Cigars: Giving Cigars as a Gift

Posted on January 04 2010 at 09:14 AM

By Nicholas Tan

Is there a cigar aficionado on your gift list? Wondering how to choose a decent cigar for a friend or loved one? Even if you know nothing about cigars or choosing a good cigar, just learning a few basics can help you sniff out (sometimes literally) a good cigar to give to a friend.

Fortunately, cigars have now entered the mainstream. Once the symbol of the rich and powerful, it's easier than ever for just about anyone to purchase a good cigar. Of course, you probably won't be able to buy your friend a box of top-tier Cuban cigars, but you can definitely buy them a good quality cigar that will put a smile on their face.

First, visit your local tobacconist or specialty smoke shop for the best quality and widest selection. Avoid 'drugstore' cigars. Although they may be inexpensive and convenient to purchase, drugstore cigars are usually filled with preservatives and generally of poorer quality. They may contain, at minimum, saltpeter, paper, glycerin, and other preservatives and irritants. You should make sure that the cigars you purchase are made of 100% tobacco. If you have any questions regarding the cigars ingredients, ask the salesperson. An experienced and knowledgeable sales clerk will be able to tell you extensive information about the ingredients.

Your local tobacco shop is a good place to shop because you will generally be allowed to smell and touch the cigars. Squeeze the cigar gently. A good quality cigar will give a little when squeezed. The cigar should be firm, with no excessively soft or hard spots. Never buy a lumpy cigar. Look at the wrapper. If you notice any drying or discoloration, best not to buy it. Ideally, the wrapper should be tight and smooth. Inspect the color of the tobacco to make sure it is even. Do this by inspecting the end of the cigar. Some color variation is normal, but if the color changes abruptly, chances are the cigar was not rolled properly. A cigar that is not rolled properly may result in an uneven burning and unpleasant odors.

If you're not sure how much your friend smokes, choose a longer cigar. Longer cigars tend to have a 'cooler' taste—an excellent choice for beginners. If you know your friend is an experienced and regular smoker, choose a cigar that is greater in diameter. These cigars tend to have a richer flavor that experienced smokers will appreciate.

Source: http://www.articlesbase.com

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The Art of Smoking a Pipe

Posted on December 20 2009 at 11:50 PM

By Jim Bennington

Smoking a pipe is a time to relax, to put aside the day’s hectic pace. Because we need to pay attention to what the tobacco is doing inside the bowl we shouldn’t do much of anything else except maybe take a walk or sit on the porch. Driving or any other mechanical work which needs our undivided attention should not be done while we are smoking.

Learning how to pack, to light and smoke a pipe is an ability that needs to be developed. Getting it right the first time is nearly impossible. And, in order to get good at it the novice must be patient and practice. Making mistakes is part of the learning process.

Guide to Smoking a Pipe Correctly


1. Start with a clean pipe - Before you reach for your tobacco make sure your pipe is dry and free of any dottle ( left-over tobacco and ashes ). If your pipe is not clean, your tobacco will have a bitter taste and the aroma will not be attractive.

2. Prepare your tobacco - Take a large pinch of tobacco and place it on a paper towel. If it has knots or clumps remove them. If it is too moist, let it sit for a few minutes so it will dry a bit.

3. Fill your bowl - The first pinch should be loose. Tamp it lightly. If you tamp it too hard you will end up with a rock and it will not draw. Try drawing, if you can’t, start over. The second pinch tamp it a little more firmly and so on and so forth until your pipe is filled. Remember that when you tamp the second pinch your are re-tamping the ones below. A last draw before lighting, if there is no resistance, you are good to go.

4. Light your pipe - Do not use a torch lighter. You will burn the wood and that will leave an ugly burn mark which might not be removed. Use matches or a regular butane lighter with a flame adjusted for pipes. Light the tobacco in a circular motion. At this point draw lightly, most tobaccos and particularly the longer cuts, uncurl and loosen when they are lit for the first time. Tamp it lightly, very lightly and re light it if it goes out. If the smoke is too hot you are puffing too fast. Slow down and take your time, you will find your own rhythm. In case your pipe gets too wet run a pipe cleaner, without taking the pipe apart, just push it in, leave it in for a minute and pull it out.

