(upbeat jazzy music)
Speaker:- There's a story inside every smoke shop.
Speaker:With every cigar and with every person.
Speaker:Come be a part of the cigar lifestyle of Boveda.
Speaker:This is Box Press.
Speaker:(upbeat music stops)
Speaker:Welcome to another episode of Box Press.
Speaker:I am your host, Rob Gagner
Speaker:I am sitting next to no one other than Robert Caldwell,
Speaker:he cannot be confused with anyone else.
Speaker:He's probably one of the taller people in the industry,
Speaker:definitely has a style and a swagger to him.
Speaker:And I appreciate him because he makes really great cigars
Speaker:with Henderson Ventura at William Ventura Cigar Company.
Speaker:You're kind of a world traveler.
Speaker:- Yeah.
Speaker:- So gimme your top three places to travel.
Speaker:- To visit or live?
Speaker:- Let's go visit first. We're just gonna travel.
Speaker:We live in America. Let's go visit.
Speaker:- Istanbul, Turkey.
Speaker:- [Rob] That's number one or three.
Speaker:- Number one, visit.
Speaker:- That's number one.
Speaker:- For visit.
Speaker:- Istanbul, Turkey.
Speaker:Why?
Speaker:- There's like 20 million people spread over
Speaker:like rolling hills.
Speaker:And then you have a culture that's
Speaker:thousands and thousands of years old.
Speaker:And then it's the,
Speaker:where Europe and Asia connect is right there.
Speaker:So part of Turkey's in Asia,
Speaker:part of Turkey's in Europe, and then, yeah
Speaker:- [Rob] That's interesting,
Speaker:kind of like a melting pot of culture.
Speaker:- And it's like a very European,
Speaker:but yet like Middle Eastern culture,
Speaker:which is similar to Morocco
Speaker:- [Rob] Okay.
Speaker:- and Lebanon, or similar kind of vibe, but amazing food.
Speaker:Great music, great people.
Speaker:Beautiful. Like everything's gorgeous.
Speaker:- [Rob] Wow.
Speaker:- Yeah, but I could never live there.
Speaker:- Couldn't live there.
Speaker:Okay. - No.
Speaker:- Second place to visit.
Speaker:- Santa Marta, Colombia.
Speaker:There's a park there called Parque Tayrona
Speaker:that's like on, I think the eastern side of the coast.
Speaker:And it's like a rainforest.
Speaker:It looks like you're in Thailand or something.
Speaker:Just absolutely stunning nature.
Speaker:- Wow.
Speaker:- Just un-fucking-believable.
Speaker:- Thailand in Colombia.
Speaker:- Yeah.
Speaker:- Amazing.
Speaker:- That's number two. - [Rob] Good food too.
Speaker:- Wait, no that's number three.
Speaker:Number two is Sagres, Portugal, which is where,
Speaker:when they thought the earth was flat,
Speaker:that's where they thought it fell into the-
Speaker:like that's where they thought it fell over.
Speaker:Sagres, it's like hundred foot tall cliffs,
Speaker:100-foot tall waves or 80-foot tall waves,
Speaker:really violent sea.
Speaker:And then the whole area there is like
Speaker:a very otherworldly ecosystem.
Speaker:- And you can't see land off the coast.
Speaker:- No, you, you can't see land.
Speaker:- They think, "Well, yeah."
Speaker:- And it's violent.
Speaker:Like you hear boom, boom of the waves.
Speaker:It's just weird. Special.
Speaker:- Those are the places to visit.
Speaker:Traveling 101 with Robert Caldwell, you heard it here first.
Speaker:(lighter clicks) One, two and three.
Speaker:All right.
Speaker:Now we're gonna uproot ourselves because we live in this
Speaker:world where we can work from home.
Speaker:Where am am I going to live? Number three, number three.
Speaker:- Oof, that's, you know, that's a much harder-
Speaker:- Well, you're the one who said it, so, okay.
Speaker:Gimme your number one then.
Speaker:you said, "Live or travel?"
Speaker:- Number one.
Speaker:- You have to have some idea of
Speaker:somewhere else you'd wanna live.
Speaker:- So it depends if you're working or not working.
Speaker:- Okay. I'm working.
Speaker:I gotta work from home.
Speaker:- Madrid, Spain.
Speaker:- Madrid, Spain.
Speaker:Absolutely. I've been there.
Speaker:- Now, work from home, also Florence, Italy.
Speaker:- [Rob] Really? - Yeah.
Speaker:- Isn't it more expensive in Italy than it is in Spain?
Speaker:- No, no.
Speaker:- Really?
Speaker:- It depends where you go, but no.
Speaker:- [Rob] Okay.
Speaker:- They're very similar price.
Speaker:- [Rob] So both of those, Madrid or Florence, Italy.
Speaker:Great places to work.
Speaker:- From home. - Home.
Speaker:What about, you're not working.
Speaker:You're independently wealthy.
Speaker:You just sold Robert Caldwell a cigar brand and
Speaker:you're gone. You're done.
Speaker:I'm out, cashing in, I'm living somewhere else.
Speaker:Number one spot.
Speaker:- (sighs heavily)
Speaker:- Where will we find Robert?
Speaker:- Somewhere in the coast of Chile where it's cold,
Speaker:like Patagonia area.
Speaker:And I ride a fuckin' horse, like Gaucho style,
Speaker:like have a knife and shit
Speaker:- Why cold? You are living in Miami.
Speaker:You said Minnesota was too cold.
Speaker:- Minnesota's too cold.
Speaker:- Minnesota's too cold.
Speaker:But then you're doing the opposite end of the equator,
Speaker:but still going too far south to the point where you hit
Speaker:the other polar plex and you're going, you're going cold.
Speaker:- No offense, but Minnesota's not Chile.
Speaker:- [Rob] Really?
Speaker:- Like, I would never live in (laughing) Minnesota.
Speaker:- [Rob] Why?
Speaker:- It's too cold.
Speaker:- But Chile is-
Speaker:- It's not as cold.
Speaker:- [Rob] It's not as cold.
Speaker:Okay. What are we talking?
Speaker:What's average, like, gets down to the zeroes?
Speaker:- Depends where you are.
Speaker:I mean, it gets real cold up in the Andes,
Speaker:like super negatives, but by the beach not so bad.
Speaker:So you could be like very far south, have like,
Speaker:kind of maybe like a coastal New York type of cold.
Speaker:That's like fucked up for a little while.
Speaker:- Chilly, windy. - Not that bad, yeah.
Speaker:- Good food.
Speaker:- Good food.
Speaker:- Pretty nature.
Speaker:- Yeah.
Speaker:Are you a hiker, rock climber, adventurer?
Speaker:- Hiker, not rock climber.
Speaker:I button my shirt to look professional.
Speaker:- That's not the Robert Caldwell Way.
Speaker:- I know.
Speaker:- [Rob] I mean, come on.
Speaker:- Here we go.
Speaker:- Like what, what gives?
Speaker:I've never seen - I felt like it was too low.
Speaker:- I thought you removed the buttons at least halfway up.
Speaker:- No, but they button weirdly, like up there.
Speaker:- [Rob] For you.
Speaker:- Yeah, well, all my shirts,
Speaker:all my dress shirts are tailored.
Speaker:- [Rob] Really?
Speaker:- Try to find shirts that fit me.
Speaker:- Yeah, I know.
Speaker:You're about the same size torso as me and about
Speaker:like 16 inches longer.
Speaker:- So I have a very good friend in Turkey
Speaker:that owns a tailoring company,
Speaker:- [Rob] Mm. - so then he makes my shirts.
Speaker:But then they make them so that they wear openly well.
