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Biography
Other usesA cigar is a tightly-rolled bundle of dried and fermented tobacco that is ignited so that its smoke may be drawn into the mouth. Cigar tobacco is grown in significant quantities in Brazil , Cameroon , Cuba , the Dominican Republic , Honduras , Indonesia , Mexico , Nicaragua , the Philippines , and the Eastern United States .
Etymology
The word "cigar" originated from sikar , the Yucatec Mayan word for smoking, which became cigarro in Spanish, probably from the Mayan sikar ("to smoke rolled tobacco leaves" & ndash; from sik , "tobacco;") or from the Spanish word cigarra ("grasshopper"). However, the word itself, and variations on it, did not come into general use until 1730. New names for cigars include "Jules", "Havana", "Vitole" and "Puro".cite web|url= http://www.etymonline.com/index.php? search=cigar& searchmode=none |title=Online Etymology Dictionary |publisher=Etymonline.com |date= |accessdate=2010-10-25
History
Explorer Christopher Columbus is generally credited with the introduction of tobacco to Europe. Two of Columbus's crewmen during his 1492 journey, Rodrigo de Jerez and Luis de Torres , are said to have encountered tobacco for the first time on the island of Hispaniola , when natives presented them with dry leaves that spread a peculiar fragrance. Tobacco was widely diffused among all of the islands of the Caribbean and therefore they again encountered it in Cuba where Columbus and his men had settled.cite journal |author=Van Lancker JL |title=Smoking and disease |journal=NIDA Res Monogr |issue=17 |pages=230–88 |year=1977 |pmid=417256 |url= http://nida.nih.gov/pdf/monographs/17.pdf#page=243 |format=PDF His sailors reported that the Taínos on the island of Cuba smoked a primitive form of cigar, with twisted, dried tobacco leaves rolled in other leaves such as palm or plantain.
In due course, Spanish and other European sailors adopted the hobby of smoking rolls of leaves, as did the Conquistador s, and smoking primitive cigars spread to Spain and Portugal and eventually France, most probably through Jean Nicot , the French ambassador to Portugal, who gave his name to nicotine . Later, the hobby spread to Italy and, after Sir Walter Raleigh 's voyages to the Americas, to Britain. Smoking became familiar throughout Europe—in pipes in Britain—by the mid-16th century and, half a century later, tobacco started to be grown commercially in America. Tobacco was originally thought to have medicinal qualities, but there were some who considered it evil. It was denounced by Philip II of Spain , and James I of England .cite web|url= http://www.cigars-review.org/history.htm|title=A bit of History|publisher=Cigars Review|accessdate=8 April 2011
Around 1592, the Spanish galleon San Clemente brought 50 kilograms (110& nbsp;lb) of tobacco seed to the Philippines over the Acapulco-Manila trade route. The seed was then distributed among the Roman Catholic missionaries, where the clerics found excellent climates and soils for growing high-quality tobacco on Philippine soil.
In the 19th century, cigar smoking was common, while cigarette s were still comparatively rare. In the early 20th century, Rudyard Kipling wrote his famous smoking poem, " The Betrothed (Kipling poem)|The Betrothed ." The cigar business was an important industry, and factories employed many people before mechanized manufacturing of cigars became practical. In 1869, Spanish cigar manufacturer Vicente Martinez Ybor moved his Principe de Gales (Prince of Wales) operations from the important cigar manufacturing center of Havana, Cuba to Key West, Florida to escape the turmoil of the Ten Years' War . Other manufacturers followed, and Key West became another important cigar manufacturing center. In 1885, Ybor moved again, buying land near the then-small city of Tampa, Florida and building the largest cigar factory in the world at the time http://www.floridastateparks.org/history/parkhistory.cfm? parkid=142 Ybor City Museum State Park in the new company town of History of Ybor City|Ybor City . Friendly rival and Flor de Sánchez y Haya owner Ignacio Haya built his own factory nearby in the same year, and many other cigar manufacturers soon followed, especially after an 1886 fire that gutted much of Key West. Thousands of Cuban-American|Cuban and Spanish-American|Spanish tabaqueros came to the area from Key West, Cuba and New York to produce hundreds of millions of cigars annually. Local output peaked in 1929, when workers in Ybor City and West Tampa rolled over 500,000,000 "clear Havana" cigars, earning the town the nickname "Cigar Capital of the World".cite book | last = Ingalls | first = Robert | title = Tampa Cigar Workers: A Pictorial History | publisher = University Press of Florida | location = Gainesville, Florida | year = 2003 | isbn = 0-8130-2602-4 Cite video | people = Jamison, Gayla (Producer, Director, Writer) | title = Living in America: 100 Years of Ybor City | medium = video documentary | publisher = Lightfoot Films, Inc. | location = Tampa, Fl | date = 1987cite book | ref=harv | last = Lastra | first = Frank | title = Ybor City: The Making of a Landmark Town | publisher = University of Tampa Press | year = 2006 | isbn = 1-59732-003-X
In New York, cigars were made by rollers working in their own homes. It was reported that as of 1883, cigars were being manufactured in 127 apartment houses in New York, employing 1,962 families and 7,924 individuals. A state statute banning the practice, passed late that year at the urging of trade unions on the basis that the practice suppressed wages, was ruled unconstitutional less than four months later. The industry, which had relocated to Brooklyn and other places on Long Island while the law was in effect, then returned to New York.cite web|url= http://query.nytimes.com/mem/archive-free/pdf? _r=1& res=9F0CE7DF1238E033A25753C3A9679C94659FD7CF |title="Tenement cigar making", '& #39;New York Times'& #39; (January 30, 1884) |publisher=New York Times |date= |accessdate=2010-10-25
As of 1905, there were 80,000 cigar-making operations in the United States, most of them small, family-operated shops where cigars were rolled and sold immediately.cite web|url= http://www.cigaraficionado.com/Cigar/CA_Archives/CA_Show_Article/0,2322,803,00.html |title=Frank, Michael "Wise old hands", '& #39;Cigar Aficionado'& #39; (Winter 1993) |publisher=Cigaraficionado.com |date=1993-12-01 |accessdate=2010-10-25 While most cigars are now made by machine, some, as a matter of prestige and quality, are still rolled by hand. This is especially true in Central America and Cuba, as well as in small chinchales found in virtually every sizable city in the United States. Boxes of hand-rolled cigars bear the phrase totalmente a mano (totally by hand) or hecho a mano (made by hand). These premium hand-rolled cigars are significantly different than the machine-made cigars sold in packs at drugstores or gas stations. Since the 1990s and onwards, this has led to severe contention between producers and aficionados of premium hand made cigars and cigarette manufacturing companies that create machine made, chemically formulated/altered products resembling cigars, and subsequently labeled as cigars.
Historical figures
Edward VII of the United Kingdom|King Edward VII enjoyed smoking cigarettes and cigars, much to the chagrin of his mother, Victoria of the United Kingdom|Queen Victoria . After her death, legend has it, King Edward said to his male guests at the end of a dinner party, "Gentlemen, you may smoke." In his name, a line of inexpensive American cigars has long been named King Edward.
