(upbeat music)
Speaker:- I'm holding in my hand
Speaker:a Juan de Fuca,
Speaker:Tampa, Florida.
Speaker:I'm sitting with Arnold Serafin,
Speaker:and I'm thrilled
Speaker:to announce that Juan de Fuca
Speaker:is the latest
Speaker:package with Boveda
Speaker:cigar box partner.
Speaker:Thank you very much for that.
Speaker:- Thanks for having me.
Speaker:- I'm gonna smoke this. Can
you tell me about this cigar?
Speaker:- Sure, it's an old Tampa label,
Speaker:hadn't been made for about 50, 60 years,
Speaker:and it used to belong to a company
Speaker:called the Morgan Cigar
Factory out of Tampa, Florida.
Speaker:And they had been out of
production for many years.
Speaker:And I just, I really loved the name.
Speaker:I thought the name was really,
really funny and iconic.
Speaker:And when I did a little bit
of research on the brand,
Speaker:it turns out that the brand
Speaker:was being made at the time in Tampa,
Speaker:but it had a strong distribution
in the Pacific Northwest.
Speaker:There's a strait, I don't
know if you've seen it,
Speaker:the Juan de Fuca Strait.
- Yeah.
Speaker:- It goes from like Seattle
up to, like, Vancouver Island.
Speaker:So as a matter of fact, we
went through it last year.
Speaker:We took a trip up to Alaska
Speaker:and I thought that was really cool.
Speaker:- Well, this is great
trivia for you kids at home
Speaker:to ask the question, who is Juan de Fuca?
Speaker:- He was a Spanish navigator.
Speaker:Let me say this for my Greek friends,
Speaker:Greek by birth and, I
guess, Spanish later.
Speaker:So his real name was
Ioannis [Apostolos] Fokas.
Speaker:And I'm a history nut, so
I love this type of stuff.
Speaker:He ended up going to Spain,
Speaker:changed his name to Juan de Fuca,
Speaker:which was a really, really
funny name, I thought.
Speaker:- Hmm.
Speaker:I like a closed foot.
Speaker:I got to thank you for that.
- It's romantic, right?
Speaker:- Well, it just creates a
concentration of wrapper
Speaker:around the first puff.
Speaker:- That's true.
Speaker:- You must love that, too.
- I do.
Speaker:That was kind of like my little idea
Speaker:to give it that real Cuban-esque flavor,
Speaker:taste, you know, look.
Speaker:I did that with another one that we have,
Speaker:which is the Don Ramon 1917.
Speaker:And it's the same thing
with the closed foot.
Speaker:I just love the way they look.
Speaker:It's really appealing to me.
Speaker:- So I have to sit here all day
Speaker:and talk to people that
manufacture tremendous craft cigars
Speaker:and I get to try them all.
Speaker:- What a job.
Speaker:- It's so great.
- What a sacrifice.
Speaker:- Tell me how you fell
in love with cigars.
Speaker:- Well, it's a long story.
Speaker:I'm a fourth generation cigarmaker.
Speaker:My father, my grandfather,
my great-grandfather even,
Speaker:he came to Cuba by way
of Spain, late 1800s.
Speaker:And he had a tobacco farm.
Speaker:And then my grandfather
grew up in central Cuba
Speaker:alongside his father.
Speaker:And then eventually he had
his own little factory.
Speaker:So it's been passed down
to me. I'm very fortunate.
Speaker:But myself personally,
the bug that got me,
Speaker:when I was about 14 years old,
Speaker:I went down to Cuba with my dad
and to visit my grandfather,
Speaker:and he was rolling his own
little cigars at the time.
Speaker:He was, you know, pretty old at that time,
Speaker:but he still made his own cigars.
Speaker:And I was only 14 years old
Speaker:and I said, "Grandpa,
Speaker:we gotta get into this again, you know."
Speaker:I told my dad, I said, "When
we get back to Florida,
Speaker:we have to get back into the business."
