue, what better place to have it then the part of the cigar that gets clipped off? All told, they’re some pretty good looking smokes.

    The cigars had the familiar Davidoff feel, firm but with little more give than average. The wrapper had an interesting floral compost aroma and the cold draw was musty and sweet.

    The Burn
    The AVO Heritage burned like a champ. It was even, produced sturdy light ashes and drew perfectly. The only thing out of the ordinary to note is that one cigar burned a little faster than normal for its size.

    The Flavor
    The AVO Heritage began with combination of creamy nougat, must and earthy cocoa that carried through about the first inch. At that point a spicy grassy element and a mouth-drying combination of savory nuts and cedar flavors began to emerge.

    The grassy flavor that debuted in the first third was gone again in the second, but the spiciness that appeared with it remained. The profile continued to be slightly sweet, a tad musty, creamy and cocoa-y. A savory mouth-drying nutty wood flavor began to appear a little later in this third.

    The final third was much the same as the latter half of its predecessor, only a little fuller and with more spice.

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    The Story Behind the Avo Cigar Brand

    The Avo cigar brand is named after Avo Uzezian, a musician and composer who was born in 1926 in Beirut, Lebanon. Avo Uvezian was born into a family of musicians. His mother was a gifted singer and his father was a composer as well as a conductor for a symphony orchestra.

    Avo moved to the United States in 1947, where he attended the prestigious Juilliard School of Music, studying classical piano and composition. But his studies were cut short by the draft for the Korean War.

    After entering the military, Uvezian was sent to Fort Dix in New Jersey where he was put through Infantry training. After impressing his officers with his musical talents, Uvezian was taken out of the Infantry and put into Band Training. When he arrived in Korea, the band would play at the Officers Club. He then returned to New York to continue out his career in the military and he was discharged in 1952 after serving the United States with honor.

    After being discharged, Uvezian spent the next several years working with his father-in-law designing jewelry. This eventually brought him to Puerto Rico where he decided to get back into music and use his talents playing piano for the opening of the new Palmas Del Mar resort. Once they heard him play, they offered him a four-month contract. He enjoyed the work so much, he stayed there for 14 years.

    In 1983, when Avo’s daughter Karyn was born, he went to Switzerland for a ceremony of her birth. After the ceremony, he went out to dinner, and ordered a couple of Cuban cigars after the meal and he was charged $24 apiece for the cigars. He was outraged at this, and his friend mentioned that they should make their own. That is exactly how Avo Uvezian decided to get into the cigar industry.

    After arriving back home, Uvezian immediately booked a trip to the Dominican Republic, where he ended up searching for two years looking for a factory that suited his needs. Avo eventually met Hendrik Kelner, the president of Tabacos Dominicanos, who he teamed up with to produce Avo cigars.

    He also received guidance from Michel Roux, the Frenchman responsible for bringing Absolut Vodka into the United States. He told Avo to make his cigars with the best quality that he can, and put the product in the best packaging. He also helped him get his label designed by the graphics guy.

    By 1988 the first Avo cigars became available and he sent his cigars to the Davidoff shop in New York. They sold well, and by the first year, Davidoff sold about 120,000 cigars. The second year, it went up to 250,000, and the next year sold 450,000. Davidoff eventually bought the Avo brand from Avo in 1995, and now Avo concentrates on the promotional aspect of the brand.

    Today Avo brand has blossomed into a variety of different lines and produces around three million cigars each year from their factory in the Cibao Valley, the tobacco heartland of the Dominican Republic

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    Avo is coming to town

    image

    It’s true it’s true avo is coming to town february 18th.

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