U.S. President Ulysses S. Grant smoked cigars heavily, an estimated up to 12 a day. In late 1884, Grant was diagnosed with an oral cancer consisting of malignant squamous cell carcinoma . With his health failing, Grant devoted his time to his autobiography; five days after finishing it, he became the only U.S. president to die of cancer.
Sigmund Freud , the founder of Psychoanalysis , smoked 20 cigars a day, despite health warnings from colleagues.cite journal |author= Hafner JW, Sturgis EM |title= The famous faces with oral cavity and pharyngeal cancer |journal= Tex Dent J |volume=125 |issue=5 |pages=410–29 |year=2008 |pmid=18561797 |url= http://doep.org/ODU2008.pdf |format=PDF |accessdate=2009-06-05Dead link|date=September 2010|bot=H3llBot Because of his frequent references to phallic symbolism, it is often claimed that his colleagues challenged him on the "phallic" shape of the cigar. Freud is supposed to have replied "sometimes a cigar is just a cigar," however, there are no records of such a conversation ever having taken place.Attributed in Bartlett, Familiar Quotations 15th Ed. 679 Initially concealing a cancerous growth in his mouth in 1923, Freud was eventually diagnosed with the same cancer as Grant's. Despite over 30 surgeries, and complications ranging from intense pain to insects infesting dead skin cells around the cancer, Freud smoked cigars until his life ended. Freud died at age 83 in a morphine-induced coma to relieve the pain from his cancer.
Winston Churchill , who has been credited with the practice of dunking a cigar in port wine or brandy ,cite web |url= http://www.onlinehavanacigars.com/pages/cigarTips.htm |title= Cigar Tips |author=Online Havana Cigars|year=2008 |accessdate=2008-12-09 was rarely seen without a cigar during his time as Britain's wartime leader, so much so that a large cigar size was named in his honour.
Fidel Castro and his comrade Che Guevera were often seen smoking a cigar during the early days of the Cuban Revolution . But Castro has claimed to have given up smoking in the early 1980s as part of a campaign to encourage the Cuban population to smoke less on health grounds.cite book |chapter= Tobacco in the Contrapunteo : Ortiz and the Havana cigar |author= Stubbs J | title= Cuban Counterpoints: the Legacy of Fernando Ortiz |editor= Font MA, Quiroz AW (eds.) |publisher=Lexington |year=2005 |isbn=978-0-7391-0968-7 |pages=105–24 Many other celebrities were well-known cigar smokers, including Groucho Marx , George Burns , Mark Twain , Jack Benny , Milton Berle , Rush Limbaugh , Ernie Kovacs and Bill Cosby .cite journal |journal=Cigar Aficionado |date= Nov/Dec 1999 |url= http://www.cigaraficionado.com/Cigar/CA_Archives/CA_Show_Article/0,2322,1140,00.html |title= The top 100 cigar smokers of the twentieth century
Rudyard Kipling said in his poem " Wikisource:The Betrothed (Kipling)|The Betrothed ", "And a woman is only a woman, but a good cigar is a smoke."
Apart from certain forms of heavily cured and strong snuff (tobacco)|snuff , the cigar is the most potent form of self-dosing with tobacco, it has long had associations of being a male rite of passage, as it may have had during the pre-Columbian era in America. Its fumes and rituals have in American and European cultures established a "men's hut"; in the 19th century, men would retire to the "smoking room" after dinner to discuss serious issues.
Manufacture
Unreferenced section|date=July 2009 Tobacco leaves are harvested and aged using a process that combines use of heat and shade to reduce sugar and water content without causing the large leaves to rot. This first part of the process, called curing of tobacco|curing , takes between 25 and 45 days and varies substantially based upon climatic conditions as well as the construction of sheds or barns used to store harvested tobacco. The curing process is manipulated based upon the type of tobacco, and the desired color of the leaf. The second part of the process, called fermentation (biochemistry)|fermentation , is carried out under conditions designed to help the leaf dry slowly. Temperature and humidity are controlled to ensure that the leaf continues to ferment, without rotting or disintegrating. This is where the flavor, burning, and aroma characteristics are primarily brought out in the leaf. Once the leaves have aged properly, they are sorted for use as filler or wrapper based upon their appearance and overall quality. During this process, the leaves are continually moistened and handled carefully to ensure each leaf is best used according to its individual qualities. The leaf will continue to be baled, inspected, un-baled, re-inspected, and baled again repeatedly as it continues its aging cycle. When the leaf has matured according to the manufacturer's specifications, it will be used in the production of a cigar.
Quality cigars are still hand-made. An experienced cigar-roller can produce hundreds of very good, nearly identical, cigars per day. The rollers keep the tobacco moist — especially the wrapper — and use specially designed crescent-shaped knives, called chavetas , to form the filler and wrapper leaves quickly and accurately. Once rolled, the cigars are stored in wooden forms as they dry, in which their uncapped ends are cut to a uniform size. From this stage, the cigar is a complete product that can be "laid down" and aged for decades if kept as close to 21°C (70°F), and 70% relative humidity , as the environment will allow. Once cigars have been purchased, proper storage is usually accomplished by keeping the cigars in a specialized wooden box, or humidor , where conditions can be carefully controlled for long periods of time. Even if a cigar becomes dry, it can be successfully re-humidified so long as it has not been handled carelessly and done so gradually. The loss of original tobacco oils, however, will greatly affect the taste.
Some cigars, especially premium brands, use different varieties of tobacco for the filler and the wrapper. Long filler cigars are a far higher quality of cigar, using long leaves throughout. These cigars also use a third variety of tobacco leaf, called a "binder", between the filler and the outer wrapper. This permits the makers to use more delicate and attractive leaves as a wrapper. These high-quality cigars almost always blend varieties of tobacco. Even Cuban long-filler cigars will combine tobaccos from different parts of the island to incorporate several different flavors.
In low-grade and machine-made cigars , chopped tobacco leaves are used for the filler, and long leaves or a type of "paper" made from tobacco pulp is used for the wrapper which binds the cigar together. This alters the burning characteristics of the cigar, causing hand-made cigars to be sought-after.
Historically, a lector or reader was always employed to entertain cigar factory workers. This practice became obsolete once audio book s for portable music players became available, but it is still practiced in some Cuban factories. The name for the Montecristo (cigar brand)|Montecristo cigar brand may have arisen from this practice.
Dominant manufacturers
Two firms dominate the cigar industry. Altadis , the world's largest cigar producer, produces cigars in the United States, the Dominican Republic, and Honduras, and has a 50% stake in Corporación Habanos in Cuba. It also makes cigarettes. Swedish Match , the second largest producer, produces cigars in Honduras, Belgium, Germany, Indonesia, the United States, and the Dominican Republic; it also makes Chewing tobacco|chewing and pipe tobacco, snuff , lighter s, and matches . Other manufacturers include General Cigar Co. and the Oliva Cigar Co.