Speaker:And he said, "Do you
really feel that way?"
Speaker:I said, "Yeah, I'm very
passionate about this
Speaker:and I feel like we gotta bring the family,
Speaker:you know, legacy back."
Speaker:And my dad helped me.
Speaker:And he passed away in 2019,
Speaker:but he was-
- I'm sorry.
Speaker:- Thank you.
Speaker:Very instrumental.
Speaker:- No, it's good.
Speaker:You know, it's wonderful
to see the emotion.
Speaker:People don't understand.
Speaker:- Here's a knife, you want me to cut it?
Speaker:- Do you mind?
- No.
Speaker:- So people don't understand
Speaker:the love and the commitment
Speaker:that these families have to the craft
Speaker:of building remarkable cigars.
Speaker:- Let me go a little bit further.
Speaker:- You're close.
Speaker:- Close but no cigar.
Speaker:- You know, close but no cigar. Yeah.
Speaker:(Arnold chuckles)
Speaker:That's the package with Boveda box label.
Speaker:Did you get it?
Speaker:Yeah, I think you got it.
- Yeah.
Speaker:- Yeah, we make those so
you can't get them out.
Speaker:Look at the beauty of that.
Speaker:Serafin de Cuba.
Speaker:Juan de Fuca.
Speaker:It's a new launch.
Speaker:Is it announced at the show
Speaker:or has it been out already?
- Yes.
Speaker:No, this is brand new for the show.
Speaker:- So it's at the show.
- Yep.
Speaker:- It's packaged with Boveda.
Speaker:This is delicious.
- Thank you very much.
Speaker:- How do you describe this cigar?
Speaker:- I would say, you
correct me if I'm wrong.
Speaker:I would say it's a mild to medium.
Speaker:It's a Cameroon wrapper,
Nicaraguan filler,
Speaker:but very rich, very flavorful,
Speaker:not too strong, not too harsh.
Speaker:I would say it's got a little
bit of sweetness to it.
Speaker:- I'm a sucker for Cameroon wrappers.
Speaker:And I'm impressed that
this is a Cameroon wrapper
Speaker:that's not showing any
sign of wear and tear
Speaker:in the Las Vegas air.
- Yeah, I know, in the desert.
Speaker:Right?
- Yeah, because typically
Speaker:a Cameroon wrapper
would be a little papery
Speaker:and subject to disintegration
upon touching your lips
Speaker:or your tongue or anything.
- Absolutely.
Speaker:- This is holding its own, it's durable.
Speaker:It starts out just beautiful.
Speaker:I don't know if I'd call it a mild.
Speaker:- What do you think?
Speaker:- I'd definitely call it
Speaker:a medium.
- Medium?
Speaker:- I mean, I'm not feeling
the impact of the strength,
Speaker:but I'm definitely digging the flavor.
Speaker:- You know what's funny
Speaker:is we had never worked with
Cameron wrappers before,
Speaker:and this is my first time.
Speaker:And when I originally blended this,
Speaker:I wasn't really a big fan.
Speaker:And then I started kind of
tweaking it a little bit
Speaker:because it was a little strong.
Speaker:And then I said, "Well, you know what?"
Speaker:I'm gonna bring it down a little bit,
Speaker:tweak it a little bit more.
Speaker:And I think we just got it right
Speaker:that it's medium.
- I like it a lot.
Speaker:- Like you said, it's-
- I like it a lot.
Speaker:- But flavorful.
Speaker:- Well, and, you know, Dellas [Edmisten]
Speaker:has a great palate for cigars and-
Speaker:- What a great friend.
Speaker:- He's very excited about your
joining the Boveda family.
Speaker:- As I am as well.
- Yeah.
Speaker:- So thank you for having me.
Speaker:- So you're launching at
the show and how's it going?
Speaker:Where are you set up?
- Oh, yeah, very well.
