Archive for the ‘Articles’ Category

Press Release: Oliveros Cigars Signs Contract with Teka Puro of Istanbul

Miami, FL, September 08, 2010 — Teka Puro of Istanbul Tobacco has signed a multi-year agreement with Rafael Nodal of Oliveros Cigars to provide consulting services and serve as the exclusive international representative for all Teka products. Teka Puro is the only manufacturer of Tobacco Products in Turkey and originally was a joint venture between the government of Cuba and the government of Turkey. Teka Puro used to produce Fonseca Cigarillos and other Cuban brands using tobacco from Cuba. Teka Puro was created in response to the growing market for cigars in Asia, the Middle East and Eastern Europe and was a project conceived by Cuban President Fidel Castro, who attended the opening of the factory. As a part of the privatization process of Turkish Tobacco monopoly, TEKA Puro was privatized a couple of years ago and it was sold to Azmi Erdogan and tobacco veteran A. Kemal Turk, whom also owns Che Cigar store in Istanbul. During the last few years Teka Puro has been producing mass-market cigars and now, as part of this cooperative agreement, Teka will also produce premium hand made cigars. Teka currently produces CHE cigars, cigarillos and flavored cigarillos and recently introduced Punta Cana, a line of rustic moist cigars.Rafael Nodal is the president and co-founder of Oliveros Cigars, a boutique brand of premium cigars that is sold in the United States of America, Russia and other international markets. Rafael Nodal and his wife Dr. Alina Nodal, a practicing psychiatrist, come from a veteran cigar family from Pinar del Rio, Cuba. Mr. Nodal will serve as Senior Advisor to Teka Puro in the areas of production, product development, general operations, packaging and marketing and will be the exclusive international representative of all Teka tobacco products. Under the terms of the agreement, Plasencia Cigars will be the premier provider of tobacco for Teka Puro. Located in Honduras and Nicaragua, Plasencia Cigars is one of the largest growers of Habano tobacco leaves in the world and manufacturer of Premium Cigars. Plasencia Cigars is headed by Nestor Plasencia, a renown Cuban grower and his son, Nestor Andres Plasencia. Plasencia Cigars is partly owned by Swedish Match, which also owns in the USA, Cigars International and General Cigar, together with the rights to Cuban Cigar Brands in the USA like Cohiba, Bolivar, Hoyo de Monterrey, La Gloria Cubana, Partagas and Punch as well as interest in other tobacco companies like Arnold Andre in Europe.“With the help of Mr. Nodal and the premium tobacco of Plasencia cigars, our company is getting ready for the international market as we improve our product lineup,” said Mr. Erdogan, the shareholder of Teka Puro. “For Alina and me it is a great opportunity to work with such a wonderful group of individuals that are dedicated to produce the best possible cigars at the best possible prices,” said Rafael Nodal. “With our perfect strategic location, the experience of Rafael Nodal and the Tobacco of Plasencia Cigars, we are ready to play an important part in the national, regional and International tobacco market,” said Meltem Cebi from Teka Puro.

For information about Teka Puro of Istanbul Tobacco please contact

Meltem Cebi

meltem.cebi@tekapuro.com

www.TekaPuro.com

PH: 0 216 442 8975

For information about the cooperation agreement or about Oliveros Cigars please contact:

Hank Bischoff, Vice President

Habana Cuba Oliveros

CigarsHank@OliverosCigars.com

www.Oliveroscigars.com

Ph: (305) 557- 6919

Greece Institutes Smoking Ban…Again

Over the past few years Europe has adopted a much harsher stance on smoking through tariffs and public smoking bans.  The most notable of smoke-friendly countries, France, too adopted a smoking ban that very much came down on café culture, and now Greece has added itself to the mix.

The new law is charged with banning smoking in enclosed public spaces and tobacco advertising.  This is the second

Image courtesy of AFP

time in just over a year that the Greek government has attempted to curb smoking in the country.  An estimated 40% of Greek adults smoke, which is well above the EU national average of 29%.