Speaker:(both chuckling) - Custom.
Speaker:- Well, he's always like, you know, "Try it on."
Speaker:I'm like, "I don't wear it like that."
Speaker:So then I open it up.
Speaker:But then when you actually close 'em like,
Speaker:they're a little weird in the chest area.
Speaker:- [Rob] Yeah.
Speaker:- They're not made to be closed.
Speaker:They're made to be like that.
Speaker:(Rob laughs)
Speaker:- "Miami Vice" style. Love it.
Speaker:So do you think you'll live in Miami
Speaker:for the rest of your life?
Speaker:- Absolutely not.
Speaker:- Really?
Speaker:- I hate this fuckin' city.
Speaker:- [Rob] Really?
Speaker:- I hate it.
Speaker:- Why, why are you here then?
Speaker:Why are we in Miami?
Speaker:- I'm born and raised here. I've lived here my whole life.
Speaker:I like my house.
Speaker:I like, I have privacy and stuff.
Speaker:I work here. The airport's convenient.
Speaker:- [Rob] Yep.
Speaker:- It's convenient city to live in,
Speaker:but it was the coolest city in the world
Speaker:until like 10 years ago.
Speaker:It's the people.
Speaker:- What did you call it, "shiny-"
Speaker:- Shiny shit syndrome.
Speaker:- Yeah. Shiny
Speaker:- Yeah.
Speaker:- shit syndrome.
Speaker:Which is, define.
Speaker:- People come here, - [Rob] Urban Dictionary.
Speaker:- People come here from other places.
Speaker:They see all the shiny shit
Speaker:and then they want that.
Speaker:- (muffled) Like this and that and the cars.
Speaker:- But there's no economy here. - Cell phones.
Speaker:- So like Miami's the most unaffordable city in the country
Speaker:because nobody makes shit,
Speaker:and it's so expensive to live here.
Speaker:- It's all imported.
Speaker:So there's economy there.
Speaker:It's all importation of product from basically-
Speaker:- That's more like Port Everglades, Fort Lauderdale.
Speaker:- [Rob] Okay.
Speaker:- Miami, the port, you have a lot of stuff coming in, yes.
Speaker:But a lot of it's-
Speaker:Port Everglades is much - [Rob] Cruises, people.
Speaker:- So Miami's like
Speaker:real estate, tourism and tax law.
Speaker:And the crazy thing is you have,
Speaker:there's nothing you can rent in the county
Speaker:for under like $1300 a month.
Speaker:And you're talking like a 250-square foot efficiency,
Speaker:piece of shit, no kitchen, $250.
Speaker:Or $1250 a month.
Speaker:- [Rob] Wow.
Speaker:- It's incredibly expensive.
Speaker:And then you're driving an hour and a half
Speaker:to get to Miami City.
Speaker:So it's just real weird, man.
Speaker:It's real weird.
Speaker:- So just a lot of shiny objects to distract you,
Speaker:but it's real no value.
Speaker:- Yeah, and there's no way to get there.
Speaker:Like there's no ladder to climb in Miami.
Speaker:Like, and so always we've had a brain drain
Speaker:where intelligent people in art,
Speaker:finance or law have always left to California or New York.
Speaker:- [Rob] Really?
Speaker:- Always, like-
Speaker:- I thought this was new York's playground.
Speaker:Like you come down from New York,
Speaker:get away from the city-
Speaker:- For the weekend and then you go back up.
Speaker:- [Rob] To make your money.
Speaker:- Yeah. So it's always been that.
Speaker:It's never been the guy - It's their cabin.
Speaker:- Yeah.
Speaker:It's never been the guy that makes money here.
Speaker:So then with COVID what's changed is that you've had
Speaker:a lot of businesses come in that then bring,
Speaker:not find locally,
Speaker:but bring people with them to work for them.
Speaker:- [Rob] Sure.
Speaker:- Because nobody in Miami will hire anybody that's from,
Speaker:like if you come from New York, you're not hiring local.
Speaker:You're importing your workforce from New York.
Speaker:- Really, why?
Speaker:- Education, people are not educated here.
Speaker:- Well, that is kind of a direct response
Speaker:to the taxation problem.
Speaker:- Mm-hm. (lighter clicks)
Speaker:- [Rob] The taxes pay for.
Speaker:- Favorable climate.
Speaker:Well that, and then again, it's like,
Speaker:people are distracted by
Speaker:like the ambition in Miami is just to make it,
Speaker:but not to climb the ladder to get to the top.
Speaker:I just want to be on top.
Speaker:So then it's like the shortcut city where everybody's like,
Speaker:"Dude, I got this deal for you."
Speaker:- But you know, what I think is interesting about that,
Speaker:there is a retailer named Terry
Speaker:and I don't know his last name,
Speaker:but he wrote a book called "The Border,"
Speaker:or something like that.
Speaker:He was a border patrol agent in the eighties in Arizona.
Speaker:And you know, they didn't have cameras back then.
Speaker:So you had to do like personal stakeouts.
Speaker:He has all these different stories in the book,
Speaker:and it's absolutely amazing.
Speaker:One of those books that you just can't put down,
Speaker:like it's good.
Speaker:I should send it to you. - And a retailer?
Speaker:A cigar retailer?
Speaker:- He's a cigar retailer in Arizona.
Speaker:They call him like, he's real grumpy.
Speaker:He came up with a cigar too, his own cigar for the shop.
Speaker:But he is very hard.
Speaker:Like you could just, you can hear it in his voice,
Speaker:you can see it, that he's lived through some thick stuff.
Speaker:And the stories in there, like, you know,
Speaker:you talk about like dogs protecting a spot
Speaker:and they're like injecting,
Speaker:sleeping or tranquilizer into the meat.
Speaker:And he's throwing meat in there.
Speaker:The dog's finally getting affected.
Speaker:And then he goes in.
Speaker:- Whoa.
Speaker:- And he's not, there's no, like, search warrant, right?
Speaker:So he's like undercover going in,
Speaker:basically behind enemy lines, to try to figure out
Speaker:what's going on, and who he needs to basically target.
Speaker:He's got tons- - That's cool.
Speaker:- Tons of cool stories in that book.
Speaker:You would absolutely love it.
Speaker:It's an easy read, too
Speaker:- Yeah.
Speaker:- What got you excited about cigars even in the first place?
Speaker:I mean, you smoked really young.
Speaker:- Yeah.
Speaker:- So you like, you know, we're not gonna say any ages,
Speaker:but you were very young.
Speaker:You were getting cigars.
Speaker:But like at what point, whether you're, I mean,
Speaker:were you smoking really good cigars back then?
Speaker:Or were you just kind of smoking eh?
Speaker:- Both, but I think
Speaker:back then it was a weird time because I mean,
Speaker:it was like (coughs) the early 2000s.
Speaker:So you had, like the boom that had been had busted and
Speaker:there'd been a ton of product, I think during that boom.
Speaker:- Right.
Speaker:- But they were really good cigars
Speaker:from major brands back then.
Speaker:So now people complain about the big guys, you know,
Speaker:like I don't smoke X or Y brand
Speaker:because they're very big and they're,
Speaker:I'm not gonna name anybody.
Speaker:- Right.
Speaker:- But you know what I'm talking about,
Speaker:but back then, there was good shit.
Speaker:- I still think a lot of it is good.
Speaker:- I would agree with you.
Speaker:But I think that those that don't try those products
Speaker:are never gonna, they're not ever gonna be like,
Speaker:"Oh, I'm gonna pick this up."
Speaker:Like they got a new something.
Speaker:- Yeah.
Speaker:They want something that is either shinier or newer
Speaker:and more boutique.
