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  • Avelino Lara Passes 10/27/09

    Didn't see this posted. Rest in peace. What a legacy...

    Former Cohiba Boss Avelino Lara Dies

    Avelino Lara, the original maestro who oversaw production of Cohiba cigars in Cuba, died Tuesday in Havana. He was 88.





    The Legend of Cohiba

    ...Avelino Lara, 71, the creator of Cohiba and current head of El Laguito, said that he never received a formal request from Fidel to produce the cigar. "I received an order from Cubatabaco, the marketing arm for Cuban cigars," said Lara, puffing away on a Cohiba Lancero in his office in El Laguito. "The head of Cubatobaco asked me to create a new blend which was different from all others brands. It had to be the very best...the selection of the selection."

    Although Lara created the Cohiba in 1968, only a few thousand boxes a year were given away as diplomatic gifts. Then in 1982, what was once considered the smoke of world leaders became the cigar of the world cognoscenti. Today, its unique bright yellow, white and black band has become a symbol of success in much of the world. Cuba may not embrace the ways of capitalism, but her Cohiba cigars are clearly symbols of financial success. Actors such as Tom Cruise and Arnold Schwarzenegger have standing orders with London and Geneva cigar merchants for Cohiba while business magnates such as Lee Iaccoca have been known to light up Cohibas after a successful deal.

    You certainly have to be fairly well off to buy six cigars in the Cohiba range. The least expensive Cohiba, the four and one-half inch-long 26 ring gauge Panetela, costs about ?4.80 ($8.90) in London while the similarly small Exquisito, five inch by 36 ring gauge, is about ?6.60 ($12.20). Prices quickly increase to about ?9.40 ($17.40) and ?11.80 ($21.80) for the elegantly thin Coronas Especial and Lanceros, both 38 ring gauge by six and seven and one-half inches long, respectively. The thick Robusto at 50 ring gauge and five inches long goes for ?8.80 ($16.30) while the longer Churchill-sized Esplendido carries a price off ?13 ($24).

    "The pricing is totally correct," said Lara, whose monthly salary may only cover the U.K. retail price of a box of 25 Lanceros. Luckily for him, he has an unlimited personal supply. "I buy the best quality tobacco for Cohiba, and the tobacco I select may cost three times the price per ton than other tobacco. It takes three years for the cigar to be produced and sold. Cohiba is the best cigar in the world. So, it has to be expensive."

    The tobacco for Cohiba, like nearly all other premium Cuban cigar brands, comes from the heart of the Vuelta Abajo, about 100 miles southwest of Havana. Lara makes dozens of trips a year to this lush region of deep, red-brown soil and drooping green palm trees. He visits vegas or plantations near the towns of San Juan y Martinez and San Luiz to select the best tobacco. Selection begins during the harvest in February when the first silky green leaves of the tobacco plants are picked and continues through the various steps of production.

    "There are only two people in Cuba that know the names of the vegas used for Cohiba," said Lara, playfully drawing on his Lanceros with a satisfied grin. "It is a great secret. Only myself and Francisco Torano of the Ministry of Agriculture know."

    He said that the ten vegas used for Cohiba comprise about 700 acres, a tiny percentage of the roughly 98,800 acres planted to tobacco for last year's harvest in the Pinar del Rio district. Lara did admit, however, that Cuba's most legendary vegas, El Corojo and Hoyo del Monterrey, supply Cohiba along with the well-known Santa Damiana plantation. On average, he selects tobacco from five of the ten vegas, each harvest depending on the quality of tobacco available.

    The production in the Vuelta Abajo for Cohiba is the same as for other brands. The tobacco, depending on its strength and quality, is dried and fermented twice in various warehouses which dot the countryside of the region. This drying and fermentation process, according to Laral reduces the tar and nicotine in the tobacco as well as changes its color from green to various shades of brown. Some tobacco may be aged for more than 18 months during these processes. In addition, all the tobacco is classified by color and by strength during this period.

