Posts Tagged ‘Fonseca’

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

Pairing Cigars with Port: History and Guidelines

     

      I’m going to start off by saying that I am not a fan of drinking Port. It’s not my style and it’s not something my palate is accustomed to having grown up in a family that is Hell bent on medium-bodied dry red wines, but the pairing of both this specific wine and cigars is one that has been around for generations. 

       Thanks to the success of my first three pairing articles on Stogie Review, I’ve decided based on questions and comments that so many people are curious about Port and therefore I’d step up and write yet another article making all of you think I’m probably an alcoholic. (Ha….)

 __________________________________________________________________________________________

        Port is known by a variety of monikers depending on what languages you speak, but no matter what you call it, it is a fortified wine from Portugal’s Douro Valley. For all of you that are not total wine geeks, here’s some trivia you can throw out at your friends the next time you’re dining and talking after-dinner drinks: fortified wine is simply a wine to which a distilled beverage has been added before the fermentation process is complete, therefore killing the yeast and leaving behind a sizeable amount of sugar (and much more alcohol than that bottle of Chianti you polished off earlier during your primi piatti).

         Commonly served as a dessert wine, Ports are thicker, richer, sweeter, heavier and with an alcohol content of around 20%. Although Ports are being made in other parts of the world now, purists will tell you the real stuff of course comes from Portugal and it can be divided into two generic categories:

  •  Wines that have matured in sealed glass bottles, with no exposure to air, and experience what is known as “reductive” aging. This process leads to the wine losing its colour quite slowly, resulting in more smoothness on the palate and being less tannic.
  • Wines that have matured in wooden barrels, whose permeability allows a small amount of exposure to oxygen, experiencing what is known as “oxidative” aging. They too lose colour, but at a much faster pace. If red grapes are used, in time the redness lightens to a tawny colour – these are known as Tawny (or sometimes Wood) ports. They also lose volume to evaporation, leaving behind a wine that is slightly more viscous and intense in delivery.

           I think what might be the best way to go is to provide all of you with the most simple rule of all when it comes to pairing Ports with a cigar: since Port wine is naturally quite sweet, do yourself a favour and avoid smoking anything light/sweet because you won’t be able to enjoy it once the thick wine coats your palate. Honestly, grab a medium- to full-bodied cigar that not only has fairly prominent spice notes, but is balanced with woodsy essences. Remember that many maduro cigars also have some bittersweet chocolate and dark coffee notes to them as well and this allows the Port to work with the cigar and not against it, providing your palate with a very well-rounded flavour profile and therefore experience.  

 *                *                *

       Everyone laughs when I tell them this little anecdote, but part of the reason why some consider cigars and Port a  natural pairing is due to one name: Fonseca. This story is like trying to figure out which came first with respect to the chicken and the egg since there is no paperwork authenticating one or the other, but the Portugese Fonsecas are heralded for their wine, while next door the Spanish Fonsecas are known for cigar tobacco. No one knows which technically came first and it’s a point of contention for both countries (in polite conversation, of course.) 

       Although Ports are not for everyone, if you’re at all curious because you’ve never tried, go for it and grab a nice cigar based on my simple guidelines above and hopefully you will enjoy an entirely new experience!

January 20, 2010Lindsay 4 Comments »
FILED UNDER :Articles , Cigars , Wine
TAGGED WITH : , , , , , ,