Speaker:- Exactly.
Speaker:So the people that don't trust big business
Speaker:are never gonna trust big business, you know?
Speaker:- Yeah. Okay. - So.
Speaker:- But isn't there some power there to getting really good
Speaker:quality stuff?
Speaker:Because you got a lot of buying power,
Speaker:you got a lot of access to quality tobacco.
Speaker:- Yeah.
Speaker:But then the question is how much volume.
Speaker:- I was just gonna say,
Speaker:you got a smirk on your face, so where are we going?
Speaker:- So you can get the best tobacco in the world.
Speaker:But what if you're gonna only make 50,000 cigars?
Speaker:And what if you're a huge company,
Speaker:that does nothing for you.
Speaker:- Sure. Okay.
Speaker:- You either use it or you sell it.
Speaker:But I mean a lot of bigger companies are buying for quantity
Speaker:- [Rob] Mm-hm.
Speaker:- or they're growing and when you get something very,
Speaker:very special or a unique varietal or
Speaker:- Can you have quantity and quality at the same time?
Speaker:- I think so.
Speaker:But you have to age the shit outta the tobacco.
Speaker:So then you have price.
Speaker:- [Rob] Okay.
Speaker:- So I think to have like quantity, quality and consistency.
Speaker:- [Rob] Yeah.
Speaker:- You gotta age it.
Speaker:- You gotta age it.
Speaker:Well, that would make sense.
Speaker:- Yeah. But you gotta age it long time.
Speaker:- Which I recently smoked
Speaker:the Davidoff Oro Blanco $500 cigar,
Speaker:which was very unique.
Speaker:Have you smoked it?
Speaker:- I have.
Speaker:- [Rob] It's unique, right?
Speaker:- Yeah.
Speaker:- Like I've never tasted anything like that,
Speaker:but I mean, what are they talking about?
Speaker:Like 2012 is when they were saying like tobacco and aging
Speaker:and it's been there that long.
Speaker:- Yeah. - So that would make sense.
Speaker:You know, kind of almost like really high-end wines.
Speaker:- Mm-hm. - I don't drink,
Speaker:but I hear that high-end wines are like no longer
Speaker:fruit forward.
Speaker:It's more like mineral, earth, leather, cocoa,
Speaker:or you know, just these complex flavors.
Speaker:That's what I felt like was going on on my palate.
Speaker:Like this complex flavor I've never tasted before.
Speaker:Like this, great cigar,
Speaker:but I've tasted this before in a cigar.
Speaker:Like I taste cigar,
Speaker:I don't know what I'm tasting as like,
Speaker:I'm not a good palate, like I'm like,
Speaker:"Ooh, I taste plum."
Speaker:I just, this is good, balanced.
Speaker:And I hate that word sometimes
Speaker:because it's like so cliche to say, "Oh, it's balanced."
Speaker:But it is.
Speaker:Like anything that starts to go (whistles)
Speaker:- Yeah.
Speaker:- It's like, whoa, whoa, whoa.
Speaker:My palate's like all over.
Speaker:It's like chaos in a smoke shop.
Speaker:It's just alarming.
Speaker:- Yeah.
Speaker:- And I used to be a funeral director.
Speaker:So chaos in general is not good.
Speaker:Like you want the family nice and calm
Speaker:and like nothing can be outta order.
Speaker:It's gotta just make it all very nice.
Speaker:Speak slowly.
Speaker:What other crazy jobs have you had?
Speaker:- I've never had a job in my life.
Speaker:(wind chimes ringing)
Speaker:Ever.
Speaker:Well, when I was in Minneapolis, in college,
Speaker:I bartended for like six months.
Speaker:And then
Speaker:- How did you do that, being in rehab?
Speaker:I didn't even like it. I tried to be,
Speaker:- Had to pay the bills, man.
Speaker:- I know. But I tried to do that.
Speaker:I tried to be a barback in Fargo when I went to school
Speaker:and I was like, I gotta get outta here.
Speaker:This is just horrible.
Speaker:- The only job I ever had, job,
Speaker:because I've been an entrepreneur my whole life.
Speaker:Even before that, like I had a car washing business
Speaker:in high school, shit like that.
Speaker:The only job I ever had was when I left rehab,
Speaker:I went to bartend - Bartend.
Speaker:- Like immediately, because I had to pay tuition.
Speaker:My mom cut me off.
Speaker:She's like, "I'm not helping you with anything."
Speaker:- At some point you have to do that to a drug addict.
Speaker:- So, yeah.
Speaker:I think that your ambition in life should to be,
Speaker:have something that it doesn't feel like
Speaker:you're working that hard.
Speaker:You know what I mean?
Speaker:- Right.
Speaker:Do you think that that either that
Speaker:spending or that kind of like
Speaker:just basically buying stuff that
Speaker:leaves you empty at the end of the day,
Speaker:kinda like drugs, right?
Speaker:Drugs will leave you empty at the end of the day.
Speaker:Don't really fulfill anything
Speaker:other than a quick high or something.
Speaker:Do you think that's pretty common in American culture?
Speaker:- Yeah, a hundred percent.
Speaker:- Yeah, do you feel like you're subject to that now?
Speaker:- Never. - Or after you got clean?
Speaker:- No.
Speaker:I've never been like, a pointless consumer.
Speaker:- [Rob] Really?
Speaker:- Never.
Speaker:- You never got like really obsessed with something
Speaker:and wanted to buy it. And a lot of it.
Speaker:- For different reasons, but not obsessed.
Speaker:So I'll buy, like if I go to the grocery store and
Speaker:they got a buy one, get one free I'll load the fuckin' cart.
Speaker:Like toothpaste, buy one, get one free.
Speaker:I'll buy 20 things of toothpaste to have inventory.
Speaker:Because my theory is toothpaste is $3.79.
Speaker:You buy one, you get one free.
Speaker:Now they're half price. So you doubled your money.
Speaker:So you gotta work like real hard to double your money,
Speaker:but not if you buy right.
Speaker:So I buy a lot of stuff like that.
Speaker:- But what about cash flow?
Speaker:If I buy 20 of those, that's enough toothpaste
Speaker:to probably last me a lifetime.
Speaker:Doesn't it go bad?
Speaker:- No, it'll last you a couple years.
Speaker:- Let me go check your toothpaste.
Speaker:How long have you been brushing your teeth
Speaker:with Colgate from 1973?
Speaker:- No, I use Arm & Hammer.
Speaker:- [Rob] Me, too.
Speaker:- That's the shit.
Speaker:- Because of the baking soda.
Speaker:- Yeah, makes your mouth like - And the peroxide.
Speaker:Yeah, it kind of does the scrubbing bubble thing.
Speaker:- And then like with consumption, like I don't buy anything,
Speaker:I'm very rarely an impulse buyer.
Speaker:- Unless there's a deal.
Speaker:- If there's a deal, but that's strategy.
Speaker:- [Rob] Mm-hm.
Speaker:- But like I'm not a guy like, "Oh that looks cool.
Speaker:I'm gonna buy it."
Speaker:Like I think real hard before I buy something.
Speaker:- [Rob] Really?
Speaker:- And I'm super cheap.
Speaker:- Well, yeah.
Speaker:- Like I'm incredibly fuckin' cheap.
Speaker:- You like to pinch a penny?
Speaker:- I don't like drive around looking for deals,
Speaker:but I mean like, I'm like, "Do I really need this?"
Speaker:And it's like 70 bucks and I'm like,
Speaker:"I don't fuckin' need that."
Speaker:And then my wife, like, she'll get a package.
Speaker:I'm like, "What's in the box?"