    Fermentation is a unique factor in Cohiba cigars. While tobacco for other cigars only undergoes two thorough fermentations, the leaves for Cohiba go through a third fermentation at the El Laguito factory. All the key types of tobacco-- the ligero, seco and volado--are fermented a third time. The leaves are stacked and fermented in small wooden barrels in dark closets in various parts of the factory. The fermentation may take as long as 18 months depending on the tobacco. Lara said that this costly process gives Cohiba cigars their finesse and refinement. Added the factory's assistant director, Rafael Guerra, "The third fermentation is nothing new. It is the old way of doing things. But it greatly reduces the nicotine and tars in the Cohiba...we say in Cuba that those who smoke Cohiba will never die of cancer but those who don't will die of envy."

    With the various types of tobacco in stock, El Laguito's cigar rollers--called torcedores--are given batches of leaves to cover their daily production. Each batch represents the correct blend of tobacco to produce approximately 100 to 110 cigars. Rollers can make a variety of sizes and shapes, although they generally specialize in one type of cigar for a few months at a time.

    El Laguito began in 1961 as a cigar-rolling school for women. Until that time, very few women rollers existed because many of the cigar factory owners believed that their hands were not strong enough to properly shape cigars. The owners also thought that the men would not concentrate on their work if women were present. "I had my doubts at the beginning," admitted Lara, who started the school. "But it is clear now that they are just as good as men in rolling cigars. It only took me a few months to realize this."

    Lara is considered one of Cuba's greatest cigar men. His ability to select tobacco and roll cigars is legendary. The texture of a tobacco leaf, its smell, its color, they all tell Lara more than can be imagined. "Lara is a great teacher," said Guerra, who may one day take over when Lara retires. "He is the best tobacco man in Cuba. With Lara, it is like a family at El Laguito. We hope that he never retires. Every day you learn something from him."

    An almost magical ambiance radiates from the Cohiba factory's light-blue, classical facade. The small ornate palace of El Laguito with its elegant grounds gives a spirit of lost aristocratic grandeur, a stark contrast to the grubby, well-worn rooms inside. Nearly 300 workers labor here each day in rooms that once were filled with the finest furniture, tapestries and paintings.

    The workers produce three sizes of Cohiba at El Laguito: Lanceros, Coronas Especial and Panetelas. The factory also made the similar shaped thin cigars of Davidoff--No. 1, No. 2 and Ambassadrice--until the Swiss company decided to switch its production to the Dominican Republic last year. Lara said that the greatest possible care had always been taken to assure that each brands' cigars retained their blended character and uniqueness.

    "Davidoff came here in 1969," said Lara, with a slight haze of cigar smoke around him. "Zino was in this very room and we decided together what the mix of the cigars would be and the sizes. We tasted various cigars and came up with the blends. Cohiba, however, was already developed at the time, and it was always the best of the two."

    El Laguito is small when compared to other well-known cigar factories such as Partagas or H. Upmann in Havana. Although it has increased significantly in size over the last decade, El Laguito's total annual production exceeds three million cigars or about one-third to one-fifth the size of a major cigar factory. The entire Cohiba range is produced here, although thick cigars such as the short Robusto and long Esplendido are made only four to five months a year in El Laguito due to production limits at the factory. About 400,000 more of these two cigars are also produced in the Partagas factory, which receives pre-blended tobacco from El Laguito.

    Although the production of Cohiba fluctuates each year according to the quality of the harvest, the average annual production by size is currently: 950,000 Lanceros, 700,000 Coronas Especial, 260,000 Exquisitos, 390,000 Panetelas, 440,000 Robustos and 660,000 Esplendidos. "In the end, we only produce what we have in the best quality tobacco," said Lara. "If we only have enough tobacco for one million cigars that is all we will make. We do not make exceptions, Cohiba is the selection of the selection."

    Lara is a candid and charismatic individual. He is most at ease smoking a cigar in his simple office on the second floor of El Laguito and reflecting on cigars. He loves nothing better than to recall the days as a young child when he played in the tobacco fields of the Vuelta Abajo with his Spanish grandfather who may have told him about life in the tobacco factories so well depicted in Carmen. "I learned many things about tobacco from my grandfather," he said puffing away on his Lanceros and watching the gray smoke rise to the ceiling as he was deep in thought. "Tobacco is part of Cuban culture, and Cohiba is the best cigar made in Cuba."

