Popular Post PigFish Posted May 22, 2017 Popular Post Share Posted May 22, 2017 Understanding a cigar. Having read a comment about the Hoyo Coronas this morning got me to thinking… That’s bad, I know! The comment was, and I am paraphrasing, 'one of the few cigars in MRN’s book that got trashed.' I scoffed at that comment, and got to thinking about it some. Why should I scoff at panning a cigar? Many of us ‘pan’ cigars. I am certainly one of the worst perpetrators… These ELs and REs are favorite targets of mine. I suppose it is because it comes from the lips of a collector, and my obvious bias against them as a group. More on that another day… I know, many think these guys are gurus and gods but I don’t share their sentiments. Smoking was designed as a pleasure, not a competitive practice. (MHO). I cannot say that I like the direction smoking has gone since the 'collector community' has come to the forefront. I give you the topic at hand. How well do you know any cigar? As for me, there was a day that I smoked several cigars a day. I no longer smoke like this. I rarely have a cigar a day, lately anyway. I may go on binges where I smoke everyday for a few days, however that usually subsides within about a week. I also largely smoke from one box, but that too is getting less common. As I smoke less often, I have been picking away at the decades growth of my singles and strays. I have no ‘rotation’ as some put it. When I used to smoke this often, it was largely done from one box. That open box, might just travel around with me in the car as it would not last longer than a week or so. It was more habitual and little time was put into 'thinking about what to smoke.' When I wanted to smoke, I just went to 'the open box' to smoke from! That was more or less a time when I considered myself largely a ‘this is my cigar’ smoker. Let me explain. Those days were largely filled with Coronas. Punch Coronas and Partagas Coronas as well as others, and of course plenty of Petit Coronas and sub-Petit Coronas cigars. My favorite back then was the Partagas PC, generally in 50 cabs. Another 50 cab cigar that was a staple, was the du Depute. These were the days when I was consuming 1000 (or so) cigars a year. At that rate, I felt I got to know certain cigars pretty well. I mean if you smoked say 300 of one cigar in a year, you got to know them pretty well… Yesterday as today, cigar quality would ebb and flow with the trends in cigar manufacturing, both good and bad. I felt connected to certain cigars back then. I called those cigars, 'my own.' I brought this up in a thread recently about considering a cigar, or a brand of cigar your own. While I cannot comment on the habits of others, there were certainly signature cigars that were really my staples. While I was certainly smoking other brands and sizes of cigars, I wanted to pick my way through the entire Cuban cigar catalogue back then, there was simply never the time nor smoking experience to call ‘every’ cigar I owned or tried, my signature cigar. As cigars have changed so much I am a bit of an anachronism. I still know my favorites better than any made today. There are of course some of my favorite cigars that are still made, such as the QdO Coronas, but since I am not consuming over 100 of them a year, there is no real means for me to claim to be an expert on them. I certainly know more about the ones made 15 years ago, than I do today. So this brings me to the point. What is ‘your’ cigar, if you have one? How well do you know it? How long have you known it and what does it take in your mind to be an authority about it? Reading an 'expert's' tasting notes on hundreds of cigars got me thinking more and more about this. Who is kidding whom here? How many cigars must you consume in a day, a week, a year to be an expert? Can there really be an expert on all those cigars? For me the authority days are pretty much a thing of the past. I likely know more about the Grande de Espana than the RASS. I certainly know more about the Diplomaticos #1 than the Monte 2…! As those cigars are no longer available, calling them 'my own,' categorizing them as such has more or less become an obsolete notion. So I have come full circle. How many cigars a day does an expert need to smoke to become intimate with the entire Cuban catalogue of cigars? Can there really be an expert on them all, or even just a few? As cigars change over time, how many of them would one need to smoke and need to keep smoking over time in order remain current? I proffer there are no expert smokers. Even with the limited catalogue today, one simply cannot consume enough of more than a few cigars to really know them intimately. Intimately, meaning having a continuing depth of knowledge about their past and their current trends… As for me, I know more about humidors than the cigars that most people keep in them today! I suppose as long as I have one more RA PC to smoke, I will know more about that one (and a few others) than many will ever know. Yet it is only due to the fact that the cigars is no longer made and there are not newer vintages to become familiar with and no need to keep current. Perhaps