Speaker:She's like, "Oh these pair of shoes."
Speaker:I'm like, "Where are they from?"
Speaker:And then she buys,
Speaker:well, she buys from some of these like companies
Speaker:that resell like, gently used.
Speaker:- Oh yeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker:Like secondhand, like. - Yeah, and I'm like,
Speaker:- Like "I'm getting rid of my Louis Vuitton's
Speaker:because my husband bought 'em for me and we're divorcing."
Speaker:- Exactly. So almost everything she buys,
Speaker:but she also buys that way.
Speaker:Not because it's cheaper,
Speaker:but because it's more ecological.
Speaker:Like she doesn't agree with like.
Speaker:- She's wise with her dollar.
Speaker:- Yeah. She's more of a consumer than I am,
Speaker:but she's also very mindful of like,
Speaker:"Just because you wore that purse doesn't mean I can't,"
Speaker:because a lot of girls like want something new.
Speaker:She doesn't give a fuck if it's new or not.
Speaker:- Right. She just, if she likes it, she likes it.
Speaker:- Yeah, and she doesn't want to be
Speaker:like the first line of waste,
Speaker:which is the person that buys it from the store.
Speaker:So she's very good about that.
Speaker:- That's an interesting philosophy:
Speaker:The first line of waste.
Speaker:- We're real weird with shit like that.
Speaker:Like we don't use plastic at all.
Speaker:There's no trash, my trash cans have no bags in them.
Speaker:- What do you do? You just throw it in the bin?
Speaker:- Wash it out, put it in the trash bin.
Speaker:But the only thing that we throw away here,
Speaker:like I was saying earlier, all the organic stuff,
Speaker:even meat, I take it to the corner.
Speaker:There's a possum family that lives in the corner.
Speaker:So I'll go throw meat and sausage and shit to them.
Speaker:Because normally you wouldn't throw out that.
Speaker:- Yeah.
Speaker:- But they'll eat it, and then everything else.
Speaker:- That'd be a nightmare. Yeah.
Speaker:- If it's bread or nuts,
Speaker:we put it out here for the birds and the squirrels.
Speaker:So the only thing that ends up in the trash is,
Speaker:well, trash is trash.
Speaker:So like cellophane and shit like that,
Speaker:that doesn't recycle.
Speaker:And then everything else is recycle bin,
Speaker:but we just clean it out and dump it.
Speaker:(lighter clicks) - Nice.
Speaker:- Yeah.
Speaker:Word to the wise, no more trash bags.
Speaker:- Trash bags are overrated.
Speaker:- So.
Speaker:- So then like once a year,
Speaker:like you gotta clean out the trash can.
Speaker:You gotta put it with bleach in there,
Speaker:spray it down with water.
Speaker:- [Rob] Right.
Speaker:- Make sure it doesn't smell.
Speaker:And like once a year you just dump the old trash can,
Speaker:which is recyclable.
Speaker:And then you get a new trash can,
Speaker:- [Rob] Sure. - but then you're not wasting.
Speaker:- Yeah. Way more. - 400 plastic bags.
Speaker:- Way more better for the environment.
Speaker:Would you call yourself an environmentalist or do you
Speaker:just try apply common sense?
Speaker:- I hate plastic.
Speaker:- [Rob] Yeah.
Speaker:- Everything else, I'm kind of okay with.
Speaker:Like diesel truck?
Speaker:That's cool.
Speaker:Like plastic just fucks with me.
Speaker:And I think it's from growing up here,
Speaker:like in a coastal environment.
Speaker:- Where the trash can wash up on the shore.
Speaker:- You go to Miami Beach.
Speaker:There's not more than two inches without trash.
Speaker:It's fucking everywhere.
Speaker:- And what's crazy is that they can
Speaker:actually dump that stuff legally into the ocean.
Speaker:- Well, and for years, and I think we still do,
Speaker:but we would send our trash to Haiti.
Speaker:Like we used to send trash as a country.
Speaker:We would send it to China,
Speaker:but we used to send in Miami they'd
Speaker:fill like big ships with shit and send it to Haiti.
Speaker:- Aren't we nice.
Speaker:- And then a ton of that shit would end up in the ocean
Speaker:and then it just, but not just from Haiti.
Speaker:I mean from all the islands.
Speaker:So a lot of the pollution in Miami's local,
Speaker:but a lot of it's just ocean currents,
Speaker:carrying trash from the Caribbean up.
Speaker:- Right.
Speaker:- But I mean it's fucked.
Speaker:So then the permanence of plastic made me have
Speaker:a problem with it, but nothing else bothers me I guess.
Speaker:- That makes sense.
Speaker:How did you meet your wife?
Speaker:- We met in a bar in Madrid.
Speaker:- [Rob] Ooh.
Speaker:- Mm. We got the same,
Speaker:we met the day after our birthday.
Speaker:- No wonder why you like Madrid.
Speaker:- Yeah, we met the day after our birthday
Speaker:and then she started talking to me and she said,
Speaker:"What are you doing in Madrid?"
Speaker:I said, "I came for my birthday."
Speaker:And she's like, "When's your birthday?"
Speaker:I said "Yesterday."
Speaker:And that hers was yesterday also.
Speaker:And that was that.
Speaker:- You guys have the same birthday?
Speaker:- Yeah.
Speaker:- Are you the same age?
Speaker:- No, she's 10 years younger.
Speaker:I wouldn't marry a woman my age.
Speaker:Crazy. - [Rob] Really?
Speaker:- Come on. - How old are you?
Speaker:(lighter clicks) - 39.
Speaker:- Yeah, that's not old.
Speaker:- Mm-mm. - I'm 36.
Speaker:- How old's your wife?
Speaker:- She's five years younger than me.
Speaker:- You see?
Speaker:(Rob laughs)
Speaker:- But I did for a while.
Speaker:I dated somebody who was 15 years older than me.
Speaker:That was interesting.
Speaker:- Yeah.
Speaker:- [Rob] Culture shock almost.
Speaker:- Yeah.
Speaker:- She was talking about stuff I didn't even know,
Speaker:but it was fun.
Speaker:- You were a boy toy.
Speaker:- I actually proposed to my wife in Spain
Speaker:at La Tomatina festival.
Speaker:Have you ever been there?
Speaker:- No, I've seen it though.
Speaker:- [Rob] Throw the tomatoes?
Speaker:- Yeah.
Speaker:- You should go.
Speaker:- Where is it?
Speaker:- It's right outside of Valencia.
Speaker:- Okay.
Speaker:- But Italy's got a tomato festival and it's the same thing.
Speaker:Just everybody goes in the street,
Speaker:throws tomatoes at each other.
Speaker:- Madrid is a cool place.
Speaker:Barcelona is cool.
Speaker:- Madrid's way cooler.
Speaker:- Why?
Speaker:- Barcelona you feel the tourism, Madrid you don't.
Speaker:So you can go to Madrid, walk down the street.
Speaker:Nobody fucks with you.
Speaker:You go to Barcelona,
Speaker:- No, I felt it in Madrid because we got an Airbnb.
Speaker:So we felt, we were like right in the middle.
Speaker:- Oh, you were like by Sol.
Speaker:Like the train station.
Speaker:- Yeah. We were kind of like right in the middle.
Speaker:And if I went to the east,
Speaker:there was like an art center and like
Speaker:a bunch of hotels and like food,
Speaker:the quality of food went down and the price went up.
Speaker:And then if I went to the left, which was to the west,
Speaker:like that was where all the tapas were.
Speaker:That's where all the locals went.
Speaker:- So you stayed in Gran Vía
Speaker:- [Rob] Maybe, maybe. - area for sure.
