Dictionary Definition
cigar n : a roll of tobacco for smoking
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Etymology
From lang=esPronunciation
Translations
- Armenian: սիգար (sigar)
- Chinese: 雪茄 (xuějiā)
- Dutch: sigaar
- Estonian: sigar
- Finnish: sikari
- French: cigare
- German: Zigarre
- Hebrew: סיגר (sigar)
- Icelandic: vindill
- Indonesian: cerutu
- Italian: sigaro
- Japanese: タバコ, 煙草 (たばこ, tabako)
- Polish: cygaro
- Portuguese: charuto
- Romanian: trabuc
- Russian: сигара
- Slovene: cigara
- Spanish: puro, cigarro
- Swedish: cigarr
- Telugu: చుట్ట (chuTTa)
- Tagalog: abano; tabako
See also
Extensive Definition
A cigar is a tightly rolled bundle of dried and
fermented tobacco which
is ignited so that its smoke may be drawn into the smoker's mouth.
The English
cigar comes from the Spanish
cigarro, which in turn derives from the Mayan
word for tobacco, siyar; see the entry for cigarro at the Spanish
Royal Academy's online dictionary. Cigar tobacco is grown in
significant quantities in Brazil, Cameroon, Cuba, Dominican
Republic, Honduras, Indonesia,
Mexico,
Nicaragua,
the
Philippines, and the United
States. Cigars rolled from Cuban tobacco are
often popularly reputed to be of higher quality and better
taste.
History
The indigenous inhabitants of the islands of the Caribbean Sea and Mesoamerica have smoked cigars since as early as the 10th century, as evidenced by the discovery of a ceramic vessel at a Mayan archaeological site in Uaxactún, Guatemala. The vessel was decorated with the painted figure of a man smoking a primitive cigar. Explorer Christopher Columbus is generally credited with the introduction of smoking to Europe.Two of Columbus's crewmen during his 1492
journey, Rodrigo de
Jerez and Luis de
Torres, are said to have disembarked in Cuba and taken puffs
of tobacco wrapped in maize husks, thus becoming the
first European cigar smokers.
Around 1592, the Spanish galleon San Clemente brought 50
kilograms (110 lb) of Cuban tobacco seed to the
Philippines over the Acapulco-Manila trade route. The seed was then
distributed among the Roman Catholic missions, 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 cigarettes were
still comparatively rare. The cigar business was an important
industry, and factories employed many people before mechanized
manufacturing of cigars became practical. Many modern cigars, as a
matter of prestige, are still rolled by hand: some boxes bear the
phrase totalmente a mano, "totally by hand" or hecho a mano, "made
by hand".
Manufacture
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, 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,
is carried out under conditions designed to help the leaf die
slowly and gracefully. 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, unbaled, reinspected, 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 70 °F (21 °C), and 70%
relative humidity, as the environment will allow. According to some
experts, however, long-term cigar aging requires significantly
lower storage temperatures (for example, 40 °F
(4 °C) is recommended for a 50-year storage). The higher
temperatures which are usually used in standard cigar storage will
cause the cigar to deteriorate after several years, resulting in an
eventual corruption of the cigar's flavor. 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.
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, 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 cigars, chopped up tobacco leaves
are used for the filler, and long leaves or even a type of "paper"
made from tobacco pulp is used for the wrapper which binds the
cigar together.
Historically, a lector or reader was always
employed to entertain the cigar factory workers. This practice
became obsolete once audio books
for portable music players became available, but it is still
practiced in some Cuban factories. The name for the Montecristo
cigar brand may have arisen from this practice. (See List
of cigar brands.)
Marketing and distribution
Cigars are marketed via advertisements, product
placement in movies and other media, sporting events,
cigar-friendly magazines such as Cigar
Aficionado, and cigar dinners. Advertisements often include
depictions of affluence, sexual imagery, and
explicit or implied celebrity
endorsement.
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,
Families in the cigar industry
Nearly all modern cigar makers are members of
long-established cigar families, or purport to be. 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.