Families in the cigar industry
Importance-section|date=August 2010 Nearly all modern cigar makers are members of long-established cigar families, or purport to be http://www.skydancercigarettes.com/ The art and skill of hand-making premium cigars has been passed from generation to generation; families are often shown in many cigar advertisements and packaging cite web|url= http://www.cigaraficionado.com/Cigar/CA_Profiles/Cigar_Stars_Profile/0,2547,138,00.html |title=The Change at C.A.O. & #124; Cigar Stars |publisher=Cigar Aficionado |date=2004-04-01 |accessdate=2010-10-25
In 1992, Cigar Aficionado magazine created the "Cigar Hall of Fame" and recognized the following six individuals:cite web|url= http://www.cigaraficionado.com/Cigar/CA_Archives/CA_Show_Article/0,2322,1320,00.html |title=Cigar Aficionado Magazine Cigar Hall of Fame |publisher=Cigaraficionado.com |date=2002-12-01 |accessdate=2010-10-25
Edgar M. Cullman, Chairman, General Cigar Company, New York, United States
Davidoff|Zino Davidoff , Founder, Davidoff et Cie., Geneva , Switzerland
Carlos Fuente, Sr., Chairman, Tabacalera A. Fuente y Cia., Santiago de los Caballeros , Dominican Republic
Frank Llaneza , Chairman, Villazon & Co., Tampa, Florida , United States
Stanford J. Newman, Chairman, J.C. Newman Cigar Company , Tampa, Florida, United States
Ángel Oliva, Sr. (founder); Oliva Tobacco Co., Tampa, Florida, United States
Perhaps the best-known cigar family in the world is the Arturo Fuente (cigar brand)|Arturo Fuente family. Now led by father and son Carlos Fuente, Sr. and Jr. The Fuente family has been rolling their Arturo Fuente and Montesino cigars since 1912.Citation needed|date=July 2009 The release of the Fuente Fuente OpusX in 1995 heralded the first quality wrapper grown in the Dominican Republic.Citation needed|date=July 2009 The oldest Dominican Republic cigar maker is the León family, who have been making their León Jimenes and La Aurora cigars on the island since 1905.Citation needed|date=July 2009 Not only are premium cigar-makers typically families, but so are those who grow the premium cigar tobacco.Citation needed|date=July 2009 The Oliva family has been growing cigar tobacco since 1934 and their family's tobacco is found in nearly every major cigar brand sold on the US market.Citation needed|date=July 2009 Some families, such as the well-known Padrons, have crossed over from tobacco growing to cigar making.Citation needed|date=July 2009 While the Padron family has been growing tobacco since the 1850s, they began making cigars that bear their family's name in 1964.Citation needed|date=July 2009 Like the Padrons, the Carlos Torano family first began growing tobacco in 1916 before they started rolling their own family's brands, which also bear the family name, in the 1990s.Citation needed|date=July 2009 Families are such an important part of the premium cigar industry that the term "cigar family" is a registered trademark of the Arturo Fuente and J.C. Newman families, used to distinguish and identify their families, premium cigar brands, and charitable foundation.Citation needed|date=July 2009 Even the premium cigars made by the cigar industry's two corporate conglomerates, Altadis and Swedish Match, are overseen by members of two cigar families, Altadis' Benjamin Menendez and Swedish Match's Ernesto Perez-Carrillo .Citation needed|date=July 2009
Marketing and distribution
Pure tobacco, hand rolled cigars are marketed via advertisements, product placement in movies and other media, sporting events, cigar-friendly magazines such as Cigar Aficionado , and cigar dinners. Since hand made cigars are a premium product with a hefty price, advertisements often include depictions of affluence , sensual imagery, and explicit or implied celebrity endorsement .cite journal |journal=JAMA |year=2000 |volume=284 |issue=6 |pages=735–40 |title= Health risks associated with cigar smoking |author= Baker F, Ainsworth SR, Dye JT et al. |pmid=10927783 |doi=10.1001/jama.284.6.735
Cigar Aficionado , launched in 1992, was credited both by cigar companies and readers in transforming the U.S. cigar smoking market from a small blue-collar segment to an upscale market promoted in places like luxury hotels and golf courses. The magazine presents cigars as symbols of a successful lifestyle, and is a major conduit of advertisements that do not conform to the tobacco industry's voluntary advertisement restrictions since 1965, such as a restriction not to associate smoking with glamour. The magazine also presents pro-smoking arguments at length, and argues that cigars are safer than cigarettes, since they don't have the thousands of chemical additives that cigarette manufactures add to the cutting floor scraps of tobacco used as cigarette filler. The publication also presents arguments that risks are a part of daily life and that (contrary to the evidence discussed in #Heatlh effects|Health effects ) cigar smoking has health benefits, that moderation eliminates most or all health risk, and that cigar smokers live to old age, that health research is flawed, and that several health-research results support claims of safety.cite journal |author= DeSantis AD, Morgan SE |title=Sometimes a cigar magazine is more than just a cigar magazine: pro-smoking arguments in Cigar Aficionado , 1992–2000 |journal= Health Commun |volume=15 |issue=4 |pages=457–80 |year=2003 |pmid=14557079 |doi=10.1207/S15327027HC1504_05 Like its competitor Smoke , Cigar Aficionado differs from marketing vehicles used for other tobacco products in that it makes cigars the focus of the entire magazine, creating a symbiosis between product and lifestyle.cite journal |author= Wenger LD, Malone RE, George A, Bero LA |title= Cigar magazines: using tobacco to sell a lifestyle |journal= Tob Control |volume=10 |issue=3 |pages=279–84 |year=2001 |pmid=11544394 |pmc=1747592 |doi=10.1136/tc.10.3.279
In the U.S., cigars are exempt from many of the marketing regulations that govern cigarettes. For example, the Public Health Cigarette Smoking Act of 1970 exempted cigars from its advertising ban, and cigar ads, unlike cigarette ads, need not mention health risks. As of 2007, cigars were taxed far less than cigarettes, so much so that in many U.S. states, a pack of #Little cigars|little cigars cost less than half as much as a pack of cigarettes. It is illegal for minors to purchase cigars and other tobacco products in the U.S., but laws are unevenly enforced: a 2000 study found that three-quarters of Internet cigar marketing sites allowed minors to purchase cigars.cite journal |journal= Am J Public Health |year=2000 |volume=90 |issue=5 |pages=790–2 |title= Cigars, youth, and the Internet link |author= Malone RE, Bero LA |pmid=10800432 |url= http://www.ajph.org/cgi/reprint/90/5/790.pdf |format=PDF |doi= 10.2105/AJPH.90.5.790 |pmc= 1446234
Inexpensive, non-pure cigars are sold in convenience store s, grocery stores, and pharmacies, mostly as self-serve items. Premium cigars are sold in tobacconist s, cigar bar s, and other specialized establishments.cite book |title= Cigars: Health Effects and Trends |editor= Shopland DR, Burns DM, Hoffman D, Cummings KM, Amacher RH (eds.) |author= Slade J |chapter= Marketing and promotion of cigars |chapterurl= http://cancercontrol.cancer.gov/tcrb/monographs/9/m9_7.PDF |format=PDF |accessdate=2008-12-11 |publisher= National Cancer Institute |series= Smoking and Tobacco Control Monograph No. 9 |year=1998 |pages=195–219 Some cigar stores are part of Chain store|chain s, which have varied in size: in the U.S., United Cigar Stores was one of only three outstanding examples of national chains in the early 1920s, the others being Great Atlantic and Pacific Tea Company|A& amp;P and F. W. Woolworth Company|Woolworth's .cite book |title= Chain Stores: Their Management and Operation |author= Hayward WS, White P, Fleek HS, Mac Intyre H |publisher= McGraw-Hill |location=New York |year=1922 |oclc=255149441 |chapter= The chain store field |pages=16–31 Non-traditional outlets for cigars include hotel shops, restaurants, vending machines and the Internet.