Speaker:And then to the left would be a La Latina probably.
Speaker:- Okay.
Speaker:- It's a really cool neighborhood.
Speaker:Like lot of little bars and shit.
Speaker:- Yeah. - Yeah.
Speaker:- And you just walked down the down basically this road,
Speaker:and there's just stuff all everywhere, everywhere.
Speaker:And the locals don't go out there until like late at night.
Speaker:- Yeah, they eat at 11:30.
Speaker:- Like we were like hungry at 6:00 and they're like
Speaker:still preparing the food.
Speaker:We're like, "Do you have anything to eat?"
Speaker:And they're like, "What?"
Speaker:- 9:00?
Speaker:- Yeah, we did a 9:00 dinner and everyone was out.
Speaker:And then by 10:00 it was (blows raspberry) over.
Speaker:- Yeah.
Speaker:- [Rob] They eat fast.
Speaker:There's not a lot of lounging.
Speaker:- Here?
Speaker:- [Rob] Yeah.
Speaker:It depends where you go.
Speaker:- Okay.
Speaker:I went to the wrong spot.
Speaker:I like the experience, I like the ambience.
Speaker:I mean, that's why we smoke cigars, right.
Speaker:We stop, we're like in your yard,
Speaker:that's like a tropical paradise, and I'm just relaxed.
Speaker:I'm hungry right now, but I'm relaxed.
Speaker:Like I could get up and go get something,
Speaker:but I don't want to, like, I just want to just chill.
Speaker:That's why I smoke cigars.
Speaker:- There you go. - Why do you smoke cigars?
Speaker:- (sighs) I don't know.
Speaker:That's a great fucking question.
Speaker:I guess I just like 'em.
Speaker:Sometimes I smoke 'em because I have to, like,
Speaker:I'll be at a cigar event.
Speaker:- What? That's a job, dude.
Speaker:- Yeah. Sometimes it's a job.
Speaker:- You have, have a job. You do have a job.
Speaker:- So, yeah.
Speaker:Sometimes like if you're sampling lots of blends.
Speaker:- [Rob] You're just a liar. - Well, it's not having a job.
Speaker:- (laughing) Okay. All right.
Speaker:- Smoking lots of different blends is work sometimes.
Speaker:Well, especially actually that's work.
Speaker:And then like, you know,
Speaker:you're visiting all these cigar shops and you have
Speaker:an event at night and people are like,
Speaker:"Why aren't you smoking?"
Speaker:It's like, "I had 13 cigars today."
Speaker:So you always have to have one.
Speaker:- Right.
Speaker:- But then I got very good at slow smoking.
Speaker:So I'll like light something and then leave it.
Speaker:- Well and you should actually.
Speaker:- Yeah. - Because it tastes better.
Speaker:- And like myself,
Speaker:I'm actually smoking somewhat quickly right now.
Speaker:But a Corona will take me like two hours,
Speaker:two and a half hours typically.
Speaker:Like that cigar will take me,
Speaker:it's a little smaller than a Corona.
Speaker:That'll make an hour and 45 minutes typically.
Speaker:Like if I'm enjoying, but then if I go to a cigar event,
Speaker:you feel like you need to puff and puff and puff.
Speaker:And then I don't enjoy 'em.
Speaker:- No.
Speaker:I had a hard time when I worked in tobacco retail,
Speaker:smoking on the job because, okay.
Speaker:Yeah, there's a lull, great time to light up.
Speaker:Great.
Speaker:And then something happens or rush happens.
Speaker:And then you set the cigar down for too long
Speaker:and then it gets acrid you know,
Speaker:- Mm-hm.
Speaker:- it gets that build-up,
Speaker:and then I just ruin the whole stick.
Speaker:So I stopped smoking while I was working,
Speaker:which is very, like, weird.
Speaker:- Yeah.
Speaker:- It's weird to be in a smoke shop and not be smoking.
Speaker:- Yeah.
Speaker:But I do that in my office.
Speaker:Like I used to go in work a little while, light a cigar,
Speaker:but normally I'll help like in the warehouse
Speaker:and do that type of stuff.
Speaker:And then in the afternoon I'll do computer work.
Speaker:And then so now I don't smoke until like after lunch,
Speaker:when I'm done helping in the warehouse,
Speaker:then I'll go sit down with my computer and then
Speaker:I'll light a cigar.
Speaker:- Right, because you know you can commit.
Speaker:- Yeah.
Speaker:But I used to come in and light one right away.
Speaker:Like not right away, but.
Speaker:- Right, or driving with one.
Speaker:- No, I don't smoke in my car.
Speaker:- Why?
Speaker:I think you might be,
Speaker:- I got married.
Speaker:- Oh, (laughing) same thing happened to me.
Speaker:I was smoking in my car all the time.
Speaker:Got married.
Speaker:She kind of put up with it. She didn't like it.
Speaker:She put up with it and then we had a baby and she's like,
Speaker:"You can't smoke in there.
Speaker:And I don't want my daughter to have that smell in there."
Speaker:So, you know, you gotta like chlorine bomb the car,
Speaker:get the smell out, vacuum it.
Speaker:That's the key.
Speaker:Like most people think like the smell is in the fabric,
Speaker:which it is, which is why you would chlorine bomb it.
Speaker:But the actual smell is coming from like the ash.
Speaker:You gotta vacuum all that stuff out.
Speaker:Otherwise you'll never get the smell out.
Speaker:You can chlorine bomb this,
Speaker:but it's still gonna smell like ash.
Speaker:- Yeah.
Speaker:- So that's my 2 cents.
Speaker:If you're trying to clean your car,
Speaker:get the smoke out, get a $30 chlorine bomb.
Speaker:(lighter clicks) You'll be good.
Speaker:What's next for Robert Caldwell?
Speaker:Where do you wanna be in five years?
Speaker:That's a really typical question.
Speaker:- (sighs) Not living in Miami.
Speaker:- All right, in five years?
Speaker:- Less.
Speaker:- I asked you if you were gonna flip this house
Speaker:and you said no.
Speaker:- I'm not gonna flip it. I'll rent it.
Speaker:- Oh.
Speaker:- You know.
Speaker:- High-end rental.
Speaker:- Yeah. The thing is,
Speaker:- How much are you gonna charge it?
Speaker:- A lot of money. (Rob laughs)
Speaker:I'm not gonna say that, because nobody will buy my cigars.
Speaker:So I wouldn't want to sell it because I love the house.
Speaker:- Because you wanna come back.
Speaker:- Yeah.
Speaker:But like I'll leave for a while.
Speaker:- I wanna save some of this content
Speaker:for playing PIG with you.
Speaker:Because you have an indoor basketball, half court.
Speaker:- Half court.
Speaker:- And it's awesome.
Speaker:And you say you're really good.
Speaker:- I never said I was good.
Speaker:- Yeah you did. You bragged to me.
Speaker:- I'll beat you at PIG though.
Speaker:- You bragged to me that you could do the far door
Speaker:all the way in the corner.
Speaker:- Oh I could.
Speaker:- And you can sink a shot.
Speaker:- Yes.
Speaker:- Which I think is, after looking at it, that's good.
Speaker:- I can probably do that.
Speaker:- "Probably"?
Speaker:- It might take me a couple tries.
Speaker:- All right.
Speaker:Well, we will let you warm up and you got boat shoes on.
Speaker:We'll let you warm up with the boat shoes.
Speaker:We're not playing basketball.
Speaker:I don't wanna play basketball.
Speaker:I can't even shoot well.
Speaker:But shooting is kind of fun and therapeutic though.
Speaker:- Mm-hm.