as cigars are cancelled from the catalog, that act makes some of us who have smoked them 'experts?' After all, who is going to argue? Now that is collector logic for you!!! Thanks for reading. -Piggy 21 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Popular Post El Presidente Posted May 22, 2017 Popular Post Share Posted May 22, 2017 Beautiful post Ray I don't seek to address your points directly. I have no idea what an expert is. It certainly isn't me. I have a decent bullshit meter for both others and myself. If someone has extensive experience in certain cigars I listen. I am intrigued. When on the rare occasion I am fortunate enough to be in the company of the Simon Chases of this world, I listen. There is still a glint in their eye as they discuss the cigar. When Foxy (Rob) pulls out a Por larranaga from the 70's to share I love the interaction, again the glint in their eye as they tell the tale as much as I enjoy the cigar. When Stan the travel agent changes from his beloved Especial to a Monte 2 over numerous weeks I ask why? I listen. Intrigued. The Stans of this world teach me as much as anyone else. Today I treat every cigar I smoke as a (largely) referred friend. I limit the expectation but provide the canvas for it to do its work. Some excel, some pass, some fail. Some that pass and fail will excel in the future, some never do /never will. They are but cigars. 11 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Popular Post polarbear Posted May 22, 2017 Popular Post Share Posted May 22, 2017 "My Cigar" will always be the Monte 2 While I may not be able to tell the subtle differences in the blend from year to year, or look at the foot of a Monte 2 from 2015 and know they included more Seco in the blend this year than in years previous, I will (almost) always know one when I burn it. I've smoked hundreds (maybe thousands) of them during my life. In good times and bad times. I've smoked them during weddings and funerals but also on the most mundane Tuesday imaginable. They are an old friend to me. I've never had less than half a box in my humidor since I first sampled one back in 2006. They were the cigar I bought when I had little spare money and the cigar I bought when I had only spare money. I've sampled Monte 2's from the 80's, 90's and I don't know how many post 2000 examples. I've sampled arguably the best Monte 2 HSA could produce (the Monte 2 GR) as well as one I've had to rehydrate after a year of sitting in someone else's pantry. On the days I am feeling a little more romantic than is normal, I could almost say the Monte 2 is one of my oldest friends. Its been a constant in my life through joy and heart break. They've punctuated the first meetings of women I would go on to fall in love with and then comforted me when that love eventually ended. I have sat on my deck a allowed the ribbons of smoke drift, as if the cigar was trying to put its around arm around me. While I will never claim to know them better than anyone else, I feel I understand it. I know a good one when I see it, just as I know one that will let me down. There are days when they still go on to surprise me (I once smoked a Monte 2 that I would've bet money was a CPE) and those are the days I'm forced to sit up and take notice. After maybe 1000 Monte 2's, they still have a trick or two left to show me. 7 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Popular Post Winchester21 Posted May 22, 2017 Popular Post Share Posted May 22, 2017 I have never seen a hobby with so many "experts". I run into lots of folks at the local cigar shop who are convinced that buying a few high end NCs qualifies them for admission to the enlightened cigar society. They profess thatCCs are crap because most have never smoked a good one. Quite often my BS meter is off the chart. I am certainly no expert. Lots of folks on this forum have forgotten much more than I will ever know about cigars. Other than quality issues I generally do not knock anything that I personally don't like so as not to ruin it for someone else who may be enjoying them. I also used to burn through a box of whatever I was enjoying at the time usually Coros or Monte 2s. I am out of both and have not had a Coro in months. However I have discovered some brands like SLR, Diplomatico, and others which I am really enjoying. I smoke 3-4 cigars a day and I have started mixing it up more so as not to burn through my top favorites on hand. Every time I think that I have this thing figured out something comes along to change my mind.it all comes down to what you are enjoying at the moment. After all like you say they are just cigars 5 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
archosaur Posted May 22, 2017 Share Posted May 22, 2017 Fantastic post Piggy. I have pondered this topic before and I agree with you on all points...for me, I do not have 'a' cigar and based on how rarely I smoke, I never will have one.And I am OK with that. I go into each smoke with little to no expectations. I seek out the vitolas I like, welcome new experiences (including many disappointments), and just enjoy the journey for what it is.Sent from my SM-G920V using Tapatalk 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