Smokers who violate the law risk being fined hundreds of euros and businesses may have to pay several thousand. On the flip-side, café and restaurant owners are crying out accusing the government of targeting them in a time of economic crisis.  Starting today (1 September) smokers who break this new law can be fined up to 500 euros (£413; $636).  Businesses may have to pay up to 10,000 euros.

Just as we are accustomed here in the US, the Greek government is instituting this law under the guise of protecting public health.  Ironically enough, the government also commented that the Greek people should be more conscious overall of their actions citing the recently-adopted austerity plan to be used as a tool to resurrect the near-bankrupt economy as a metaphor.

A little over one year ago the Greek government imposed restrictions on smoking in various public places which were largely ignored by everyone. The government claims this new smoking ban covers a wider range of locations as a means to truly seem serious about it this time around, but only time will tell if the new law is enforced and if the Greek people learn to respect it.

September 1, 2010Lindsay 1 Comment »
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A Lower East Side Legend to be Replaced by Specialty Cigar Shop

Article and photos courtesy of the Huffington Post, 23 August 2010

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Coming Soon: Maraya’s Cigar Shop on 87 Orchard

Those rumors about Mother-in-Law’s Kimchi assuming control of the old Guss’ Pickles HQ can now be put to sleep for the duration.  Six months after the pickle stand decamped for Borough Park as Ess-a-Pickle, a completely different type of business is moving into the small storefront.  A specialty cigar shop called Maraya.

Saturday afternoon, the security gates were up and the doors open at 87 Orchard Street, beckoning us to explore further.  Sitting on the tiled floor inside with a trowel in her hand was one of the co-owners, Joy Florentz.  Ms. Florentz was busy preparing the space, but kindly took five to explain to us the nitty gritty.

We learned that all of the craft cigars are hand-rolled and manufactured in the Dominican Republic. Florentz also stressed their somewhat non-traditional marketing stance – cigar smoking is an acceptable pleasure and should be enjoyed as such. Period.  Here is a bit of copy from their website:

“Our aim is to preserve the centuries-old tradition and craft of cigar-making, an authentic livelihood, deserving a continued place in the world. We want to educate and inform those who continue to enjoy fine cigars made in countries around the world.

Maraya promotes the enjoyment of cigar smoking as an acceptable pleasure, rather than accepting being dogged in a downward spiral by negative social stigma. We want to enjoy cigars when and where we please, at appropriate times and in appropriate places without being forced into smoking rooms.

We celebrate the fine craft of cigar-making as an art form and artisinal form of pleasure today and for many generations to come. We encourage the fight for freedom to continue making great cigars, and freedoms to pursue our natural instincts of pleasure.”

Maraya is tentatively scheduled to open in time for the third annual NYC Apple Day on September 26. Given the appearance of the interior, though, one month to ready the joint might be lofty thinking.  And as an aside, it should be noted that throughout our conversation, a number of people stopped to ask where Guss’ went.  Take pictures while you can, because that green-and-red awning is on its last legs.

Those rumors about Mother-in-Law’s Kimchi assuming control of the old Guss’ Pickles HQ can now be put to sleep for the duration.  Six months after the pickle stand decamped for Borough Park as Ess-a-Pickle, a completely different type of business is moving into the small storefront.  A specialty cigar shop called Maraya.
August 23, 2010Lindsay 3 Comments »
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IPCPR: Industry Trade Show or Blogger Meet & Greet?

Should IPCPR Be Open To Fans And Bloggers Or Vendors And Retailers Only?

In this little exposé, Lindsay and Squid take opposite sides on an issue that may be of concern to the community of cigar smokers, bloggers and fans. Lindsay takes the side that IPCPR is an industry trade show and should be for business primarily, so the bloggers are in the way. Squid takes the side that it’s a once-a-year celebration where the fans get to see all their heroes in one week-long venue.