Speaker:- Just kind of, do you get ideas?
Speaker:Like what's your like, when you're jamming on an idea,
Speaker:like what do you do?
Speaker:Where do you go?
Speaker:What do you, what do you like?
Speaker:I gotta go think about this.
Speaker:- Yard work.
Speaker:- Yard work. Yeah.
Speaker:Yeah. We were talking about that.
Speaker:You just like,
Speaker:- Yeah.
Speaker:- You'll go out and kind of trim the trees and the palm.
Speaker:- Yeah.
Speaker:If it's during the week I listen to music
Speaker:and I do yard work.
Speaker:- What kind of music are you listening to?
Speaker:What's the Robert Caldwell playlist?
Speaker:- There's a DJ called Ash.
Speaker:- Ash?
Speaker:- He's fucking amazing.
Speaker:- DJ called Ash. - Yeah.
Speaker:That's like the epitome of what I listen to.
Speaker:But it's like a hybridization of like,
Speaker:house music and Middle Eastern music.
Speaker:It's amazing.
Speaker:He's the best guy in the world.
Speaker:- Ashnikko?
Speaker:- No, A-S-H.
Speaker:- A-S-H.
Speaker:- Let me see.
Speaker:- Oh, artist.
Speaker:Is that him?
Speaker:- Yeah, that, fuckin' amazing.
Speaker:- That guy?
Speaker:- He plays every instrument himself
Speaker:and makes his own music.
Speaker:- What's your favorite song?
Speaker:You got a favorite song there?
Speaker:- I mean, they're all good, but this shit's like,
Speaker:all of them are good.
Speaker:His shit's fuckin' amazing.
Speaker:That guy's so good.
Speaker:(Middle Eastern electronic music)
Speaker:It's very good.
Speaker:So he's got like a little Middle Eastern thing,
Speaker:then it's electronic.
Speaker:Kid's like 22. He's from Canada.
Speaker:- He's got a lot of followers, almost a million.
Speaker:- Mm-hm. - It's over 800,000.
Speaker:- But he didn't.
Speaker:- Monthly listeners.
Speaker:- Yeah. No, that kid's fuckin' amazing.
Speaker:He's like the number one artist in the like
Speaker:Middle Eastern music.
Speaker:- His first EP is out now.
Speaker:He doesn't even have an EP out,
Speaker:or album out, just music.
Speaker:He makes music, let it go.
Speaker:- He's very good.
Speaker:- That's like making a cigar without a brand,
Speaker:or like a commitment to stay there.
Speaker:i.e., insert Lost & Found.
Speaker:- That works.
Speaker:- (laughing) Isn't that neat?
Speaker:Did you know that you did that?
Speaker:- Lost & Found was meant to be like,
Speaker:like a one-time thing.
Speaker:- Why?
Speaker:- The cigars were bought by Tony Bellato
Speaker:for his store as bundles
Speaker:and then they didn't know how to sell them.
Speaker:So then Jacqueline that was working with him at the time,
Speaker:came up with the idea of like,
Speaker:just coming up with like kitschy stupid branding.
Speaker:- Yeah, like have fun.
Speaker:- Yeah, we just sold him to his store
Speaker:and then people found out they had 'em
Speaker:and then they took off and then it became a thing,
Speaker:but it was never intended to be,
Speaker:- A real organic takeoff.
Speaker:- Yeah.
Speaker:So then after it takes off, what do you do?
Speaker:You're like, "Oh, wait a minute.
Speaker:We should do something more here."
Speaker:- Yeah.
Speaker:And then we did like another one and then that one did well.
Speaker:And then we would like sporadically do them,
Speaker:but it was never organized
Speaker:- [Rob] Mm-hm. - Until actually two years ago
Speaker:we started organizing it.
Speaker:Because until then it was kind of like,
Speaker:I always thought it was a fluke.
Speaker:Like I never thought every time we'd bring something in
Speaker:and we'd sell it, I was surprised that it sold.
Speaker:- Really? Why, quality?
Speaker:- No, just because like I'm like,
Speaker:I don't see the branding appealing to everybody.
Speaker:So I thought it was like a really niche market.
Speaker:- Right.
Speaker:- Which it kind of is, but it's really not.
Speaker:because I mean, we sell a lot of cigars,
Speaker:but in the beginning I'm like, people aren't gonna get this.
Speaker:They're like, which was a fair argument.
Speaker:And then like two years ago we started organizing and
Speaker:started like amping it up and we still can't get, like,
Speaker:we just did a project with Bolívar.
Speaker:It's a lot of cigars and they sold them all
Speaker:in like two weeks.
Speaker:- So you did something with them?
Speaker:- Yeah, and it sold, like.
Speaker:- They just didn't sell underneath the Bolívar brand.
Speaker:- Wait, Bolívar Lost & Found edition.
Speaker:- Okay, so I thought the Lost & Found was to say
Speaker:these cigars are lost.
Speaker:They're in the back of the blah-bitty-blah aging room.
Speaker:Nobody, it was a thing that the whoever
Speaker:first commissioned it didn't want it.
Speaker:So kind of like your wife,
Speaker:"I don't wanna be the first consumer of it."
Speaker:They let it go, and then it goes to you because you're like,
Speaker:"Hey, what is this?"
Speaker:And you smoke it.
Speaker:And you're like, oh it's good.
Speaker:- So that's what it is. And that's what it was.
Speaker:But then now we started pivoting towards manufacturing,
Speaker:using really aged or rare tobaccos.
Speaker:So the deal with them, like you said,
Speaker:these big companies have all this tobacco,
Speaker:but it's not enough for them to do something with.
Speaker:- Okay. So it's not gonna get their 50 million cigars.
Speaker:- No, so then we plugged in with them and then we said,
Speaker:"Okay, let's do a project, blend the cigar together."
Speaker:But using really old lost tobacco,
Speaker:which isn't necessarily lost.
Speaker:- Is that the Antique Line?
Speaker:- No, that's the Bolívar Cofradia I think.
Speaker:- But your Antique Line is super old.
Speaker:- Yeah. But those are lost and then found.
Speaker:- Okay. So those aren't,
Speaker:I'm gonna make these with age tobacco,
Speaker:or really gonna age.
Speaker:This is like, this has been sitting there for a long time.
Speaker:- Yeah. - How long?
Speaker:Like what's the longest?
Speaker:- '98 Antique Line.
Speaker:- Wow.
Speaker:- Yeah. Those haven't come out yet though.
Speaker:I think the oldest we've done so far is 2004.
Speaker:- Okay.
Speaker:- But we have some 1998 vintage stuff too.
Speaker:- You're the one guy in the industry that I know has black,
Speaker:oh we have to find the black liquorice stash.
Speaker:Is there one here?
Speaker:- I got some in my kitchen.
Speaker:- Okay. We gotta,
Speaker:Matt, we need to catch that because
Speaker:I actually did a cigar and candy pairing episode
Speaker:on Unboxed Live and you sent me,
Speaker:- It worked, right?
Speaker:- It does work.
Speaker:But you were very picky about,
Speaker:like I got on Amazon and I was like,
Speaker:"Hey Robert, these are the ones I can get."
Speaker:And you're like, "Ah, those are all sugar."
Speaker:- Yeah.
Speaker:- Like if you get real into it,
Speaker:like you want the licorice, licorice.
Speaker:- Pure licorice extract and nothing else.
Speaker:- Right.
Speaker:- Because if it's sugar, it's shit.
Speaker:It's candy. And then a lot of times they put
Speaker:anise or clove or mint.
Speaker:- Yeah. That's different. - Yeah.
Speaker:Well then it fucks up the flavor instead of enhancing it.