Composition
Cigars are composed of three types of tobacco leaves, whose variations determine smoking and flavor characteristics:
Wrappers
A cigar's outermost leaves, or wrapper, come from the widest part of the plant. The wrapper determines much of the cigar's character and flavor, and as such its color is often used to describe the cigar as a whole. Over 100 wrapper shades are identified by manufacturers, but the seven most common classifications are as follows, from lightest to darkest:Perelman, Richard, ''Perelman's Pocket Cyclopedia of Cigars Perelman, Pioneer & Co. ISBN 18932730509Please check ISBN|reason=Invalid length. (2004) p.12
Color
Description
Double Claro
very light, slightly greenish (also called Candela , American Market Selection or jade ); achieved by picking leaves before maturity and drying quickly, the color coming from retained green chlorophyll ; formerly popular, now rare.
Claro
very light tan or yellowish. Indicative of shade-grown tobacco.
Colorado Claro
medium brown, includes Natural and English Market Selection
Colorado
Distinctive reddish-brown (also called Rosado or Corojo )
Colorado Maduro
darker brown; often associated with African wrapper from Cameroon, and Honduran or Nicaraguan grown wrapper from Cuban seed.
Maduro
Very dark brown or black; primarily grown in Connecticut, Mexico, Nicaragua and Brazil.
Oscuro
Very black, (also called Double Maduro ), often oily in appearance; has become more popular in the 2000s; mainly grown in Cuba, Nicaragua, Brazil, Mexico, and Connecticut , USA.
Some manufacturers use an alternate designation:
Designation
Acronym
Description
American Market Selection
AMS
synonymous with Double Claro
English Market Selection
EMS
typically Colorado Claro, but can refer to any color stronger than Double Claro but milder than Maduro
Spanish Market Selection
SMS
either of the two darkest colors, Maduro and Oscuro
In general, dark wrappers add a touch of sweetness, while light ones add a hint of dryness to the taste.
Fillers
The majority of a cigar is made up of fillers , wrapped-up bunches of leaves inside the wrapper. Fillers of various strengths are usually blended to produce desired cigar flavors. In the cigar industry this is referred to as a "blend". Many cigar manufacturers pride themselves in constructing the perfect blend(s) that will give the smoker the most enjoyment. The more oils present in the tobacco leaf, the stronger (less dry) the filler. Types range from the minimally flavored Volado taken from the bottom of the plant, through the light-flavored Seco (dry) taken from the middle of the plant, to the strong Ligero from the upper leaves exposed to the most sunlight. Fatter cigars of larger #Size and shape|gauge hold more filler, with greater potential to provide a full body and complex flavor. However, this effect can be diminished because of the generally poorer burn characteristics of thicker cigars (greater than 50 ring gauge), and the fact that these cigars burn cooler. This can prevent the full spectrum of flavors from being easily detectable. When used, Ligero is always folded into the middle of the filler because it burns slowly.
Fillers can be either long or short; long filler uses whole leaves and is of a better quality, while short filler, also called "mixed", uses chopped leaves, stems, and other bits. Recently some manufacturers have created what they term "medium filler" cigars. They use larger pieces of leaf than short filler without stems, and are of better quality than short filler cigars. Short filler cigars are easy to identify when smoked since they often burn hotter and tend to release bits of leaf into the smoker's mouth. Long filled cigars of high quality should burn evenly and consistently. Also available is a filler called "sandwich" (sometimes "Cuban sandwich") which is a cigar made by rolling short leaf inside long outer leaf. If a cigar is completely constructed (filler, binder and wrapper) of tobacco from only one country, it is referred to in the cigar industry as a "puro" which in Spanish means "pure."
Binders
Binders are elastic leaves used to hold together the bunches of fillers. Essentially, binders are wrappers that are rejected because of holes, blemishes, discoloration, or excess veins.
Size and shape
See also|Factory nameCigars are commonly categorized by the size and shape of the cigar, which together are known as the vitola .
The size of a cigar is measured by two dimensions: its ring gauge (its diameter in sixty-fourths of an inch) and its length (in inches).In Cuba next to Havana there is a display of the '''world's longest rolled cigars.
Parejo
The most common shape is the parejo , sometimes referred to as simply "coronas", which have traditionally been the benchmark against which all other cigar formats are measured. They have a cylindrical body, straight sides, one end open, and a round tobacco-leaf "cap" on the other end which must be sliced off, have a V-shaped notch made in it with a special cutter, or punched through before smoking.
These dimensions are, at best, idealized. Actual dimensions can vary considerably.
Figurado
Irregularly shaped cigars are known as figurados and are sometimes considered of higher quality because they are more difficult to make.
Historically, especially during the 19th century, figurados were the most popular shapes; however, by the 1930s they had fallen out of fashion and all but disappeared. They have, however, recently received a small resurgence in popularity, and there are currently many brands (manufacturers) that produce figurados alongside the simpler parejos . The Cuban cigar brand Cuaba (cigar brand)|Cuaba only has figurados in their range.
Figurados include the following:
Figurado
Description
Torpedo
Like a parejo except that the cap is pointed.
Pyramid
Has a broad foot and evenly narrows to a pointed cap.
Perfecto
Narrow at both ends and bulged in the middle.
Presidente/ Diadema
shaped like a parejo but considered a figurado because of its enormous size and occasional closed foot akin to a perfecto.
Culebras
Three long, pointed cigars braided together.
Tuscan/ Toscano
The typical Italian cigar, created in the early 19th century when Kentucky tobacco was hybridized with local varieties and used to create a long, tough, slim cigar thicker in the middle and tapered at the ends, with a very strong aroma. It is also known as a cheroot , which is the largest selling cigar shape in the United States.
Arturo Fuente, a large cigar manufacturer based in the Dominican Republic, has also manufactured figurados in exotic shapes ranging from chilli peppers to baseball bats and American footballs. They are highly collectible and extremely expensive, when publicly available. In practice, the terms Torpedo and Pyramid are often used interchangeably, even among very knowledgeable cigar smokers. Min Ron Nee, the Hong Kong-based cigar expert whose work An Illustrated Encyclopaedia of Post-Revolution Havana Cigars is considered to be the definitive work on cigars and cigar terms, defines Torpedo as "cigar slang". Nee thinks the majority is right (because slang is defined by majority usage) and torpedoes are pyramids by another name.