**NOTE: We’ve taken these sides at random, not because we necessarily believe them.
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SQUID: In recent years, the number of online cigar forums and other virtual communities of cigar lovers has grown dramatically. Both retailers and manufacturers are active in these online venues, which has slowly changed how they are viewed by the members of these various online communities. They are now seen in most cases not as vague captains of industry but as real people, and even as celebrities sometimes. Because IPCPR has allowed access to a certain amount of non-retailers (as either “Press” or using a non-buyer pass from a retail shop) I see nothing wrong with these fans having access to see and speak with whomever they please.

LINDSAY: While I will never disagree that with the advent of social media this industry has changed, the point here is that since the RTDA morphed into IPCPR, an industry trade show has turned into a giant meet & greet.
The point of a trade show is to use an opportunity to display to one’s peers new products & innovations, plus of course engage in business. There are other cigar events throughout the calendar year where a plethora of major manufacturers are around to hand out samples, talk to fans/bloggers, etc., so why disrupt companies who are there under the auspice of doing business?? Though I can attest that most IPCPR exhibitors are happy to answer questions & like seeing the ‘fan boi’ enjoy their product(s), that blogger isn’t placing an order for 1,000 boxes and needs to get off the couch so the manufacturer can make money and disseminate inventory.

SQUID: Fan Boi??? Gosh, Lindsay! These are the guys who will go to your B&M and plunk down their hard-earned cash for a cigar they never tried, simply on the basis of another “Fan Boi’s” recommendation on a blog, or because they traded a few words and a ‘LOL’ with the manufacturer on Twitter. They also take time off work, pay to travel to IPCPR, and generally have mostly good comments to write on their “Fan Boi” blogs! Make no mistake that the professionals in the cigar industry use social media to sell their products, so if a few fans want to talk to a celebrity cigar maker for a few minutes, what’s the harm? And do you think all the Booth Babes and glitter are merely to impress the retail shop owners?

LINDSAY: As supportive as bloggers generally are of this industry, do you see other trade shows being mobbed by them? I grew up going to trade shows with my Dad who has worked in the cable industry since the early ’80s and despite having HBO, Cinemax, Showtime, etc with large booths and celebrities to promote shows/products, even today you don’t see “True Blood” blogging fanatics at these venues because they’re not allowed if
they are in fact not employed by the cable industry itself.

To boot I have it on good authority from multiple reps in various cigar companies that this year the IPCPR was sad: about half the retailers as were last year, low sales, and TONS of bloggers. While this year manufacturers didn’t have to worry about allocating samples and denying bloggers over buyers — this did happen in 2009 — when the Padróns and
Rocky Patel & co. are sitting down talking amongst themselves in their own booths, something is wrong on the sales end. I know for a fact these guys really like the bloggers and appreciate all the attention, but if the bloggers are so influential, why did less retailers show up & why did those that were present cut their booth sizes in half from last year? You can’t blame this all on taxes, either….

Honestly there is a better place for bloggers in this industry when it comes to events, which is why Cigar Aficionado has its Big Smoke on both coasts, Serious Cigars has their annual festival/BBQ, and CI has CigarFest. Assuming the board members of IPCPR this year weren’t completely turned off by the hoards of bloggers then maybe the best way for these non-industry folks to get their face time & samples would be through a “Press Day” just as is done in the entertainment industry.
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DISCLAIMER: This is our first writing collaboration and we both hope you readers have enjoyed it. We did this to give food for thought, and we don’t necessarily hold to the opinions we’ve expressed; but both sides of the issue needed to be aired. Your comments and opinions are welcome!

Lindsay is a tobacconist based in New York City who does everything from sell cigars, to assist in blending, write articles for various publications, and host cigar events around the world.  You can follow Lindsay on Twitter by clicking here.

Squid builds cigar-banded lighters and is based in Houston, TX.  You can see his custom lighters on his website: http://squidslighters.wordpress.com/ If you’d like to follow Squid on Twitter, you may so do by clicking here.