99call Posted May 22, 2017 Share Posted May 22, 2017 Great topic. Sadly people claiming to be experts in anything is a sign of the times. You only have to look at Linkedin, with people listing themselves as Architect/Engineer/Novelist/Spanish Guitar Instructor/Lover/Fighter/Candlestick Maker. It's pathetic. I'm a conservator of Museum objects as a profession, and although I have trained for many years, and obviously have numerous qualification within the subject, every day when I turn up to the bench I'm faced with technical problems that make me realise that what I know, compared to what there is still to learn could be equated at about 0.000000001%. I think the world of cigar smoking especially in Europe can often feel very ostentatious, and intimidating. Sadly, humility in the modern world is almost extinct, and often the outcome is people overcompensating and giving it the 'big I am', and projecting knowing 'expert' statements that are full of BS. In a weird way if anyone expressed any hard and fast "facts" about a certain cigar, it actually diminishes that cigar, it advertises it as only being able to deliver within those limited constraints. Every time I pick up a cigar it's based on truisms not facts. I hope it will deliver certain things it's done before, but equally I hope it's going to have an extra dimension, a card up it's sleeve. As you referenced, I think you do need to smoke that single cigar industriously to know it, and I don't smoke enough of anything to know it, but like a friend that I've not seen for a while, I love catching up with 898s. Although, I am starting to secretly cheat on them with R&J Cazadores, which currently are pretty impressive ROTT 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
dowjr1 Posted May 22, 2017 Share Posted May 22, 2017 Expert status always a dicey and subjective thing although there are some objective measures. I don't profess to know them, but I'm sure they exist. Does only smoking a cigar make one expert? Or should one know leaves, regional crop reports, etc to become fully abreast? I don't know. Regarding Pigfish, he is an interesting guy and his posts, at least for me, are sometimes difficult to fully grasp. I think his brain is wired differently in relation to mine. That is a good thing for him. ? 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Texwrangler Posted May 22, 2017 Share Posted May 22, 2017 Sir Pig....what I got outta your initial post was 'what is an expert?'. Especially when it comes to determining what is 'my' cigar. Great question, made me think of those so called NFL analysts or 'experts' who follow the NFL draft and predict who each team will absolutely pick when their draft position comes up. 99% of the time they're wrong!!!!! I've been enjoying CC for less than a year. early on I tried to consume as many different marca's as well as different sizes based on what I read and heard (those I like I continued to smoke, those I didn't like I sheepishly pawned off on my friends) in hopes of finding 'my' cigar. Move to current times and I've seen/learned that when it comes to myself..what I like, prefer........ I am my own expert. I've seen too many times (and learned the hard way) when a journalist or blogger readily pushed a certain cigar, pushing me to buy a box, only to find it didn't do anything for me. Over time, I've found that no one can predict what I prefer/like than myself. I still do enjoy reading reviews, more so to see if I agree or disagree on their findings. Its when I see someone market themselves as expert, do I stand back and give them the political stare..... pardon the rant, just wanted to express my simple opinion. 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Popular Post garbandz Posted May 22, 2017 Popular Post Share Posted May 22, 2017 Have been smoking cigars since 1974,got serious in the 80s. Have read everything I could find about cigars ,from seed to ashtray. Rolled my own, worked with online and catalog firms, done tastings for magazines. I know a little about a very large subject. 6 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
PigFish Posted May 22, 2017 Author Share Posted May 22, 2017 2 hours ago, dowjr1 said: Expert status always a dicey and subjective thing although there are some objective measures. I don't profess to know them, but I'm sure they exist. Does only smoking a cigar make one expert? Or should one know leaves, regional crop reports, etc to become fully abreast? I don't know. Regarding Pigfish, he is an interesting guy and his posts, at least for me, are sometimes difficult to fully grasp. I think his brain is wired differently in relation to mine. That is a good thing for him. ? Mate you gave me a good laugh... I ponder the strangest things. To suggest that I think a bit differently than the mainstream would put you in good company! -LOL You wanna' know how odd I am? Most people send photos of their kids, sometime playing sport (yeah, mate... I am talking about you) and yet Piggy hear sends pictures of humidor performance and data logs. Luckily for them and the human race, I have no kids!!! Cheers! -Piggy Great posts my friend, I have been enjoying the responses very much.... 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
