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Los Angeles – There was a time when Mexico’s Te-Amo brand
was one of the largest-selling cigars in the
United States. That time has passed, but not
for a lack of any effort by the Turrent family,
now in its sixth generation in tobacco and still
hard at work in the San Andres Valley. Profiled
in the trade journal Smokeshop, Alberto
Turrent IV noted that the first Alberto
Turrent came to Mexico from Spain all the way
back in 1880 to grow tobacco, but the region’s
famous cigars didn’t show up for another
80 years.
Wrote story author William Kaliher, "Turrent
IV took over the company in 1960 at a time when
most Mexican tobacco was shipped to Europe. In
1964, he first started exporting cigars, targeting
the American market which as still adjusting
to the loss of embargoes Cuban cigars. Turrent’s
Te-Amo brand would go on to become a market-leading
blockbuster." Among its other claims to
fame, Te-Amo was the brand which helped to popularize
the now-essential Toro format – originally
called No. 19 – of six inches and 50 ring
gauge.
Turrent is especially attentive to his tobacco
farms, with about 1,500 acres being seeded annually
and producing wrapper, binder and filler. "We
have the same conditions as Cuba, the Dominican
Republic, Honduras and Nicaragua," he said, "but
World War II finished most of the Mexican tobacco
growers. Almost all of the tobacco had been shipped
to Europe but the war ended that export business.
Most cigar factories folded and the owners turned
to bananas for export to the United States. Only
five or six families survived in the production
of tobacco."
Today, the Nueva Matacapan Tabacos – that’s
the factory name – produces five to six
million cigars per year and sells worldwide,
although U.S. premium imports have slid from
a high of 25 million in 1997 down to 1.36 million
in 2007.
That hasn’t stopped Turrent and his team
from introducing new blends, almost always created
from exclusively Mexican-grown tobaccos. But
in 2007, a totally new style of cigar was introduced,
called the Te-Amo World Selection.
There are three different blends: Dominicana,
with a Connecticut Shade wrapper, Mexican binder
and Mexican and Dominican filler; Honduras Blend,
with a Mexican wrapper, Mexican binder and Mexican
and Honduran filler and Nicaragua Blend, with
Mexican wrapper, binder and Mexican and Nicaraguan
filler. It’s a new concept and time will
tell how well it will be accepted. But it shows
a willingness to work outside the traditional
boundaries of the Mexican cigar industry and
that has to be good for the future.
>> Cigars are indisputably part of the
lives of many servicemen – and perhaps
some servicewomen as well – serving the
United States overseas. Altadis U.S.A. has
launched a program to try to make sure they are
well supplied. A new program called "Operation
Cigars for Troops" is being started nationwide
at retail tobacconists with a planned 50,000
or more free cigars to be sent to American military
personnel in Iraq and Afghanistan.
According to the company, "The effort works
as follows: consumers purchase one or more of
the ‘Operation Cigars for Troops’ four-packs
specially designed for the event. They pay for
three cigars and receive the fourth free. For
each four-pack sold, Altadis U.S.A. sends a free
cigar to the troops overseas."
The brand and sizes includes in the promotion
are some of the most popular in the Altadis U.S.A.
line-up: H. Upmann Vintage Cameroon Toro
(6 inches by 54 ring), Montecristo White Rothchilde
(5 x 52) and Romeo y Julieta Reserva
Real Belicoso (6 1/8 x 52).
>> Short fillers: The annual tobacco festival
in Candon City, Philippines finished last week
with the production and parade of a 100-meter
long (about 331 feet) cigar! News reports indicated
that the cigar was rolled by 10 women from the
Bugnay Village. It was 3 1/3 inches in diameter – about
215 ring gauge – and weighted about 727
pounds! It cost 12,000 Philippine pesos to make,
or about $289 U.S. and was brought through the
town by 150 City Hall employees. It’s not
a cigar in the traditional sense, since it’s
not smokable, but it was quite a stunt to promote
Candon City and its primary product, which is
Virginia tobacco. ‘We just want something
to highlight our city," said Candon Mayor Allen
G. Singson. The 101-meter cigar follows
up on the two 50-meter-long (165 foot) cigars
made during the Festival in 2006, but no filing
was made for a Guinness certification as a "world
record." . . . find our latest tasting review,
of new blends from Jesus Fuego and Luis
Falto, in our News & Views archives
for April 18.
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Heard in the Humidor is a
publication of Perelman, Pioneer & Company of
Los Angeles, California, USA. Copyright 2007;
All rights reserved.
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