August 12, 2010Lindsay 28 Comments »
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Northern NJ Police Won’t Enforce New Smoking Ban

Article by Rob Jennings of the Daily Record, published 12 August 2010

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DENVILLE — A new anti-smoking ordinance that was supposed to take effect Wednesday was not being enforced because the town failed to post the required notification signs, officials said.

In the absence of the signs, smokers were free to keep legally puffing away at Gardner Field and other locations targeted by the smoking ban at municipal parks and recreation areas.

“Until it’s posted, we’re not going to go out and enforce it,” Denville Police Lt. Scott Kansky said.

Adopted by the council in a 7-0 vote on July 13, the local statute — which holds out the possibility of jail time for three-time offenders — sparked a broader regional debate with a smokers’ rights group based in New York City offering to pay the fines of anyone getting a ticket.

Municipal Clerk Donna Costello said the ordinance was due to go into effect Wednesday.

It was not immediately clear why the signs were not ready in time for the law’s starting date, or when they might arrive.

Kansky said that notifying the public about a new law is not the responsibility of the police department.

August 12, 2010Lindsay 1 Comment »
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Shayna Punim = Cigar Success??

For starters if you’re not Jewish then let me translate the Yiddish phrase in the title: it means “pretty face”.  Now down to business….

What does it take to sell cigars and be successful? Certainly I don’t think there exists one right answer to this question, but I feel there are multiple wrong ways to go about it and despite supposed progress in society, in the marketing and retail world of it all we’re still stuck in the 1920s.  It is no surprise that over the last few years there have been groups formed for female cigar lovers and even female cigar makers who are part of the storied traditions of their own tobacco families, but what is to be said for success??

Maybe one day I will have my own line of cigars, but for right now I’m content selling them, writing about them, and teaching classes on them.  Besides my own place of employment I frequent the smoking lounges here in New York and for the most part no matter where I go people know me or know of me.  On the flip-side I encounter men on a semi-regular basis who think nothing of me simply because I’m a woman: they pass me over when I offer to assist them while I’m working, they make wisecracks about me being female and address cigars as something phallic, or in certain cases they write me off despite colleagues saying out loud that I am the cigar expert on premises.  Since I am not a man I cannot claim to think like one,  but I have to imagine men who don’t know me automatically think that I must know nothing because cigars are a “guy thing,” or worse yet,  hit on me because they think I’m pretty and show me no respect.  Personally I think the finger should be pointed in a clear direction: marketing.

While the number of instances of random negativity towards me in this industry decreases on a regular basis, there will always be ignorance and backwoods thinking no matter how many ways I choose to prove myself as an equal (if not a superior in some cases) in this male-oriented business.  I am proud to see a larger number of women working in the cigar industry in all mediums and I am elated when a woman comes to me to assist her in securing smokes and displays a desire to learn about tobacco on her own accord.  I am far from a feminist so don’t call me Gloria Steinem, but why must this industry always resort to using a pretty young girl to sell a product?

One avenue where I think marketers go awry today is that they discount the motives of the cigar smoker: even occasional smokers today are rather passionate about their tobacco and participate in forums, social media networks, etc., spending sometimes their entire day conversing about cigars. Those that label themselves as “cigar lovers” nowadays are interested in learning about the process and why their favourite stick has become their favourite — these are not people who flip open any number of  magazines and choose their next smoke based on the girl in the ad. These people also don’t attend events at their local B&M because of the cigar models, either, but rather they like the featured brand or want to meet its manufacturer or simply want to take advantage of event pricing.  Cigar models are simply that — models — and are not hired based on their product knowledge, especially since many of the ones I have encountered over the years don’t even smoke.

Forget the lesser-respected brands that are poorly made bargain smokes for the non-discerning palate (because if you’re on the retail side as a proud tobacconist you’re not interested in that crowd), but what happens when a major label manufacturing cigars you love resorts to the “sex sells” philosophy? New labels seem to be popping up left and right; and while many are doing their best to make a dent in the marketplace, there are some that I think are not only going about it unfairly, but taking the cheap route by using a young model to tout their product.  Part of me wonders what goes through the mind of cigar manufacturer who suddenly decides to abandon their traditional advertising in lieu of a girl wearing a bikini or a mini-dress partying it up in Miami with an unlit cigar in her hand: do these people really think consumers are that dumb and easy?!