OZCUBAN Posted May 22, 2017 Share Posted May 22, 2017 Great Post Ray the hidden truths of our little Hobby,I care to not about pretension, or collectors they can fill up as many rooms or what ever vessel they choose after all it is there right. For me alas a lot of my favourite read mine ,cigars have now gone the way of the dodo, and for me they will be missed, and i curse myself for not having the wisdom to stock up when i should of ,but i didn't and that is the end of it opinions are like assholes everybody has one and not everyone is always right ,but for me the true wisdom is recognising true wisdom.... for the record mine are Punch RS#12/11 Punch super selection #1,2,3 as well as Partagas SDC #1,2,3 Almost all the Diplomatic line and the deus dioux of the current stuff my go to ones are the Monte petit Edmundo. BBF's and a handful more just my 2c worth 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
BrightonCorgi Posted May 22, 2017 Share Posted May 22, 2017 The more you learn about something, the more you understand about how much you do not know... 4 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Philc2001 Posted May 22, 2017 Share Posted May 22, 2017 13 hours ago, PigFish said: Understanding a cigar. Having read a comment about the Hoyo Coronas this morning got me to thinking… That’s bad, I know! The comment was, and I am paraphrasing, 'one of the few cigars in MRN’s book that got trashed.' I scoffed at that comment, and got to thinking about it some. Now that is collector logic for you!!! Thanks for reading. -Piggy I know the comment in question, and the very cigar it was about. I'm no expert by any means. At the height of my affair with cigars I smoked 8-10 cigars a week, which is nowhere near the caliber of what I would think would qualify as an expert. I don't really know what an cigar expert is, or what qualifies them to be experts. I'm not sure anyone can even begin to determine what the qualifications would be... is it the frequency of smoking cigars, the size of one's collection of cigars, the marketing knowledge of cigars, the history of cigars, the expertise of a manufacturer, tobacco blender, tobacco picker, ?? Over the years I have met with, drank with, broke bread with and smoked cigars with several prominent cigar industry titans in the NC cigar industry, and found them to be a tremendous fountain of knowledge about cigars, so perhaps this is the closest I have seen to what one might call an expert in the topic. Some of the most knowledgeable and respected men and women I have met are truly experienced in what goes into the making of cigars, from the process of selecting the seed variety, to planting, caring, harvesting, curing, blending and ultimately marketing their products. But even then, their expertise would be limited to a very narrow slice of a very vast and multi-faceted topic. 13 hours ago, PigFish said: So this brings me to the point. What is ‘your’ cigar, if you have one? How well do you know it? How long have you known it and what does it take in your mind to be an authority about it? Reading an 'expert's' tasting notes on hundreds of cigars got me thinking more and more about this. Who is kidding whom here? How many cigars must you consume in a day, a week, a year to be an expert? Can there really be an expert on all those cigars? There was a time when I was very narrowly focused on Punch cigars, and not the entire line, but 3-4 specific vitolas. I was extremely fond of two in particular, both in the Punch Super Selection line - the corona gorda SS#2, and the corona grande (lonsdale) SS#1. I purchased many 50 cabs of each, over a 3-5 year period, and for nearly a decade not a week went by that I didn't smoke at least 2 of each, and often much more than that. So if I ever had a "you cigar" I would say 800-1000 cigars of a specific vitola would be as close as I have ever been to having a "you cigar". In my opinion, that in no way qualifies me as an expert even in just one of these vitolas. Ironically, a close friend of my wife's father smoked one specific vitola of one specific cheap American brand for over 50 years. As I recall, he smoked at least 2/day for about 30 of those 50 years, and the funny thing is he wouldn't ever take any other cigar offered to him, no matter the origin or how expensive. I suppose he would probably be close to an expert in that cigar, wouldn't he? 13 hours ago, PigFish said: I proffer there are no expert smokers. Even with the limited catalogue today, one simply cannot consume enough of more than a few cigars to really know them intimately. Intimately, meaning having a continuing depth of knowledge about their past and their current trends… I agree! I know what formats, flavors and aromas I like in a cigar, and for me it has become an endless pursuit to find cigars that give me the fix I desire in a cigar that most closely resembles the characteristics I seek. The time I spend smoking (about 3-5 cigars a week) is precious to me, and I rather not waste it on cigars that don't satisfy me, so I try my best to smoke cigars I like. At any given moment I know there are about 3 or 4 vitolas in my humidor that I know will fill the bill, and I keep those stocked up. The rest are unfinished experiments. Thanks for the great post Ray! 3 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