Little cigars
Little cigars (sometimes called small cigars or miniatures in the UK) differ greatly from regular cigars. They weigh less than cigars and cigarillo s,cite book |title= Cigars: Health Effects and Trends |editor= Shopland DR, Burns DM, Hoffman D, Cummings KM, Amacher RH (eds.) |author= Connolly GN |chapter= Policies regulating cigars |chapterurl= http://cancercontrol.cancer.gov/tcrb/monographs/9/m9_8.PDF |format=PDF |accessdate=2008-03-15 |publisher= National Cancer Institute |series= Smoking and Tobacco Control Monograph No. 9 |year=1998 |pages=221–32 but, more importantly, they resemble cigarettes in size, shape, packaging, and filters. Sales of little cigars quadrupled in the U.S. from 1971 to 1973 in response to the Public Health Cigarette Smoking Act , which banned the broadcast of cigarette advertisements and required stronger health warnings on cigarette packs. Cigars were exempt from the ban, and perhaps more importantly, were #Marketing and distribution|taxed at a far lower rate. Little cigars are sometimes called "cigarettes in disguise", and unsuccessful attempts have been made to reclassify them as cigarettes. In the United States, sales of little cigars reached an all-time high in 2006, fueled in great part by their taxation loophole.cite journal |journal= Am J Public Health |year=2007 |volume=97 |issue=8 |pages=1368–75 |title= 'A whole 'nother smoke' or a cigarette in disguise: how RJ Reynolds reframed the image of little cigars |author= Delnevo CD, Hrywna M |doi=10.2105/AJPH.2006.101063 |pmid=17600253 |pmc= 1931466
Smoking
To smoke a cigar, a smoker cuts the closed end or 'cap', lights the other end, then puts the unlit end into the mouth and draws smoke into the mouth. Some smokers inhale the smoke into the lungs, particularly with #Little cigars|little cigars , but this is uncommon otherwise. A smoker may swirl the smoke around in the mouth before exhaling it, and may exhale part of the smoke through the nose in order to smell the cigar better as well as to taste it.
Cutting
Main|Cigar cutterAlthough some cigars are cut on both ends, or twirled at both ends, the vast majority come with one straight cut end and one end in a "cap". Most quality handmade cigars, regardless of shape, will have a cap which is one or more small pieces of a wrapper pasted on to one end of the cigar with either a natural tobacco paste or with a mixture of flour and water. The cap end of a cigar must be cut off for the cigar to be smoked properly. It is the rounded end without the tobacco exposed, and this is the end one should always cut. If the cap is cut jaggedly or without care, the end of the cigar will not burn evenly and smokeable tobacco will be lost. Some cigar manufacturers purposely place different types of tobacco from one end to the other to give the cigar smokers a variety of tastes, body and strength from start to finish. Smoking a cigar from the wrong end may result in a bad experience.
There are three basic types of cigar cutters:
Guillotine (straight cut)
Punch cut
V-cut (a.k.a. notch cut, cat's eye, wedge cut, English cut)
Lighting
The "head" of the cigar is usually the end closest to the cigar band . The opposite end of the cigar is called the "foot". The band identifies the type of the cigar and may be removed or left on. The smoker cuts the cap from the head of the cigar and ignites the foot of the cigar. The smoker draws smoke from the head of the cigar with the mouth and lips, usually not inhaling into the lungs.
When lighting, the cigar should be rotated to achieve an even burn and the air should be slowly drawn with gentle puffs. A flame that may not impart its own flavor to the cigar should be used. The tip of the cigar should minimally touch the flame, the heat of the flame from a butane or torch lighter can burn the tobacco leafs. A match or cedar spill flame is a milder flame to be used.
Cigars can be lit with the use of butane-filled lighters. Butane is colorless, odorless and burns clean with very little, if any, flavor; but are quite hot as a flame source. It is not recommended to use (lighter) fluid-filled lighters and paper matches since they can influence the taste.
A second option is wooden matches but make sure the chemical head of the match has burned away and you are only placing the burning wooden match on your cigar. Depending on the manufacturer the chemical head portion of the matchstick may contain one or more of the following: gelatin, paraffin wax, potassium chlorate, barium chlorate, glue, polyvinyl chlorides, phosphorus trisulfide, and clay. The strike plate to ignite the match may contain one more of the following: glass particles, red phosphorus and glue. So make sure the head of the match has burned off before approaching your cigar.
A third and most traditional way to light a cigar is to use a cedar spill. A spill is a splinter or a slender piece of wood or twisted paper, for lighting candles, lamps, campfires or fireplaces, etc. A cedar spill for lighting a cigar is a torn narrow strip of Spanish cedar (ideally) and lit using whatever flame source is handy. http://www.cigars4dummies.com/cigar-smoking/lighting.html Lighting Cigars Article, Cigars4Dummies, 2009
Cigars packaged in boxes or metal tubes may contain a thin wrapping of cedar that may be used to light a cigar, minimizing the problem of lighters or matches affecting the taste. Cedar spills, matches and lighters are all commercially available.
Flavor
Unreferenced section|date=August 2010 Each brand and type of cigar tastes different. While the wrapper does not entirely determine the flavor of the cigar, darker wrappers tend to produce a sweetness, while lighter wrappers usually have a "drier" taste. Whether a cigar is mild, medium, or full bodied does not correlate with quality. Some words used to describe cigar flavor and texture include; spicy, peppery (red or black), sweet, harsh, burnt, green, earthy, woody, cocoa, chestnut, roasted, aged, nutty, creamy, cedar, oak, chewy, fruity, and leathery.
Cigar smoke, which is sometimes inhaled, tastes of tobacco with nuances of other tastes. Many different things affect the scent of cigar smoke: tobacco type, quality of the cigar, added flavors, age and humidity, production method (handmade vs. machine-made) and more. A fine cigar can taste completely different from inhaled cigarette smoke. When smoke is inhaled, as is usual with cigarettes, the tobacco flavor is less noticeable than the sensation from the smoke. Some cigar enthusiasts use a vocabulary similar to that of wine-tasters to describe the overtones and undertones observed while smoking a cigar. Journals are available for recording personal ratings, description of flavors observed, sizes, brands, etc. Cigar tasting is in such respects similar to wine-tasting|wine , brandy , whisky , tea , coffee , and beer tasting.