I think the same rule for packaging versus quality can be said for a cigar’s advertisement in a magazine: the prettier the parcel the lesser the quality.  Ratios in this world are far from perfect, so why overcompensate?

August 4, 2010Lindsay 45 Comments »
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FL Congressman Kendrik Meek Criticized by Peers for Loving Cigars & Protecting Small Businesses

Check out this great political piece published yesterday in both The Miami Herald and the St. Petersburg Times.

Congressman Kendrick Meek was openly criticized by some of his peers for not just loving cigars — a very public fact that Meek has mentioned in the press — but protecting the rights of cigar smokers and B&Ms of all sizes throughout the state of Florida.  Meek openly says that government doesn’t and shouldn’t exist to close the doors on small business.  To make matters worse, Meek’s US Senate Democratic opponent Jeff Greene, went as far as to send out flyers on 23 July saying that Meek pocketed more money than any other Florida politician for opposing higher tobacco taxes and that the revenue generated from higher taxes was to go to childrens’ health programs.

Thankfully as you will read it was discovered that Jeff Greene’s claims were mostly unfounded and when examined, Meek did nothing wrong.  If not falling for the SCHIP bullsh*t and protecting an industry that is already over-taxed and under-appreciated is wrong, then I don’t know what’s right.  Yes, as a big fan of Padrón cigars Meek has helped the Padrón family to get face time with politicians regarding cigar taxes, but we actually NEED more politicans like Kendrick Meek who are not afraid of admitting they are cigar lovers: instead of hiding thinking you will lose votes or voter confidence, stand up for yourselves and stop lying fellow politicians.

All I know is we need a Kendrick Meek here in New York, and he (or she) could not come too soon….

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Congressman Kendrick Meek relishes a good cigar — Padrons are his favorite, he told Cigar Aficionado magazine in a 2008 profile. He hosts an annual cigar party and is known to hand out cigars to members of Congress and their staff, and the cigar industry has helped fund his recent campaigns, the magazine reported. Padron Cigars, a longtime family business, is headquartered in Little Havana in Miami.

Meek’s U.S. Senate Democratic primary opponent, Jeff Greene, attacks Meek for his ties to the tobacco industry in a campaign flier accusing Meek of standing with special interests.

Specifically, Greene wrote in a campaign flier that hit mailboxes around July 23, 2010, that Meek was “#1 in Florida in taking tobacco cash and then opposed a tax on cigars that would have helped pay for children’s health care.” Greene this week introduced a new TV ad that stated “Meek lobbied for big tobacco against children’s health care.”

We decided to examine the campaign flier. Did Meek rake in more money from the tobacco industry than anyone else in Florida and then oppose a tax on cigars that would pay for children’s health care?

Greene’s campaign cited the Center for Responsive Politics — an organization that analyzes campaign donations — as part of its proof, so we turned there first to check tobacco donations for Meek’s 2008 Congressional race and 2010 U.S. Senate race. The website shows that Meek received $77,325 from the tobacco industry in his 2010 race and $63,727 in his 2008 race. Those amounts put him at No. 1 among Florida candidates for House or Senate and Florida members of the House and Senate.

But Greene’s flier said Meek was “#1 in Florida” and did not specify whether that was only among federal candidates. There is no simple way to thoroughly check tobacco donations to all candidates across Florida including for state Legislature.

Next we checked Meek’s voting record on the U.S. Library of Congress website, particularly in 2007 and 2009, on bills that would raise taxes on the tobacco industry to help pay for children’s health care. Meek voted for the bill each time – but the background is more complex.

While Meek touted the law, behind the scenes he helped Miami cigar maker Jorge Padron get a meeting with top Democrats including House Speaker Nancy Pelosi so Padron could lobby against higher taxes, the Miami Herald wrote on March 24, 2008. Padron later hosted a fundraiser for Meek.