In 1992, Cigar Aficionado created the "Cigar Hall
of Fame" to recognize families in the cigar industry. To date, six
individuals have been inducted into the Hall of Fame for their
families' contributions to the cigar industry:
- Edgar M. Cullman, Chairman, General Cigar Company, New York, USA
- 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, USA
- Stanford J. Newman, Chairman, J.C. Newman Cigar Company, Tampa, Florida, USA
- Angel Oliva, Sr., Founder, Oliva Tobacco Co., Tampa, Florida, USA
The oldest family-owned premium cigar company in
the USA is the
J.C. Newman Cigar Company, a four-generation family with
headquarters in Tampa's Ybor City cigar
district, which has been making their Cuesta-Rey
cigars since 1895. Other brands include La Unica, Diamond Crown and
Rigoletto. Perhaps the best-known cigar family in the world is the
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 1916. The release of the
Fuente Fuente OpusX in 1995 heralded the first quality wrapper
grown in the Dominican Republic. 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.
Not only are premium cigar-makers typically
families, but so are those who grow the premium cigar tobacco. 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. Some families, such as the well-known Padrons, have
crossed over from tobacco growing to cigar making. While the Padron
family has been growing tobacco since the 1850s, they began making
cigars that bear their family's name in 1964. 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.
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. 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.
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. Colors are designated as follows, from lightest to darkest:- Claro – light tan or yellowish. Indicative of shade-grown tobacco.
- Colorado – reddish-brown (also called Rosado'' or "Corojo").
- Colorado Claro – mid-brown; particularly associated with tobacco grown in the Dominican Republic or in Cuba.
- Colorado Maduro – dark brown; particularly associated with Honduran or Cuba-grown tobacco.
- Double Claro – very light, slightly greenish (also called Candela, American Market Selection or jade); achieved by picking leaves before maturity and drying quickly; often grown in Connecticut.
- Maduro – dark brown to very dark brown.
- Natural – light brown to brown; generally sun-grown.
- Oscuro – a.k.a. "Double Maduro", black, often oily in appearance; mainly grown in Cuba, Nicaragua, Brazil, Mexico, and Connecticut, USA.
Some manufacturers use an alternate designation:
- American Market Selection (AMS) – synonymous with Double Claro
- English Market Selection (EMS) – 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
A common misconception is that the darker the
wrapper, the fuller the flavor. If anything, 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. 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 gauge hold more filler, with greater potential to provide a full body and complex flavor. 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.
Binders
Binders are elastic leaves used to hold together the bunches of fillers.Size and shape
Cigars 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). For example, most non-Cuban
robustos have a ring gauge of approximately 50 and a length of
approximately 5 inches. Robustos which are of Cuban origin always
have a ring gauge of 50 and a length of 4 ⅞ inches.
See also Factory
name.
Parejo
The most common shape is the parejo, which has 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.Parejos are designated by the following
terms:
- Coronas
- Rothschilds (4 ½" x 50) after the Rothschild family
- Robusto (4 ⅞" x 50)
- Hermosos No. 4 (5" x 48)
- Mareva/Petit Corona (5 ⅛" x 42)
- Corona (5 ½" x 42)
- Corona Gorda (5 ⅝" x 46)
- Toro (6" x 50)
- Corona Grande (6 ⅛" x 42)
- Cervantes/Lonsdale (6 ½" x 42), named for Hugh Cecil Lowther, 5th Earl of Lonsdale
- Dalia (6 ¾" x 43)
- Julieta, also known as Churchill (7" x 47), named for Sir Winston Churchill
- Prominente/Double Corona (7 ⅝" x 49)
- Presidente (8" x 50)
- Gran Corona ("A") (9 ¼" x 47)
- Panatelas – longer and generally thinner than Coronas
- Small Panatela (5" x 33)
- Carlota (5 ⅝" x 35)
- Short Panatela (5" x 38)
- Slim Panatela (6" x 34.9)
- Panatela (6" x 38)
- Deliciados/Laguito No. 1 (7 ¼" x 38)
These dimensions are, at best, idealised. 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
only has figurados in their range.
Figurados include the following:
- 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.
- Tuscanian - 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 chili 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) differ greatly from regular cigars. They weigh less than cigars and cigarillos, but more importantly, they resemble cigarettes in size, shape, packaging, and filters.Flavor
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. Different smokers will have different preferences, some liking one good cigar better than another, others disagreeing.Cigar smoke, which is rarely 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. Some even keep journals
of cigars they've enjoyed, complete with personal ratings,
description of flavors observed, sizes, brands, etc. Cigar tasting
is in some respects similar to wine and
cognac
tasting.
Cuban cigars
Cigars manufactured in Cuba are widely considered
to be the best, although many experts believe that the best
offerings from Honduras and Nicaragua rival those from Cuba. The
Cuban reputation is thought to arise from the unique
characteristics of the Vuelta Abajo
district in the
Pinar del Río Province at the west of the island, where the
microclimate allows
high-quality tobacco to be grown.