    Link
    "Living well, is the best revenge."

  • #2
    I smoked a Legend!

    This is very sad news, indeed.

    When I was in the Cayman Islands last summer, I had the great pleasure of meeting Avelino's cousin, Jesus Parez Lara, who also was one of Castro's personal rollers. He told me, among many other things that I captured on video, that he started working [rolling cigars] in Santa Clara in 1954 at the Hoyo de Monterrey factory. Both Jesus and Avelino left Cuba to work in the Bahamas rolling Graycliffs until it went to shit [under different management], according to Jesus.

    He now works part time at a small Habano shop in the Caymans Islands rolling fine puros using hand-picked Cuban tobacco. He rolled two dozen excellent "club" puros for me while we chatted in spanglish (five of which he gifted me).

    I enjoyed several of these wonderful puros on the island and the remaining dozen are resting comfortably in my humi until next year. What a treat to smoke a freshly rolled puro made by one of Cuba's legends!


    TJ, TJCoro
    Last edited by TJCoro; 31-10-2009, 02:02 AM.
    sigpicVaya con Dios, Amigos! - don TJ and the Coros

    Comment


    • #3
      Thanks for posting the story, senor Vision.

      JB, JBCoro
      sigpicVaya con Dios, Amigos! - don TJ and the Coros

      Comment


      • #4
        Sad news, RIP.
        Lover of fine Cubans since 2006

        Comment


        • #5
          Nice TJ.

          How was the construction of the cigars?
          "Living well, is the best revenge."

          Comment


          • #6
            2007 Club by Jesus Perez Lara.

            Originally posted by Vision View Post
            Nice TJ.

            How was the construction of the cigars?

            See for yourself.

            Sorry for the low quality pics - taken with my computer.

            This is the last of my 2007 stock, and I plan to smoke it in remembrance after finishing this post.
            Attached Files
            sigpicVaya con Dios, Amigos! - don TJ and the Coros

            Comment


            • #7
              Originally posted by TJCoro View Post
              This is very sad news, indeed.

              When I was in the Cayman Islands last summer, I had the great pleasure of meeting Avelino's cousin, Jesus Parez Lara, who also was one of Castro's personal rollers. He told me, among many other things that I captured on video, that he started working [rolling cigars] in Santa Clara in 1954 at the Hoyo de Monterrey factory. Both Jesus and Avelino left Cuba to work in the Bahamas rolling Graycliffs until it went to shit [under different management], according to Jesus.

              He now works part time at a small Habano shop in the Caymans Islands rolling fine puros using hand-picked Cuban tobacco. He rolled two dozen excellent "club" puros for me while we chatted in spanglish (five of which he gifted me).

              I enjoyed several of these wonderful puros on the island and the remaining dozen are resting comfortably in my humi until next year. What a treat to smoke a freshly rolled puro made by one of Cuba's legends!


              TJ, TJCoro


              wow what a great memory to have mabey you should keep one as a memento of the day




              sad news about avelino lara lets hope he passed his knowledge on

              Comment


              • #8
                A Wonderful Momento, Indeed!

                Originally posted by peanutpete View Post
                wow what a great memory to have mabey you should keep one as a memento of the day
                Yeah, maybe, Mr. Peanut. But I'd rather smoke 'em!


                Just this morning I enjoyed a 2-year old custom puro rolled by Jesus in memory of his cousin's passing, and it was marvelous! Quite light and very creamy, with hints of vanilla throughout.

                JB, JBCoro


                WTF! I thought you were unable to detect the subtle nuances of fine puros!!!


                (Ahem!) That's don TJ, TJCoro that has a poor palate. Sir Juggle Boy is quite astute in detecting the fine flavors of fine puros.
                sigpicVaya con Dios, Amigos! - don TJ and the Coros

                Comment

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