Smoke
Smoke is produced by incomplete combustion of tobacco during which at least three kinds of chemical reactions occur: pyrolysis breaks down organic molecules into simpler ones, pyrosynthesis recombines these newly formed fragments into chemicals not originally present, and distillation moves compounds such as nicotine from the tobacco into the smoke. For every gram of tobacco smoked, a cigar emits about 120–140& nbsp;mg of carbon dioxide , 40–60& nbsp;mg of carbon monoxide , 3–4& nbsp;mg of isoprene , 1& nbsp;mg each of hydrogen cyanide and acetaldehyde , and smaller quantities of a large spectrum of volatile Nitrosamines| N -nitrosamines and volatile organic compound s, with the detailed composition unknown.cite book |title= Cigars: Health Effects and Trends |editor= Shopland DR, Burns DM, Hoffman D, Cummings KM, Amacher RH (eds.) |author= Hoffmann D, Hoffmann I |chapter= Chemistry and toxicology |chapterurl= http://cancercontrol.cancer.gov/tcrb/monographs/9/m9_3.PDF |format=PDF |accessdate=2008-03-15 |publisher= National Cancer Institute |series= Smoking and Tobacco Control Monograph No. 9 |year=1998 |pages=55–104
The most odorous chemicals in cigar smoke, and arguably the most responsible for the odor, are pyridine s. Along with pyrazine s, they are also the most odorous chemicals in cigar smoker's breath. These substances are noticeable even at extremely low concentrations of a few parts per billion. During smoking, it is not known whether these chemicals are generated by bond cleavage|splitting the chemical bonds of nicotine, or by Maillard reaction between amino acid s and sugars in the tobacco.cite journal |author=Bazemore R, Harrison C, Greenberg M |title=Identification of components responsible for the odor of cigar smoker's breath |journal=J Agric Food Chem |volume=54 |issue=2 |pages=497–501 |year=2006 |pmid=16417311 |doi=10.1021/jf0519109
Cigar smoke is more alkaline than cigarette smoke, and therefore dissolves and is absorbed more readily by the Oral mucosa|mucous membrane of the mouth , making it easier for the smoker to absorb nicotine without having to inhale.cite journal |author=Viegas CA |title=Noncigarette forms of tobacco use |journal=J Bras Pneumol |volume=34 |issue=12 |pages=1069–73 |year=2008 |pmid=19180343 |doi=10.1590/S1806-37132008001200013 |url= http://scielo.br/scielo.php? script=sci_arttext& pid=S1806-37132008001200013& lng=en& nrm=iso& tlng=en
Humidors
main|HumidorThe level of humidity in which cigars are kept has a significant effect on their taste. It is believed that a cigar's flavor best evolves when stored at a relative humidity of approximately 68-74% and a temperature of 64 °FCitation needed|date=September 2010. An ideal rate of humidity allows an even burning of the cigar. Conversely, dry cigars become fragile and burn faster while damp cigars burn unevenly and take on a heavy acidic flavor. Humidors together with their humidifiers are then used to serve this purpose. Humidor's interior lining is basically constructed with three types of wood : Spanish cedar , American (or Canadian) red cedar, and Honduran mahogany .
Most humidors come with a plastic or metal case with a sponge that works as the humidifier, although most recent versions come on polymer acryl. The latter must be filled only with distilled water , and the former may use a solution of propylene glycol and distilled water. Humidifiers may become contaminated with bacteria and should be replaced every two years to avoid such contamination.
Humidors also come with analog signal|analog or digital hygrometer s. There are three systems of analog hygrometers: analog hygrometers with a metal spring, analog natural hair hygrometers, and analog synthetic hair hygrometers.cite web|url= http://www.humidor-guide.com| title=Humidor Guide|date=|accessdate=2010-05-19
Accessories
There are a wide variety of cigar accessories on the market. Their prices may vary depending on the materials used and the quality of the finishing.
Cigar travel cases
Travel cases are intended to protect cigars from the environmental elements and to avoid the possibility of cigars being crushed. Most travel cases come in expandable or sturdy leather . They should be thick enough to protect cigars, and the inside should not have a strong leather smell that could affect the cigar's taste. Some of these cases come with either Card stock|cardboard or metal tubes that add protection and prevent the cigar from becoming permeated with the leather. Silver and brass cigar travel cases are also available as well as wood cigar cases. The latter can range from affordable cases to handcrafted ones, while the latter tend to be quite expensive.
Cigar tubes
Cigar tubes are used to carry small numbers of cigars, typically one or five. The latter tube would be called 5-finger tube and the former 1-finger tube. They are usually made from stainless steel . Cigar tubes are normally used when one is out for a few hours, but if it is necessary to spend longer periods of time out, there are tubes that come with a built in humidifier and hygrometer.
Cigar holders
Cigar holders are also known as cigar stands and are used to keep the cigars out of ashtrays. Also, cigar holders may refer to a tube in which the cigar is held while smoked. These are mostly used by women, and rarely by men.
Health effects
Further|Health effects of tobacco Like other forms of tobacco use, cigar smoking poses a significant health risk depending on dosage: risks are greater for those who inhale more when they smoke, smoke more cigars, or smoke them longer. However, when cigar smokers don't inhale or smoke few cigars per day, the risks are only slightly above those of non-smokers.cite book |title= Cigars: Health Effects and Trends |editor= Shopland DR, Burns DM, Hoffman D, Cummings KM, Amacher RH (eds.) |author= Burns DM |chapter= Cigar smoking: overview and current state of the science |chapterurl= http://cancercontrol.cancer.gov/tcrb/monographs/9/m9_1.PDF |format=PDF |accessdate=2012-02-23 |publisher= National Cancer Institute |series= Smoking and Tobacco Control Monograph No. 9 |year=1998 |page=8 The risk of dying from any cause is statistically greater for cigar smokers than for people who have never smoked, with the risk higher for smokers less than 65 years old, and with risk for moderate and deep inhalers reaching levels similar to cigarette smokers. However, for those who don't inhale and smoke 1 - 2 cigars per day, the risk of dying from all causes is statistically insignificant when compared to non-smokers.cite book |title= Cigars: Health Effects and Trends |editor= Shopland DR, Burns DM, Hoffman D, Cummings KM, Amacher RH (eds.) |author= Burns DM |chapter= Cigar smoking: overview and current state of the science |chapterurl= http://cancercontrol.cancer.gov/tcrb/monographs/9/m9_1.PDF |format=PDF |accessdate=2012-02-23 |publisher= National Cancer Institute |series= Smoking and Tobacco Control Monograph No. 9 |year=1998 |page=6 For those who inhale or smoke several cigars a day, types of health risk can be similar to those associated with cigarette smoking: nicotine addiction, periodontal disease, tooth loss, and many types of cancer, including cancers of the Oral cancer|mouth , throat, and esophageal cancer|esophagus .cite book |title= Cigars: Health Effects and Trends |editor= Shopland DR, Burns DM, Hoffman D, Cummings KM, Amacher RH (eds.) |author= Burns DM |chapter= Cigar smoking: overview and current state of the science |chapterurl= http://cancercontrol.cancer.gov/tcrb/monographs/9/m9_1.PDF |format=PDF |accessdate=2008-12-02 |publisher= National Cancer Institute |series= Smoking and Tobacco Control Monograph No. 9 |year=1998 |pages=1–20 Cigar smoking can also cause cancers of the Lung cancer|lung and Laryngeal cancer|larynx . Cigar smoking can also increase the risk of lung and heart diseases such as chronic obstructive pulmonary disease .cite journal |journal= J Prim Prev |year=2005 |volume=26 |issue=4 |pages=363–75 |title= Cigar smoking: an ignored public health threat |author= Symm B, Morgan MV, Blackshear Y, Tinsley S |doi=10.1007/s10935-005-5389-z |pmid=15995804 Little cigars are commonly inhaled and likely pose the same health risks as cigarettes.cite journal |author= Dollar KM, Mix JM, Kozlowski LT |title= Little cigars, big cigars: omissions and commissions of harm and harm reduction information on the Internet |journal= Nicotine Tob Res |volume=10 |issue=5 |pages=819–26 |year=2008 |pmid=18569755 |doi=10.1080/14622200802027214 When cigar smokers don't inhale or smoke few cigars per day, the risks of disease are greatly reduced compared to heavy cigar smokers. The increased risk for those smoking 1–2 cigars per day is too small to be statistically significant,cite book |title= Cigars: Health Effects and Trends |editor= Shopland DR, Burns DM, Hoffman D, Cummings KM, Amacher RH (eds.) |author= Shanks TG, Burns DM |chapter= Disease consequences of cigar smoking |chapterurl= http://cancercontrol.cancer.gov/tcrb/monographs/9/m9_4.PDF |format=PDF |accessdate=2008-10-21 |publisher= National Cancer Institute |series= Smoking and Tobacco Control Monograph No. 9 |year=1998 |pages=105–160 and the health risks of the 3/4 of cigar smokers who smoke less than daily are not established,cite web |url= http://www.cancer.gov/cancertopics/factsheet/Tobacco/cigars |accessdate=2008-10-21 |title= Questions and answers about cigar smoking and cancer |date=2000-03-07 |publisher= National Cancer Institute and are hard to measure.