Speaker:- (muffled) Of the cigar.
Speaker:- Yeah.
Speaker:- And will you do this with any cigar and just like
Speaker:put the candy in your mouth and then smoke and go,
Speaker:"Oh, that's good."
Speaker:Or "Whoa, that's not good."
Speaker:- No, it works with any cigar,
Speaker:but it's better with lighter cigars.
Speaker:Like mild to medium body.
Speaker:- That's the secret.
Speaker:- Yeah. - Lighter.
Speaker:- Fuller body cigars is not the same effect.
Speaker:- Do you think it's because it's like competing strength?
Speaker:(wind chimes ringing)
Speaker:- So the licorice effectively amplifies
Speaker:the natural flavors that you're tasting,
Speaker:but works again on a mild to medium body cigar,
Speaker:the fuller body cigars I think
Speaker:they're already full flavor enough that it
Speaker:doesn't have the same enhancement effect.
Speaker:- Like, (clicks tongue) Too much full.
Speaker:- Yeah, and it doesn't make it that much fuller.
Speaker:It just doesn't have much of an effect.
Speaker:- Got it.
Speaker:Now, you know.
Speaker:Where could somebody go and get this type of licorice?
Speaker:It's like hard candy.
Speaker:- Italy.
Speaker:- It's not soft, but like online.
Speaker:- I have no idea.
Speaker:- So you actually go to Italy to get it or you go,
Speaker:- Well, when I'm in Italy, I buy it.
Speaker:- You don't own a factory.
Speaker:You don't own any land to grow tobacco.
Speaker:And you've worked with more than one producer, right?
Speaker:- Mm-hm.
Speaker:- And every producer seems to have a,
Speaker:"Well, we do it different."
Speaker:Right, do you get that?
Speaker:- Yeah. - Do they tell you that?
Speaker:"Well, we do it different."
Speaker:- No, "We do it better."
Speaker:- Well, yeah.
Speaker:Okay. Yeah.
Speaker:What they're saying is,
Speaker:"We do it differently than the other guy
Speaker:who doesn't do it right."
Speaker:- Yeah.
Speaker:- [Rob] How much of that is actually true?
Speaker:- Okay. So they think they do it better,
Speaker:but they do it differently.
Speaker:And then everybody kind of does the same shit.
Speaker:- What's one thing that people do not know
Speaker:about cigar making that if they knew
Speaker:they'd be like, "Wow,"
Speaker:and no one's ever said it before.
Speaker:- There,
Speaker:so after you make a cigar,
Speaker:it goes into the aging room and the aging rooms have
Speaker:not necessarily a ton of moisture.
Speaker:It depends.
Speaker:Sometimes they're higher. Sometimes they're lower.
Speaker:But it's high enough where you could have mold issues.
Speaker:So you have to mitigate the mold.
Speaker:So you have to treat the wood
Speaker:that the cigars sit on in the shelves.
Speaker:So what do you have to treat it with?
Speaker:- [Rob] Chemicals?
Speaker:- Something acidic.
Speaker:- [Rob] Okay.
Speaker:- So then that's open to interpretation.
Speaker:What do you treat the wood with that's acidic
Speaker:that then could somehow lend flavor to the cigars?
Speaker:- Lemons, limes.
Speaker:- Wine.
Speaker:- Wine?
Speaker:- Which is another one that everybody thinks
Speaker:is like a fucking secret.
Speaker:But a lot of guys, they dilute wine
Speaker:and they use a dilution of wine and I think lemon juice
Speaker:to counter any effect that they could have
Speaker:from like mold forming.
Speaker:But then everybody's like, "I know you saw this here,
Speaker:but don't show anybody."
Speaker:I'm like, (whispers) "Yeah, everybody does that."
Speaker:And it might not be wine,
Speaker:but it's some iteration of the same concept.
Speaker:- Right.
Speaker:- Because you can't use chemicals
Speaker:Beause the cigars will absorb 'em.
Speaker:- Ah.
Speaker:- But then that's something interesting.
Speaker:Because then you find certain factories
Speaker:where all the blends are reminiscent of each other.
Speaker:- [Rob] Right.
Speaker:- Why?
Speaker:- [Rob] Right.
Speaker:- It's not the tobacco, the tobaccos are different.
Speaker:- [Rob] Mm-hm.
Speaker:- But then it's the aging process.
Speaker:They're absorbing a little something from that aging room.
Speaker:- So on that same vein,
Speaker:there are certain companies who clearly admit that
Speaker:they spray the tobacco when it's being fermented with a
Speaker:somewhat sugary solution that amplifies the flavor,
Speaker:and they call it topping, right?
Speaker:"Top the tobacco."
Speaker:- Yeah.
Speaker:- Is that common?
Speaker:- I think it's relatively common.
Speaker:I think there's probably a lot of stuff that happens
Speaker:in various stages.
Speaker:- Have you seen tobacco being topped?
Speaker:- No.
Speaker:- [Rob] Really?
Speaker:- But I've seen like heat treatments.
Speaker:I've seen tobacco being boiled, steamed.
Speaker:- [Rob] Boiled?
Speaker:- That's very common.
Speaker:- Boiling tobacco in water. - Yeah.
Speaker:- Why, what does that do?
Speaker:- Makes the wrapper color more uniform and darker.
Speaker:So like you have a tobacco that color
Speaker:and you want to get it real dark,
Speaker:boil it or steam it.
Speaker:But a lot of guys boil, a lot of guys steam.
Speaker:- Does that, is that good or bad?
Speaker:(sighs)
Speaker:To me, if you're heating up
Speaker:the aging process and quickening,
Speaker:- If you're a purist, it's probably bad.
Speaker:But in reality, I don't think it has a huge effect.
Speaker:The other thing too is sometimes they'll make cigars
Speaker:and then they need to age,
Speaker:but then they don't have time for them to age.
Speaker:So then they bake them.
Speaker:- In what?
Speaker:- Like heat, dry heat.
Speaker:- Hot box, or like create heat in a chamber.
Speaker:- Yeah, create dry heat in a chamber.
Speaker:- And that helps age them.
Speaker:- It accelerates the loss of the ammonia flavor
Speaker:you get off more fresh cigars.
Speaker:- Yeah, so once you roll a cigar,
Speaker:I was kind of like the rule of thumb is after day seven,
Speaker:it starts to go acrid.
Speaker:- Yeah.
Speaker:- And like really bitter until about day 30.
Speaker:- Yeah.
Speaker:- And then after that, it's kind of like, okay,
Speaker:now the tobacco has kind of blended together.
Speaker:The ammonia has gotten released.
Speaker:The oils and sugars are kind of figuring out
Speaker:what they're doing and they've calmed down.
Speaker:- Yep.
Speaker:- So you're saying like, if we apply some heat,
Speaker:that'll quicken that? - Yeah.
Speaker:But you can identify that like sometimes you look at a cigar
Speaker:and you're like, oh look, it's so dark.
Speaker:Like cigars don't get that dark.
Speaker:- Right.
Speaker:- There's, I mean, you get like the super black tobacco.
Speaker:Nothing's that color. Nothing's that color.
Speaker:- Like Mexican San Andreas is not super dark.
Speaker:That's super dark.
Speaker:- It's dark.
Speaker:But then you have some that's like real dark, or some of the
Speaker:Brazilian wrappers that are coming real dark.
Speaker:It's like this shit's not possible,
Speaker:like on its own it doesn't do that.
Speaker:So then something's happened.
Speaker:And it's not necessarily that it's affecting the flavor,
Speaker:which I think it can,
Speaker:but doesn't mean necessarily it does, but I mean
Speaker:- Right.