RijkdeGooier Posted May 22, 2017 Share Posted May 22, 2017 Great posts in this thread. Even though I have been fortunate to walk many a tabacco field, to converse with many people in the industry who are very experienced in their slice of the tobacco portfolio (growing, selecting tobacco, cigar manufacture, cigar marketing and distribution), to smoke with some very, very serious cigar people and to have smoked all of the current portfolio and then some, all I have to say on this is that all these wonderful experiences have only shown me what little I know about cigars. Personally, I have come to the point where I just enjoy each cigar as an indivual experience. Although no expert, I do have a fondness for Monte2 of which I've smoked about 4 decades of production at a rate of at least one a week. Even with those cigars all I can really say is they've become much milder after 1998 and are currently found in two version, caramel cappuchino or caramel and black coffee, depending on strength. Although I can guess which is which most of the time, I wouldn't bet the house on it. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Troels Posted May 22, 2017 Share Posted May 22, 2017 Always great when experts add knowledge - be it historical or technical with regards to what can help my choose new boxes to my pleasure,its makes sense to me to listen across many voices, more than one guru, though some is better at describing their experience Since I started smoking cigars in 2011 partagas shorts has been the most frequent - even though its less than 200 sticks. Feel its "my cigar" nontheless - along with hupc, mag 46s and boli pc - of which Ive smoked even less 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
1LegLance Posted May 22, 2017 Share Posted May 22, 2017 I love that I have been smoking seriously for 29 with a rate of 1-5 sticks a day and I still don't know how much I don't know Like Ray-Pig I have a few sticks that I have smoked enough of over the years that I can ID them in a blind test, but far far more that I can't. Mostly it is because I don't have that sensitive a pallette and I am comfortable with just liking something now knowing full well that the next stick from that box might taste soo different (remember they are mixed on the sorting table). More than anything I miss flavor profiles that went with certain sizes. For me a lonsdale/dalia was often my favorite in a marca. I know a ton about HOW a cigar is made, HOW it should be stored, cut, lit, and smoked....but how it taste is such an individual thing I know I am no expert. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Popular Post CaptainQuintero Posted May 22, 2017 Popular Post Share Posted May 22, 2017 I've been pondering this one. I think my stance is that to be an expert in this context (and probably others), it has nothing to do with knowledge but passion. I started off with cigars around a decade ago and tried many, then I came across the Quintero Panetela and that was it for me. On paper it shouldn't; cheap and cheerful, an economy cigar, but it had everything I liked in a cigar: size, sweet, hay, aroma, everything was just right. I tried the rest of the marca but nothing matched up what I wanted in a cigar than the Panetela. Whenever I think about then I get a little giddy with nostalgia. I've smoked many premium cigars and enjoy them a lot. The Monte no.3 and QdO Corona probably being my favourites. But I have a passion for that cheap little Panetela still, even after taking a few years away experimenting with other cigars. In fact if anything it's made me realise I didn't really need to go looking for something else. I don't know which farms or harvests produce the best versions, and can't really remember much of the history of the brand. But if someone wanted to know why to smoke one, I could tell them why far better than someone who simply knew all the literature about it. Passion is my passion, I love seeing it in others and love passing it on. I think being a part of those exchanges makes you an expert. 5 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
stogieluver Posted May 22, 2017 Share Posted May 22, 2017 Great post, Ray. I must admit I was actually able to comprehend and fully understand this particular post. I don't have "a" cigar. I love just about all CC's I've tried, with a few exceptions, and I haven't zero'd in on just one particular marca/vitola. I think the only cigar experts who truly know a cigar are the blenders and testers of a particular vitola. Thanks for, once again, giving us all something to ponder and discuss. I fully agree with @BrightonCorgi, that the more you learn about something, the more you realize how much you don't know. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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