Popularity
The prevalence of cigar smoking varies depending on location, historical period, and population surveyed, and prevalence estimates vary somewhat depending on the survey method. The U.S. is the top consuming country by far, followed by Germany and the UK; the U.S. and western Europe account for about 75% of cigar sales worldwide.cite journal |ssrn=1127582 |author= Rarick CA |title= Note on the premium cigar industry |date=2008-04-02 |publisher=SSRN The 2005 U.S. National Health Interview Survey estimated that 2.2% of adults smoke cigars, about the same as smokeless tobacco but far less than the 21% of adults who smoke cigarettes; it also estimated that 4.3% of men but only 0.3% of women smoke cigars.cite journal |journal= MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep |year=2006 |volume=55 |issue=42 |pages=1145–8 |title= Tobacco use among adults—United States, 2005 |author= Mariolis P, Rock VJ, Asman K et al. |url= http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/mm5542a1.htm |pmid= 17065979 The 2002 U.S. National Survey of Drug Use and Health found that adults with serious psychological distress are significantly more likely to smoke cigars than those without.cite journal |journal= Addict Behav |year=2008 |volume=33 |issue=4 |pages=582–92 |title= Tobacco use among those with serious psychological distress: results from the national survey of drug use and health, 2002 |author= Hagman BT, Delnevo CD, Hrywna M, Williams JM |doi=10.1016/j.addbeh.2007.11.007 |pmid=18158218 |pmc= 2696205 A 2007 California study found that gay men and bisexual women smoke significantly fewer cigars than the general population of men and women, respectively.cite journal |journal=Nicotine Tob Res |year=2007 |volume=9 |issue=9 |pages=937–40 |title= Cigar and smokeless tobacco use in the lesbian, gay, and bisexual population |author= Gruskin EP, Greenwood GL, Matevia M, Pollack LM, Bye LL, Albright V |doi=10.1080/14622200701488426 |pmid=17763109 Substantial and steady increases in cigar smoking were observed during the 1990s and early 2000s in the U.S. among both adults and adolescents.cite journal |journal= Public Health Rep |year=2006 |volume=121 |issue=2 |pages=116–9 |title= Smokers' choice: what explains the steady growth of cigar use in the U.S.? |author= Delnevo CD |pmid=16528942 |url= http://www.publichealthreports.org/userfiles/121_2/121116.pdf |format=PDF |pmc= 1525261 Data suggest that cigar usage among young adult males increased threefold during the 1990s, a 1999–2000 survey of 31,107 young adult U.S. military recruits found that 12.3% smoked cigars,cite journal |journal= Addict Behav |year=2008 |volume=33 |issue=1 |pages=69–82 |title= Prevalence of alternative forms of tobacco use in a population of young adult military recruits |author= Vander Weg MW, Peterson AL, Ebbert JO, Debon M, Klesges RC, Haddock CK |doi=10.1016/j.addbeh.2007.07.005 |pmid=17706889 |pmc=2101765 and a 2003–2004 survey of 4,486 high school students in a Midwestern county found that 18% smoked cigars.cite journal |journal= Am J Health Behav |year=2008 |volume=32 |issue=6 |pages=640–9 |title= Cigars, cigarettes, and adolescents |author= Brooks A, Gaier Larkin EM, Kishore S, Frank S |pmid=18442343 |url= http://png.publisher.ingentaconnect.com/content/png/ajhb/2008/00000032/00000006/art00008 |doi= 10.5555/ajhb.2008.32.6.640
Cuban cigars
Cuban cigars are rolled from tobacco leaves found throughout the country of Cuba. The filler, binder, and wrapper may come from different portions of the island. All cigar production in Cuba is controlled by the Cuban government, and each brand may be rolled in several different factories in Cuba. Cuban cigar rollers or " torcedor es" are claimed by cigar experts to be the most skilled rollers in the world.Citation needed|date=March 2009 Torcedores are highly respected in Cuban society and culture and travel worldwide displaying their art of hand rolling cigars.cite news|url= http://nl.newsbank.com/nl-search/we/Archives? p_product=AC& p_theme=ac& p_action=search& p_maxdocs=200& p_topdoc=1& p_text_direct-0=0F338C43ACDEC4B0& p_field_direct-0=document_id& p_perpage=10& p_sort=YMD_date:D& s_trackval=GooglePM|title=CUBAN GOLD GETS ROLLED IN VINELAND / STORE OFFERS CIGARS ROLLED BY CUBAN HANDS|last=RIVERA |first= Maricarmen|date=2002-04-29 |publisher=The Press of Atlantic City|accessdate=2009-03-08
Habanos SA and Cubatabaco between them do all the work relating to Cuban cigars, including manufacture , quality control , promotion and distribution, and export. Cuba produces both handmade and machine made cigars. All boxes and labels are marked Hecho en Cuba (made in Cuba). Machine-bunched cigars finished by hand add Hecho a mano , while fully hand-made cigars say Totalmente a mano in script text, though not all Cuban cigars will include this statement. Because of the perceived status of Cuban cigars, counterfeits are somewhat commonplace.cite web|url= http://www.decaturspirits.com/cigars/fakecubans/ |title=Identifying Counterfeit Cuban Cigars |publisher=Decaturspirits.com |date= |accessdate=2010-10-25
Despite American trade sanctions against Cuban products, cigars remain one of the country's leading exports. The country exported 77 million cigars in 1991, 67 million in 1992, and 57 million in 1993, the decline attributed to a loss of much of the wrapper crop in a hurricane.Marvin R. Shanken, "Inside Cuban Cigars: ''Cigar Aficionado Interviews Cubatabaco's Top Official, Francisco Padron", Cigar Aficionado , vol. 2, no. 3 (Spring 1994), pp. 75-83.