The Children’s Health Insurance Program Reauthorization Act of 2007 would have increased excise tax rates on cigars, cigarettes, cigarette papers and tubes, smokeless tobacco, pipe tobacco, and roll-your-own tobacco. Meek voted for the bill, referred to as the Small Business Tax Relief Act in the House, on Feb. 16, 2007. President George W. Bush vetoed the bill. Meek voted again for the bill on Oct. 25, 2007, and again Bush vetoed it.

The taxes on cigars would have soared from 5 cents to $3, a 6,000 percent increase, the Miami Herald wrote. That tax hike was too high, Meek said in the 2008 article, but he also supported the health care legislation by voting for it.

The Miami Herald wrote, “Asked why he would take a seemingly contrary stance by voting twice for the legislation, Meek explained that expanding healthcare was vital, adding, ‘We knew it was going to be vetoed. … My advocacy on behalf of the legislation is well documented in the congressional record. At the same time, I am sensitive to the fact that business owners facing a giant tax increase want to make sure that legislative leaders understand exactly what is going on. [The insurance program] is going to pass one day with my vote, but [I] don’t want the small businesses in Florida and in my community run out of business.’”

Meek also explained his concerns in the Cigar Aficionado magazine profile.

“The goal of government is not to put small businesses out of business,” Meek told Cigar Aficionado. “Speaker Pelosi and Chairman (Charles) Rangel are not about putting small businesses out of business. I thought that the tax increase (from 20.7 to nearly 53 percent) on the handmade cigar industry went a little bit too far. Well, not a little bit too far; it went too far. This would have hurt not only a lot of businesses in South Florida, but also those countries where the tobacco comes from. The Dominican Republic would have felt a direct effect of such a large tax [increase]. Also Honduras. Also Nicaragua.”

In 2009, the children’s health care legislation came up again, this time to raise the federal excise tax on cigarettes 61 cents, from 39 cents a pack to $1.01 a pack, and raise taxes on other tobacco products. Meek voted in favor of the bill, along with nearly every Democrat in the house, according to a Jan. 14, 2009, press release from Meek. President Barack Obama signed the bill into law in February 2009.

Cigar makers credited Meek with helping reduce the amount of the tax on cigar manufacturers, according to a Jan. 15, 2009, Tampa Tribune article. The article quoted Eric Newman, president of the Cigar Manufacturers Association of Tampa, as saying Tampa Democratic Rep. Kathy Castor “and Meek were very helpful and supportive of our positions.”

So where does that leave us?

Meek was clearly No. 1 in tobacco donations among Florida candidates for House or Senate in his 2008 race and 2010 race and is at the top among Florida’s members in the House and Senate. But Greene’s flier didn’t specify that the No. 1 label applied only to federal races and there is no simple way to check the tobacco dollars given to candidates across the state for various offices.

Greene also claimed that Meek “opposed” a tax on cigars that would have paid for children’s health care. Meek thought that the 2007 version was too high of an increase for businesses and he scored key meetings for a cigar maker with member of Congress, but he voted for the legislation anyway — twice that year. Meek again voted for the version that passed in 2009 when the cigar industry credited him with helping reduce the amount of their tax burden. We recognize he worked to lower the amount of the tax, but we think it’s misleading to say that Meek “opposed” a tax when he voted for it three times. Politicians are ultimately judged on their votes, and that’s why Meek’s votes for the legislation is crucial information here. We considered both parts of Greene’s claim and rate it Barely True.

D.C. Law Expands No-Smoking Areas Around Buildings, Yet is Unenforceable

Read this article below published yesterday in the Washington Business Journal.

Author Michael Neibauer is very apt at pointing out this expansion of said law is downright frivolous since it is impossible to enforce.  There are no fines attached to the violation of this law, no police office or security guard has jurisdiction to punish anyone smoking in a marked “non-smoking area,” therefore I can’t imagine too many people abiding by it.  Another prime example of a waste of time and taxpayer money!

