SteveAS
Practically Family
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rmrdaddy said:fftopic:
Off the top of my head, I believe that Party Corona is discontinued, and with 8 years of age, I'm not surprised it was very good.
Right you are, sir. This one was from a cabinet (of 50 cigars); I believe the cabinet version was discontinued in 2002, while the dress box version was made as recently as 2006. To my palate, which admittedly generally favors younger cigars, the 2006s are even better than the 2002s.
rmrdaddy said:Even more fftopic:
For those not in the know, Roldolfo Taboada was a torcedor in the La Corona cigar factory in Cuba. He was elevated to the highest level, "Master Torcedor" at age 30 with fifteen years of rolling cigars under his belt, a title which is typically only bestowed upon torcedors with 25 years of experience or more. He currently works on a bit of a free-lance basis, from what I understand. Travelling to La Casa Del Habano (LCDH) locations for rolling events. He rolls cigars at these events which the shop owers sell. I've never gotten a very clear answer to where the tobacco comes from for these rolling expositions, so while not trying to take anything away from the Masters' art, any cigar is only as good as its' components and how smoker is able to experience those components.
You are right again, and thanks for elaborating on my admittedly opaque post. I don't think anyone outside Cuba really know where the travelling master rollers get their tobacco when they roll at LCDHs outside Cuba. When they're rolling inside Cuba, most of them get their tobacco from the same place as the production cigars at the factories where they roll. The master rollers' cigars are usually thought to be better than the regular production cigars because the master rollers are also skilled blenders and they might be able to select the best tobacco coming into the factory.
The particular Toboada cigar I smoked this past weekend was obtained by "a friend" who visited Toboada at the (old) La Corona factory in Havana in April 2004. Compared to the cigars I've smoked, which were sold by, say, the LCDH in Tijuana and sold as Toboada-rolled cigars, these are unquestionably better.