Main|United States embargo against Cuba On February 7, 1962, United States President John F. Kennedy imposed a United States embargo against Cuba|trade embargo on Cuba to sanction Fidel Castro 's communist government. According to Pierre Salinger , then Kennedy's press secretary, the president ordered him on the evening of February 6 to obtain 1,200 H. Upmann (cigar brand)|H. Upmann brand Winston churchill (cigar)|petit corona Cuban cigars; upon Salinger's arrival with the cigars the following morning, Kennedy signed the executive order which put the embargo into effect.cite web|url= http://www.cigaraficionado.com/Cigar/CA_Archives/CA_Show_Article/0,2322,862,00.html |title=Kennedy, Cuba and Cigars |publisher=Cigar Aficionado |date=1992-09-01 |accessdate=2010-10-25 Richard Goodwin, a White House assistant to Presidents Kennedy and Johnson, revealed in a 2000 New York Times article that in early 1962 JFK told him, "We tried to exempt cigars, but the cigar manufacturers in Tampa objected."cite news |title= President Kennedy's plan for peace with Cuba |author= Goodwin R |work= New York Times |date=2000-07-05 |accessdate=2008-09-20 |url= http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html? res=9E0DEFDB1039F936A35754C0A9669C8B63
The embargo prohibited US residents from legally purchasing Cuban cigars and American cigar manufacturers from importing Cuban tobacco. As a result, Cuba was deprived of its major customer for tobacco and American cigar manufacturers either had to find an alternative source of tobacco or go out of business. http://www.floridamemory.com/PhotographicCollection/photo_exhibits/cigar/cigar5.cfm "Florida Cigars: Artistry, Labor, and Politics in Florida's Oldest Industry" - Archives of the State of Florida
In the United States, authentic Cuban-made cigars are seen as " forbidden fruit " for Americans to purchase.Citation needed|date=July 2011 Upon the expropriation of private property in Cuba, many former Cuban cigar manufacturers moved to other countries (primarily the Dominican Republic) to continue production.cite book |author=Tad Gage |title=The Complete Idiot's Guide to Cigars |url= http://books.google.com/books? id=XA6UfOmVfAMC& pg=PA80 |accessdate=2 August 2010 |year=1997 |publisher=Alpha Books |isbn=978-0-02-861975-0 |page=80 The Dominican Republic's production of tobacco grew significantly as a result.cite book |author=Economist Intelligence Unit (Great Britain) |title=Country report: Cuba, Dominican Republic, Haiti, Puerto Rico |url= http://books.google.com/books? id=x9iyAAAAIAAJ |accessdate=2 August 2010 |year=1998 |publisher=The Unit After reallocation, most Cuban manufacturers continued to use their known company name, seed, and harvesting technique while Cubatabaco , Cuba's state tobacco monopoly after the Cuban Revolution|Revolution , independently continued production of cigars using the former private company names. As a result, cigar name brands like Romeo y Julieta , La Gloria Cubana , Montecristo among others, exist in both Cuba and the Dominican Republic.cite book |author1=Bret Saxon |author2=Steve Stein |title=The Art of the Shmooze |url= http://books.google.com/books? id=m6QibvnDErMC& pg=PA229 |accessdate=2 August 2010 |date=1 March 1998 |publisher=SP Books |isbn=978-1-56171-976-1 |pages=224–30 Honduras and Nicaragua are also mass manufactures of cigars. Some Cuban refugees make cigars in the U.S. and advertise them as "Cuban" cigars, using the argument that the cigars are made by Cubans.cite news |url= http://travel.latimes.com/articles/la-trw-vegas3jun03 |work= Los Angeles Times |date=2007-05-30 |accessdate=2008-09-11 |title= Las Vegas cigar lounges roll out the welcome mat |author= Gould LE
It remains illegal for US residents to purchase or import Cuban cigars regardless of where they are in the world,cite web|url= http://www.treasury.gov/resource-center/sanctions/Documents/ccigar2.pdf |title=Office of Foreign Assets Control: "Cuban Cigar Update" |format=PDF |date=2004-09-30 |accessdate=2011-10-15 although they are readily available across the northern border in Canada and the southern border in Mexico. While Cuban cigars are smuggled into the USA and sold at high prices, counterfeiting is rife; it has been said that 95% of Cuban cigars sold in the USA are counterfeit.cite web |url= http://www.cigarnexus.com/counsel/counterfeit |title=The Ultimate Counterfeit Cuban Cigar Primer |author=Steve Saka |date=2002-02-22 |accessdate=2008-03-12 Although Cuban cigars cannot legally be imported into the USA, the advent of the Internet has made it much easier for people in the United States to purchase cigars online from other countries, especially when shipped without bands. Cuban cigars are openly advertised in some European tourist regions, catering to the American market, even though it is illegal to advertise tobacco in most European regions.cite book |author=Karen Slama |title=Tobacco and health |url= http://books.google.com/books? id=iomVoBt-qFcC& pg=PA78 |accessdate=2 August 2010 |year=1995 |publisher=Springer Science & Business |isbn=978-0-306-45111-9 |pages=78–
Cigars specific to other countries
Italy produces the sigaro toscano ( Tuscany|Tuscan cigar), a dry cigar, very different from the moist Havana style. Tuscan-style cigars are also manufactured in the United States of America|United States , only by The Avanti Cigar Co. of Scranton, Pennsylvania . Their brands include Parodi, De Nobili, Petri, and the anisette-flavored Avanti.www.avanticigar.com/avarticle.html
The cheroot is traditionally associated with Burma and India.Citation needed|date=July 2008
In popular culture
In the 1980s and 1990s, major U.S. print media portrayed cigars favorably; they generally framed cigar use as a lucrative business or a trendy habit, rather than as a health risk.cite journal |journal= Am J Public Health |year=2001 |volume=91 |issue=2 |pages=288–91 |title= The cigar revival and the popular press: a content analysis, 1987–1997 |author= Wenger L, Malone R, Bero L |pmid=11211641 |pmc=1446522 |doi= 10.2105/AJPH.91.2.288 Rich people are often caricatured as wearing top hat s and tail coat|tails and smoking cigars. Cigars are often smoked to celebrate special occasions: the birth of a child, a graduation, a big sale. The idiom|expression "close but no cigar" comes from the practice of giving cigars as prize s in games involving good aim at funfair|fairground s.
See also
Box-pressed
Cabinet selection
Cigar etiquette
List of cigar brands
Smoking jacket
Footnotes
reflist|colwidth=30em
External links
Commons|Cigar
http://www.cigargroup.com/faq Cigar Smoker's FAQ - compiled from http://groups.google.com/group/alt.smokers.cigars alt.smokers.cigars