At this point you know the basics to start enjoying your new pipe and tobacco. Enjoy.

Jim Bennington has been in the pipe and cigar business for over 20 years in Boca Raton, FL . At www.bocabenningtons.com you will find many other articles concerning the pipe and the cigar.

Source: http://www.articlesbase.com

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Around the World in Three Tobaccos

Posted on June 09 2009 at 04:26 AM

By Garson Smart

Many of us live, and think, as if "nature" and "culture" were separate things, kept apart by a porous but clear boundary. In fact, it's usually hard to tell where one ends and the other begins. (Think of the ways most of us encounter nature-we visit "forest preserves" created, and bounded, by an act of local government.)

For a farther-reaching example, you could hardly do better than to examine the history of tobacco-a plant that sometimes assumes new characteristics depending on the soil where it's planted. Consider just one strain of this ubiquitous, lucrative crop: White Burley. The second-most-popular pipe tobacco now sold, White Burley arose solely because its ancestor, Red Burley tobacco, was just as popular and widely-used during the nineteenth-century. Cincinnati farmer George Webb found that a strange, whitish, slightly weaker-tasting strain of Red Burley was growing in his tobacco patch. He began selling it at local fairs and markets as a curiosity-like a two-headed calf at a state fair-but smokers found that they enjoyed this whitish mutant version of Red Burley more than the parent crop, leading to the widespread cultivation-and eventual dominance-of White Burley. Meanwhile, poor Red Burley went extinct because no one cultivated it anymore. You could call this "natural selection," but it's a clear result of cultural forces as well-the preference for a lighter, airier flavor of tobacco, good marketing, etc. Nature provides the raw material, culture adapts it, and the history of plant biology moves on.

The history of this uniquely valuable crop goes back farther than we can trace; it may have been growing in the Americas eight thousand years ago, and archaeologists have found evidence (from engravings on vases and other items) that people have smoked it for, at least, the past four millennia. But tobacco smoking reached the rest of the world as a result of late-medieval/early-modern exploration-and of colonialism. Sailors on Columbus's expedition noticed it among indigenous natives of what would later become Cuba. Some of the finest tobacco has always, historically speaking, grown there, especially in the Pinar del RĂ­o province. Explorers brought samples of tobacco all over the world. From the beginning of the modern era, then, tobacco's evolution was linked to its commercial possibilities.

For example, tobacco smoking seems so much a part of the culture of the Middle East-travel to Egypt sometime, and you'll smell the richly aromatic strain known today as "oriental" tobacco (despite the political incorrectness of that word). Surprisingly, that smell wasn't always a feature of Arab culture-it wasn't always hanging in the air at the soukh (outdoor market) and the coffeehouse. Tobacco spread from Europe in the aftermath of Columbus's expedition/conquest, and set down roots in the Middle East very quickly-some of these cultures had already given a place to cannabis smoking in their rituals, so the concept wasn't new. This kind of tobacco, rich and almost fruity, is often used in the West in pipes and in cigarettes, but smoking it from a hookah is a special treat.

Brightleaf tobacco-also known as "Virginia tobacco" despite it originating in North Carolina-is another instance. Early in the nineteenth century, smokers already clamored for a milder-flavored tobacco than what was generally grown in the South; the demand for another strain existed. In 1839, North Carolina farmer Abisha Slade sought to fulfill this demand by planting a gold-leaf tobacco plant in sandy soil. This, however, wasn't enough; the plants didn't seem usable, until a slave of Slade's, named Stephen, used charcoal to restart a curing fire that had gone out. The sudden heat turned the leaves yellow-and gave birth to the idea of heat-curing plants with charcoal. Stephen and Slade's discovery had dramatic consequences-not only did it fulfill a demand for a softer-tasting smoke, but it gave Virginia farmers a way to turn the infertile Appalachian piedmont region into a goldmine. The Civil War only increased the popularity of Brightleaf, since Union soldiers traveling through the area enjoyed the taste. Thus, despite its origins in North Carolina, this still-popular tobacco clearly deserves the name "Virginia."

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.
Source: http://www.isnare.com

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