Cigar Aficionado is a magazine for the man who enjoys life’s great pleasures: fine dining and entertaining, the finest wines and spirits, world travel and the arts. At the heart of every issue is the cigar: what to smoke, where to smoke, and how to enjoy a great smoke.
highlights
The Story of the Mob
out of the humidor
Cigar Aficionado
good life guide
The $150,000 Dragon Cutter
Toyota GR Supra
Mustique, West Indies
Montblanc StarWalker Blue Planet
Infrared Grills
Porsche Design Customized Chronograph
Snowshoeing
Sean Connery 1930–2020
THE NUMBER WAR CUBANS VS. ITALIANS • The battle over New York’s $100 million numbers racket
Legends of the MOB • 13 Men who built the American Mafia
Albert Anastasia 1902-1957
Rosario “Russell” Bufalino 1903-1994
Al Capone 1899-1947
Frank Costello 1891-1973
Sam Giancana 1908-1975
Vincent Gigante 1928-2005
Enoch Johnson 1883-1968
John Gotti 1940-2002
The Five Families
Meyer Lansky 1902-1983
Charles Luciano 1897-1962
Giuseppe Masseria 1886-1931
Dutch Schultz 1902-1935
Benjamin Siegel 1906-1947
A New Shot at Godfather III • Trying to strengthen the weak link in the Godfather trilogy
Bootleg Booze • When Prohibition rendered alcohol illegal in the United States, bootleggers, foreign producers and the Mob kept Americans in good spirits
Tiger The Designer • One of the greatest golfers ever is now designing golf courses, and his first public course in the United States just opened in August
Getting There And Staying There
Catching the Tiger • Want to play a course designed by Tiger Woods? The list is growing.
STRAIGHT FROM THE BARREL • A profusion of spirits are being bottled at cask strength. Is it proof positive that stronger can mean tastier?
BIRTH OF A BOURBON
Betting Big on Vegas • As Las Vegas adjusts to Covid-19 restrictions, Derek Stevens is betting $1 billion on a luxurious new casino
cigars
churchills • Ernesto Perez-Carrillo named the La Historia E-III after his son, Ernie the Third. It scored an impressive 93 points. According to Perez-Carrillo, the cigar didn’t reach full potential until he changed the blend from a full leaf of seco tobacco, which was muting the taste, to half a leaf. And we’re glad he did. Also scoring 93 points was the Romeo y Julieta Churchill, Cuba’s most iconic cigar of that size. These samples came from a 10-count box of tubos and are a fine example of the quintessential Cuban smoking experience in both balance and character. Another Romeo, made in Nicaragua by A. J. Fernandez for Altadis U.S.A., scored 91 points. This Romeo y Julieta Reserva Real Nicaragua is new, launched this year, and is a stronger interpretation of the original Reserva Real, which is considerably mild.
figurados • A former Cigar of the Year proves itself to be an overachiever once again. At an astounding 95 points, not only did the Arturo Fuente Don Carlos Eye of the Shark get the issue’s highest score, it’s also one of the few regular-production cigars to reach “classic” status without any extra age. The Shark is a beautiful smoke with a partial box-pressing that only adds to its intrigue. We call it “delicious” in the tasting note, but that’s an understatement. It has polish and detail, delivering both subtle and intense flavors that keep the palate stimulated the entire time. n Two cigars scored 93 points. The Matilde Quadrata Torpedo is made by Jochy Blanco in the Dominican Republic for José Seijas, while the Ramon Allones Allones No. 2 was the last of Cuba’s 2019 Edición Limitadas to come to market.
grandes • As grandes edge out the smaller, more conventional sizes in...