Speaker:- We're right by the [Arturo]
Fuente booth, booth 8053.
Speaker:- It's a good place to be.
- Great place.
Speaker:Thanks to my friend Carlito.
Speaker:I love to be here, you know,
in Tampa, man, you know.
Speaker:We help each other out.
Speaker:- Well, but how many guys can
say they're fourth generation
Speaker:cigar manufacturers?
Speaker:Carlito can say that.
- Carlito can say that.
Speaker:- The PadrĂ³ns can say that.
- Yes.
Speaker:- There's maybe a few
others, but not a lot.
Speaker:- Not too many of us out there.
Speaker:- Yeah.
- My son will be the fifth
Speaker:and he's here with me, too.
Speaker:- Oh, that's great.
- So I'm honored. You know?
Speaker:- How old's your son?
Speaker:- He's 22.
- Oh, so he's in.
Speaker:He's working with the line.
- Oh, yeah.
Speaker:And he's actually the person
Speaker:that is involved in like, you know,
Speaker:the packaging of the boxes.
Speaker:And he was actually helping us
Speaker:with the order now with Boveda.
Speaker:So he's instrumental-
- So a lot of people
Speaker:don't understand the history of Tampa
Speaker:and the impact that Tampa
had on the cigar industry.
Speaker:Can you riff on that
Speaker:for a minute?
- Sure.
Speaker:Tampa at one time made 500 million cigars.
Speaker:They actually made more cigars at one time
Speaker:than Havana, Cuba.
Speaker:And it was mainly because of the Cuban
Speaker:and Spanish influence of the time.
Speaker:You know, there really wasn't
Speaker:an immigration law at the time.
Speaker:So a lot of the folks would come over,
Speaker:you know, they'd come and work in Tampa,
Speaker:and then they'd gravitate back to Havana,
Speaker:and do the same thing.
Speaker:And then a lot of them
ended up staying there.
Speaker:But it all started by Mr.[Martinez] Ybor.
Speaker:We, actually, a couple years ago,
Speaker:we brought back Mr. Ybor's brand,
Speaker:which is, in English, Prince of Wales.
Speaker:In Spanish, Principe de Gales.
Speaker:This is the label here.
- It's pretty.
Speaker:- And that was the first
cigar that was made in Tampa.
Speaker:Well, let me go back a minute.
Speaker:Mr. [Ignacio] Haya, who
was a friend of Mr. Ybor's,
Speaker:he actually has Cigar Factory,
Speaker:had Cigar Factory Number One
Speaker:and the [J.C.} Newman
family brought that one
Speaker:back, coincidentally.
Speaker:But I was already working
on Prince of Wales
Speaker:and was like, "Well, I'll
have Mr. Ybor's brand,
Speaker:they'll have Mr. Haya's brand."
Speaker:- Well, and all these legends
- So that's really cool.
Speaker:- are connected and they come
through generations later
Speaker:in the revival of a brand Juan de Fuca
Speaker:with a brand new cigar by Arnold Serafin.
Speaker:And Serafin de Cuba
Speaker:is your company.
- Yes, sir. Thank you.
Speaker:- Yeah, it's awesome.
- Thank you very much.
Speaker:- It's a tasty little critter.
Speaker:(Arnold laughs)
Dellas [Edmisten] was right.
Speaker:- He really enjoys it. He
does have a very good palate.
Speaker:- Yeah. Yeah, it's great.
Speaker:- Well, I thank-
- And a great friend.
Speaker:I appreciate what you guys
have done here for me today.
Speaker:- Well, and I'm grateful.
We're with you all the way.
Speaker:We'll keep them fresh.
Speaker:You keep producing great sticks.
Speaker:- Thank you, sir.
Speaker:- Thanks a lot. Appreciate
you having the chat.
Speaker:- Thanks for having me on the show.
Speaker:- Yeah, thanks, Arnold.
Speaker:(upbeat music)