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Building owners and property managers in D.C. as of Tuesday will be allowed to post signs barring smoking within 25 feet of their outer walls, but many may choose not to participate as the new statute is unenforceable and may spark confrontation with stubborn smokers.

Language adopted by the D.C. Council authorizes property owners — commercial or residential — or ground-floor commercial tenants to post signs on their properties stating that smoking is not permitted on public space within 25 feet from the building wall or the distance to the far side of the adjacent public sidewalk, whichever is less.

In a message to its members ahead of the D.C. law’s implementation, the Apartment and Office Building Association of Metropolitan Washington spelled out what the measure means — little more than subtle discouragement of the smoker, or often the pack of smokers who crowd a building’s entryway. There are no fines associated with violating a “no smoking” sign, no mechanism for a police officer to write a ticket and no authority for a security guard to move a smoker along.

“Thus, a property owner may elect to post a sign prohibiting smoking outside its building but, by law, the District could not impose any fines or penalties on persons found smoking in the designated no-smoking area — clearly presenting an enforcement problem for owners,” the AOBA message states. “Compliance will be difficult, if not impossible, if the District is unable or unwilling to enforce the law.

Nicola Whiteman, AOBA’s vice president of government affairs, said in an e-mail that there will be an “expectation that the District will be able to play an enforcement role when in fact the law prevents that from happening.”

“As building owners and managers,” she wrote, “we are effectively on our own.”

While they backed the bill unanimously, several council members questioned the wisdom of a law that comes without an enforcement mechanism. Councilman Phil Mendelson, the legislation’s chief advocate, said during a public hearing in January that the bill goes as far as it can “unless you want to ban smoking on sidewalks.” But Councilwoman Mary Cheh called the measure “phony.”

The smoking law also imposes civil fines, starting at $100 for a first offense, on minors who attempt to buy cigarettes, requires retailers to post more detailed signs warning of the dangers of smoking and bans the sale of blunt wraps in most retail establishments, tobacco shops not included.

I Don’t Think We Are Talking About the Same Venice….

Most of you know I am no stranger to the food and wine world and living in New York I have access to a lot of great establishments where I can indulge in these two passions of mine.  I got word a few weeks ago that a new wine bar was going to open in Greenwich Village and it sounded perfect, but I was skeptical based on the man who owns it.

While Roberto Passon is an established restaurateur here in Manhattan, I personally think he did the most cowardly thing he could have done with Aria Wine Bar: he played it safe (and boring) and completely didn’t live up to the concept he had UrbanDaddy and food writer Gael Greene promulgate on the internet, that of having Aria be like a slice of Venetian life.   Passon is respected for his pastas and he was wise to not rely on them here at Aria, but at his original restaurant the pasta was the only thing he got right.

With its communal tables, hanging prosciuttos, and large chalkboards with parts of the bar’s offerings written in a rustic manner, that’s about as Venetian as it got.  In every write-up about Aria before and right after its opening two weeks ago, each person mentioning this new spot obsessed over the fact that Passon was bringing traditional cicchetti, or Venetian-style tapas, to New York.  While I am the product of proud immigrant Italians, I am not Venetian, but I know cicchetti when I see it and cicchetti was not to be found here.

Forgetting the small offering of salumi and some cheeses, there were roughly twenty dishes on the menu and an overwhelming reliance on goat cheese, a/k/a not something you’ll find widely in Venice (if at all).  You don’t have to be card-carrying member of MENSA to deduce that if Venice is built on a series of canals then its residents must eat a lot of seafood, but seafood was virtually non-existent on the menu.  The most traditional cicchette of them all is cod on a piece of crusty bread: not only was no cod to be found, but there was not one instance of fish on bread.   I did have the anchovies with marinated peppers and the anchovies were lackluster and the peppers didn’t have that acidic quality they should have if marinated.  The polenta with sauteed mushrooms was good, but the mushrooms were loaded with butter and even overpowered the shaved parmigiano on top. The polpettini were a nice presentation and had decent flavour, but the pomodoro sauce that dressed them was not as fresh as it should have been.  It seemed like the only thing that worked was the bufala mozzarella with heirloom tomato and basil, but as long as the core ingredients are good no one can screw that up.