Speaker:- it just doesn't get that dark.
Speaker:- What's the worst thing about the cigar industry?
Speaker:- I think the lack of education
Speaker:that's given to consumers and retailers,
Speaker:if you look at something like the wine industry
Speaker:in the United States,
Speaker:like they went out and they fuckin' educated everybody,
Speaker:and we've done a poor job of doing that.
Speaker:Not because we don't want to, but because
Speaker:it's very expensive to do so.
Speaker:Like it's so small of an industry that you can't.
Speaker:So I think that's the worst thing in the industry, is that
Speaker:it's just so small that it's almost indefensible
Speaker:because we can't go out and educate consumers largely.
Speaker:But like, "Hey, this is what cigar smoking's all about.
Speaker:Here's the process. Here's how it's made."
Speaker:I mean, I don't know what percentage of cigar smokers
Speaker:actually know like the process of seed to finish product.
Speaker:And a lot of guys, you meet in cigar shop
Speaker:that are regulars that are around, okay, they know,
Speaker:but that's not the majority of smokers.
Speaker:- How is that different than the wine though?
Speaker:I don't necessarily know how they ferment it all,
Speaker:but I know they ferment it.
Speaker:They bottle it and they ship it.
Speaker:- Most people don't know cigar tobacco's fermented.
Speaker:- Really?
Speaker:- Yeah.
Speaker:- So you ferment it, you roll it, you age it, you ship it.
Speaker:- Yeah.
Speaker:- It's not that hard.
Speaker:- Or ferment it, age it, roll it, age it, ship it.
Speaker:- What is the best thing about this industry?
Speaker:What is the best thing about cigars?
Speaker:- I think the camaraderie, you know,
Speaker:like getting together, smoking, talking to people.
Speaker:I think that's cool as shit, it's very unique.
Speaker:- Do you, I mean, it's always said
Speaker:it's a level playing field. - Yeah.
Speaker:- Like you and I can sit down and have a conversation
Speaker:over a cigar there's no prejudgment of socioeconomic status.
Speaker:There's no prejudgment of maybe political beliefs.
Speaker:There's no prejudgment on sex, religion, all that stuff.
Speaker:- Mm-hm.
Speaker:- And you can wipe all that clean and still
Speaker:have a great conversation with somebody.
Speaker:Or you can have a really bad one. You just walk away.
Speaker:- Nope.
Speaker:- (laughs) Kinda like what
Speaker:you're gonna do in this interview.
Speaker:"We're done. I'm walking away."
Speaker:- But yeah, for me a hundred percent, that's it.
Speaker:I mean, it's just, it's nice.
Speaker:Like I would never walk in a bar and talk to somebody,
Speaker:but you walk in a cigar shop, someone talks to you.
Speaker:- Yeah, that's actually really true
Speaker:because you sit at a bar and
Speaker:most people are just there.
Speaker:- Yeah.
Speaker:- Watching a TV, doing this, doing that,
Speaker:drinking, getting their fill.
Speaker:- Yeah.
Speaker:- It's social. It's so social.
Speaker:Like we're gonna go to a lounge on Friday and I cannot wait.
Speaker:That's my favorite thing to do is go to a lounge on a Friday
Speaker:because that's like the beehive is active.
Speaker:- Yeah.
Speaker:- Everyone's coming in and talking.
Speaker:And "How is your week? What are you doing this weekend?"
Speaker:That's fun.
Speaker:It's the people for me.
Speaker:It's the actual process of connecting with people over,
Speaker:it's very much a social thing for me,
Speaker:which I know other people,
Speaker:they smoke a cigar in solitude and that's their thing
Speaker:that they like about cigars.
Speaker:That's great.
Speaker:That's not me. I'm an extrovert.
Speaker:I get energy off of conversing with people.
Speaker:- Mm-hm.
Speaker:- Are you an introvert or extrovert?
Speaker:- Introvert. I hate,
Speaker:- Is it because you get energy being in alone and you need
Speaker:that time or do you get energy from other people,
Speaker:but you just wanna make sure that that person
Speaker:- I wanna surgically select the people I talk to.
Speaker:- [Rob] All right.
Speaker:- So if you put me in a social setting,
Speaker:in business, it's different.
Speaker:Because like I fuckin' have to talk to everybody,
Speaker:which is completely outta my element.
Speaker:But then in my personal life, I'm like,
Speaker:I don't wanna meet anybody new.
Speaker:I do have friends.
Speaker:One's in Jacksonville, Florida.
Speaker:One's in Bogota, Colombia.
Speaker:One of them is in Switzerland, but I have very few friends.
Speaker:- Got it.
Speaker:- But by design.
Speaker:- So you're not calling up your friends
Speaker:on the weekend to get together?
Speaker:- No.
Speaker:- What are you doing on the weekend?
Speaker:- Oh, depends the weekend.
Speaker:I mean like an enjoyable weekend?
Speaker:- [Rob] Yeah.
Speaker:- Go to the beach. Hang out at the pool.
Speaker:- [Rob] With your wife? Or on your own?
Speaker:- Yeah, sometimes, either way.
Speaker:She works on Saturday, so
Speaker:- Oh.
Speaker:- Sometimes I leave her and I go do shit.
Speaker:- [Rob] Just all on your own.
Speaker:- Yeah.
Speaker:- What type of pool?
Speaker:Community pool or private pool?
Speaker:- I have a fuckin' pool right there.
Speaker:- This pool? - Yeah.
Speaker:- Over my shoulder. - Yeah.
Speaker:Why would you go anywhere when you can just sit there?
Speaker:- Well, I didn't know. You said a pool
Speaker:and I'm from Minnesota. - No, I go to that pool.
Speaker:- So not a lot of people have that in the backyard.
Speaker:- Yeah, it's real common here.
Speaker:So, pool.
Speaker:- Yeah, a lot of people have pools.
Speaker:- I don't know, go to the beach.
Speaker:I like to do nature shit.
Speaker:I like to go outside. Ride my bike.
Speaker:- What can you do nature-esque wise in Florida?
Speaker:Ride? You said ride your bike.
Speaker:- In Florida there's a lot.
Speaker:In Miami there is as well.
Speaker:- [Rob] Really?
Speaker:- Yeah. But you gotta look for it.
Speaker:You have to kind of know where stuff is, which I don't.
Speaker:And then I ride my bike.
Speaker:- (chuckling) Yeah.
Speaker:- I go walking, beach, boat.
Speaker:- Boat, you have a boat.
Speaker:- No, I wish.
Speaker:- [Rob] But you get on a boat.
Speaker:- Sometimes.
Speaker:- Whose boat?
Speaker:- Various people, like that's an invitation
Speaker:you don't turn down.
Speaker:"You wanna go on the boat?" "Yep."
Speaker:- Robert, I wanna thank you for the time,
Speaker:hospitality, the whole nine.
Speaker:I appreciate this.
Speaker:- My pleasure.
Speaker:- I hope it was enjoyable for you.
Speaker:- Absolutely.
Speaker:- I hope they get to learn a little bit about Robert
Speaker:in a different way.
Speaker:What he likes to do, travel fun, going out.
Speaker:What he's doing with his cigar business.
Speaker:I mean all of it matters, but ultimately I appreciate it.
Speaker:- My pleasure. Thank you.
Speaker:- Yeah, you're welcome.
Speaker:That's another episode of Box Press.
Speaker:We wrapped it up in Robert Caldwell's backyard,
Speaker:as always make sure you keep those cigars fresh.
Speaker:If you need anything, head over to Bovedainc.com
Speaker:or visit your local retailer.
Speaker:Have a blessed weekend and take care.