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 are claimed to be the most skilled in the
world.
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. Some cigars show a TC or Tripa
Corta, meaning that short filler and cuttings were used in the
hand-rolling process.
United States embargo against Cuba
The cigar became inextricably intertwined with U.S. political history on February 7, 1962, when United States President John F. Kennedy imposed a 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 a thousand H. Upmann brand 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.The embargo prohibited US residents from legally
purchasing Cuban-cigars on the market, and Cuba was deprived of its
major customer for tobacco.
In the United States, authentic Cuban-made cigars
are widely considered to be "the best smoking experience" of all
cigars and are seen as "forbidden
fruit" for Americans to purchase. Many former Cuban cigar
manufacturers moved to other countries, and the Dominican Republic,
Honduras, and Nicaragua continue to manufacture cigars.
It remains illegal for US residents to purchase
or import Cuban cigars, although they are readily available across
the northern border in Canada, and small
quantities can in practice be brought back without trouble from
US
Customs if the bands are removed prior to crossing. 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. 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.
Cigars specific to other countries
Italy produces the "Sigaro Toscano" (Tuscan cigar), very different from the Havana style.Health effects
see Tobacco and healthLike other forms of tobacco use, cigar smoking
poses a significant health risk. It is similar to cigarette smoking in nicotine addiction, oral cancer,
periodontal health,
and tooth loss. It causes many types of cancer, including that of
the lung and
upper digestive tract; many of these cancers have extremely low
cure rates. Risks are greater for those who smoke more cigars,
smoke them longer, and inhale when they smoke. Cigar smoking also
increases the risk of lung and heart diseases such as
chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.
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 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. 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. A 2007 California study found that gay men and bisexual women smoke significantly fewer cigars than the general population of men and women, respectively. Substantial and steady increases in cigar smoking were observed during the 1990s and early 2000s in the U.S. among both adults and adolescents. 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, and a 2003–2004 survey of 4,486 high school students in a Midwestern county found that 18% smoked cigars.Popular culture
Major U.S. print media portray cigars favorably;
despite widespread coverage of the health effects of cigar smoking,
they generally frame cigar use as a lucrative business or a trendy
habit, rather than as a health risk. Rich people are often
caricatured as wearing top hats and
tails
and smoking cigars. In the United States a poor-quality cigar is
sometimes called a "dog rocket". These cheap cigars are often
converted into blunts
rather than smoked directly. Cigars are often smoked to celebrate
special occasion: the birth of a child, a graduation, a big sale.
The expression "close but no cigar"
comes from the practice of giving cigars as prizes in games involving good aim
at fairgrounds.
King Edward VII enjoyed smoking cigarettes and cigars, much to
the chagrin of his mother,
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.
President
Ulysses S. Grant of the USA
and Dr.
Sigmund Freud were both known for regularly smoking an entire
box (25 cigars) a day. Challenged on the "phallic" shape of the cigar,
Freud is supposed to have replied "sometimes a cigar is just a
cigar."
Winston
Churchill was rarely seen without a cigar during his time as
Britain's wartime leader; a large cigar size was named in his
honour.
Rudyard
Kipling said in his poem The Betrothed, "A woman is only a
woman: but a good cigar is a smoke."
Since apart from certain forms of heavily cured
and strong 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.
References
External links
- Cigar Smoker's FAQ - compiled from alt.smokers.cigars
- Cigars Review
cigar in Arabic: سيجار
cigar in Bosnian: Cigara
cigar in Czech: Doutník
cigar in Danish: Cigar
cigar in German: Zigarre
cigar in Estonian: Sigar
cigar in Spanish: Puro
cigar in Esperanto: Cigaro
cigar in French: Cigare
cigar in Armenian: Սիգար
cigar in Indonesian: Cerutu
cigar in Italian: Sigaro
cigar in Hebrew: סיגר
cigar in Latin: Sigarum
cigar in Lithuanian: Cigaras
cigar in Hungarian: Szivar
cigar in Macedonian: Пура
cigar in Dutch: Sigaar
cigar in Japanese: 葉巻きタバコ
cigar in Norwegian: Sigar
cigar in Polish: Cygaro
cigar in Portuguese: Charuto
cigar in Russian: Сигара
cigar in Simple English: Cigar
cigar in Finnish: Sikari
cigar in Swedish: Cigarr
cigar in Turkish: Puro
cigar in Vlaams: Sigarre