Sadly, I was expecting a lot more from the wine list, which was small in comparison to the hype that was built around it.  I had been informed through multiple sources that the list was comprised of wines chosen entirely by women, which in and of itself it a great marketing tool. There were a few whites, two rosés (only one listed on the menu — I had to ask about the other), five reds and a couple of dessert wines. While I commend Mr. Passon for going this route, the wine list was confusing and I honestly didn’t care that next to every wine there was a woman’s name because it’s not like all of these women were present and accounted for so you could choose to commend or scold them for what they selected. While I enjoyed a couple glasses of the Familia Cassone ’08 Malbec, I could have cared less that someone named Florencia felt it belonged there.

All-in-all Aria Wine Bar is not a home run: the atmosphere was fun, but the food failed to deliver on its promise and the wine list was nothing spectacular.  I was really hoping Aria would be one of those unique spots here in New York that actually educated Americans about what true regional Italian cuisine is, but it instead went on stereotypes and placated a society that thinks real Italian food is this homogenized existence where your meatballs actually belong on your pasta.  I think the most fun part of the wine bar was its bathroom where a basket of chalk encouraged patrons to sketch on its walls. If you are reading this Roberto Passon, I left you a note in Italian at the centre of the wall facing the mirror by the sink: leggerlo e magari puoi dirmi dove è il baccalà.

July 21, 2010Lindsay 5 Comments »
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A Non-Smoking Cigar Bar?

As we all know there are very few places where as cigar smokers we can sit down, relax, and just puff away.  When you think of taking a vacation as a cigar lover a few scenarios pop into your mind: either you choose a destination like the Dominican Republic in hopes of seeing “tobacco country,” you go somewhere where there are reputed tobacconists so you can add to your humidor, or at the very least choose  a place that in some way or another is smoke friendly.  I’ve definitely heard of nonsensical actions like Amtrak not allowing cigars or pipes in the smoking car of their Auto Train, but now I have heard it all: Carnival Cruises now wants to take many of their cigar bars — a place on ships actually named the Cigar Bar — and restrict smoking.

Carnival’s blogger and Senior Cruise Editor John Heald revealed on Friday that Carnival will be testing a more restrictive smoking policy on many of its popular ships.  The cruise line itself has historically had a more relaxed approach to smoking since most of its ships do have cigar bars and various other open-air decks & locales where smoking is permitted.  Although he states that no final decision has been made and this is just an experiment, large ships such as the Destiny, Freedom, and Glory are now entirely non-smoking despite each behemoth of a ship actually having been built with a designated smoking room.  Supposedly to not completely restrict cigar and cigarette smokers Carnival’s administration is testing out other locations for smoking that are well-removed from other highly trafficked parts of the vessel.

I think what strikes me as absolutely moronic (outside of having a cigar bar that doesn’t allow smoking) is  the way these ships were designed was basically set up to encourage complaints from non-smokers: on many of Carnival’s ships one has to walk through the cigar bar in order to access the internet café.  Many non-smokers have apparently stressed to Carnival’s powers-that-be that while they enjoy the live music in the cigar bar, they don’t enjoy the smoking.  Pardon me while I tap into my inner Dennis Miller, but give me a break: it’s a cruise ship for Christ’s sake and there is entertainment EVERYWHERE.  I went on a Carnival cruise once in my life and what kept me sane was the cigar bar because it got me away from small children with absentee parents, oddly-themed bingo games, and dance clubs with DJs who obviously failed the wedding circuit because they embrace Kool & the Gang just a little too much.

As a cigar lover himself, John Heald admits he is a bit torn over this issue, but he is conducting a poll on his Facebook page wanting to know what consumers think of this measure, so I suggest you express your opinion if you love cigars and taking cruises.  What do YOU think about this??