What Cigar Are You Smoking? 2025

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There was a Vinyl Record show a few towns over today. My eldest and I visited and got a good collection of records.
I was looking for Indian and there wasn’t any but we got a fantastic collection of popular rock.

I deliberately bought pressings from 1990 or earlier to see how they differ from current pressings.
 

CPT

Might Stick Around
Oct 2, 2010
82
1,497
73
Westerville, Ohio
www.treneff.com
Yeah they really liked that one!

How would you rate it?

Visited family in WI today- Garmirian PC on the ride out, Eiroa Classic 448 for the ride home

View attachment 431204
BenMN: A caveat regarding my comments. When I smoke a cigar for the first time, I always prefer having it indoors at the cigar lounge I frequent; the flavors and burn line note are richer for me experienced indoors. I smoked the My Father Blue Toro on my deck with some wind effect and chilly temperatures. I also smoked a Padron 1926 first which could have impacted my perception of the flavor notes of the milder second cigar. I intend to smoke the cigar again at my lounge for a better evaluation.

The construction was very good, with a consistently even burnline and an open--but not too open--draw. It is an easy cigar to smoke.

The predominate flavor throughout was the cedar-foward Connecticut Broadleaf Rosato wrapper. It also had some secondary Maduro notes from the wrapper and some of the Honduran berry flavors from the binder/filler.

In all, a very enjoyable cigar. The price point at $12 is excellent value. I gave it an 8--a definite recommend--but plan to revisit the Lizard podcast at the second smoking as their palates usually align pretty well with mine. I may have missed something with the smoking environment outside. (Final note: the size of the Blue Toro would keep me from buying a box as I prefer smaller ring gauges. The Toro was 6 x 54 with a slight box press.)
 

BenMN

Lifer
Jun 21, 2023
3,299
52,588
St. Paul, MN
BenMN: A caveat regarding my comments. When I smoke a cigar for the first time, I always prefer having it indoors at the cigar lounge I frequent; the flavors and burn line note are richer for me experienced indoors. I smoked the My Father Blue Toro on my deck with some wind effect and chilly temperatures. I also smoked a Padron 1926 first which could have impacted my perception of the flavor notes of the milder second cigar. I intend to smoke the cigar again at my lounge for a better evaluation.

The construction was very good, with a consistently even burnline and an open--but not too open--draw. It is an easy cigar to smoke.

The predominate flavor throughout was the cedar-foward Connecticut Broadleaf Rosato wrapper. It also had some secondary Maduro notes from the wrapper and some of the Honduran berry flavors from the binder/filler.

In all, a very enjoyable cigar. The price point at $12 is excellent value. I gave it an 8--a definite recommend--but plan to revisit the Lizard podcast at the second smoking as their palates usually align pretty well with mine. I may have missed something with the smoking environment outside. (Final note: the size of the Blue Toro would keep me from buying a box as I prefer smaller ring gauges. The Toro was 6 x 54 with a slight box press.)
Thanks for expanding, that all makes sense

I may try one myself, but I too prefer smaller RG

Speaking of that, a Maduro Short Story for me before I finish some yard work

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