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Drew Estate - All You Need to Know BEFORE You Go (2024)
Keep it original with a General Admission ticket that includes a selection of our specialty swag cigars, full access to local food and drink vendors, and more.
A VIP ticket is like a premium filler- you choose it for a customized experience. You’re welcome into our all-new Black Widow Saloon with access to air-conditioned areas, lounge-seating, and tailored-for-you swag, specialized activations, and private, exclusive meet and greet with our Ambassadors.
Connecticut
AUGUST 10, 2024
11 AM - 6 PM
Depending on your access level, VIP or General Admission, you’ll receive Joya de Nicaragua Numero Uno L’ Ambassadeur, Herrera—Brazilian Maduro, Tabak—Negra, Acid 20 Toro Connecticut, and more.
dunn & foster
Located in the Connecticut River Valley, they are leading growers and brokers of broadleaf that wraps around some of the world’s favorite premium cigars.
food & drink
Delicious food and carefully crafted drinks
from local vendors.
live music &
Drew Estate’s DJ Eli + live music from local artists
live Music & dj's
Delicious food and carefully crafted drinks from local vendors
OCTOBER 5, 2024
Depending on your access level, VIP or General Admission, you’ll receive Tabak Especial, Herrera Estelí, Joya de Nicaragua, Pappy Van Winkle, Deadwood, and more.
Gray Family
Beautiful, vast acres of lush scenery in Hopkinsville where Drew Estate sources its authentic Kentucky seed fire-cured tobaccos.
Drew Estate’s DJ Eli + live music from local artists.
gray family
live music & dj's
Delicious food and carefully crafted drinks from local vendors.
NOVEMBER 9, 2024
Depending on your access level, VIP or General Admission, you’ll receive 20-Acre Farm, Blackened –M81, Deadwood, Tabak Dulce, Herrera Norteño,
florida sun
A 20-acre farm in Clermont that revived the sunshine state’s tobacco industry to bring back the unique flavor of Florida tobacco. They understand what it takes to grow the finest tobacco leaves and
make premium cigars.
florida Sun
A 20-acre farm in Clermont that revived the sunshine state’s tobacco industry to bring back the unique flavor of Florida tobacco. They understand what it takes to grow the finest tobacco leaves and make premium cigars.
Depending on your access level, VIP or General Admission, you’ll receive 20-Acre Farm, Blackened –M81, Deadwood, Tabak Dulce, Herrera Norteño, and more.
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Cigar Aficionado
Drew Estate Tour Offers Rare Velvet Rat Cigar
Drew Estate is going on tour across the United States, and eventgoers will be the only ones who have a chance to get their hands on one of the Nicaraguan cigar company's most coveted smokes: the Liga Privada Único Serie Velvet Rat.
Called the Drew Diplomat Event Series, the tour kicks off at 5 p.m. tonight at The Beer Sellar in Newport, Kentucky, and will continue into the summer, with scheduled stops at more than 50 Drew Diplomat Retailers throughout the U.S. The tour will culminate at Drew Estate's second annual Connecticut River Valley Barn Smoker on August 6, held in South Windsor at the same farm that produces wrapper for the company's Liga Privada No. 9 and Liga Privada T52 cigars.
Event attendees will not only have the opportunity to smoke a cigar among other enthusiasts and take advantage of specials on Drew Estate products, but they may also be able to meet co-founder Jonathan Drew as well as master blender Willy Herrera.
Perhaps most importantly, fans will be able to get the limited Velvet Rat cigar. Part of the company's highly sought after Liga Privada Único Serie , Velvet Rat sports a flag-style cap and measures 6 1/4 inches by 46 ring gauge. It features a Connecticut broadleaf wrapper, Brazilian mata fina binder and filler tobaccos hailing from Nicaragua and Honduras. The cigar, which is a toned-down version of the Dirty Rat, was previously released in 2012 as well as at last year's Connecticut Barn Smoker. According to Drew Estate, only 5,000 Velvet Rats will be available, and they are said to have been rolled in January 2015 and aging ever since.
However, in order for a fan to get their hands on a Velvet Rat, a few steps must be taken. First, they will need to sign up as a member (a free process) of the Drew Estate Diplomat program through the company's mobile app. The app, which is available for either Apple iOS or Android, was launched earlier in June and offers Drew Estate fans a mechanism to stay up-to-date on company news and earn points for a chance to win artwork from Subculture Studios, Drew Estate's art initiative. After downloading the app and signing up as a member, fans will then need to make a "qualifying promotional purchase" at one of the tour events, and in turn they will receive a Velvet Rat, while supplies last.
"One of the main goals of creating Drew Diplomat was to connect our Drew Estate final consumers to the retailers who have stood behind our premium cigars for so many years," said Michael Celluci, president of Drew Estate.
While tour stops are likely to be added, the list of events below is final as of today:
06/28/2016 - The Beer Sellar in Newport, KY from 5:00 PM - 8:00 PM
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Not Your Grandpa’s Cigars – Drew Estate Factory Tour, Estelí, Nicaragua
Forget what you think you know about cigars. Drew Estate is redefining the art of cigar making and marketing, as we found out when we traveled to the town of Estelí and took the hippest cigar factory tour in Nicaragua.
This 50 foot (15 meter) tall mural is just one of the many pieces of cool original art at the Drew Estate Cigar Co. factory in Estelí, Nicaragua.
The rebirth of cigars
That’s the slogan of Drew Estate and the personal goal of its co-founder Johnathan Drew, a 43-year-old guy from New York City who was selling cigars in a tiny kiosk in the World Trade Center in downtown Manhattan while dreaming of bigger things. Using cool art, irreverent names, inventive, modern cigars, and high quality they’re aiming for a new breed of cigar aficionados. In 1998 Johnathan and his partners started Drew Estate Cigar Co. and began making some of the most unorthodox and successful cigars in the world from a massive factory in Estelí.
Cigars in the making at Drew Estate Cigar Co. in Estelí, Nicaragua.
Estelí is well known as a cigar producing region and there are many other cigar factories in town. As in other tobacco and cigar producing regions, Cubans brought tobacco seeds and know how to Nicaragua and the rest is history.
Inside the coolest cigar factory in Nicaragua
We’ve toured cigar factories before, including the Plasencia cigar factory and the Flor de Copán cigar factory , both in Honduras. That’s how we know Drew Estate is really doing something different. While the other cigar factories in Estelí and around the world are busy doing things the old-fashioned way, Drew Estate took a left turn at traditional and decided to go their own way.
One of the young workers at the Drew Estate Cigar Co. factory in Estelí, Nicaragua with a tray of finished cigars.
Rock music plays in the massive warehouse and factory facility. The staff is remarkably young. There’s cool art everywhere, a modern riff on traditional cigar box art inspired by tattoos and graffiti.
We spent hours gawking at the range of cigars (they even make square ones), learning about tobacco curing and cigar rolling, and probably getting some sort of nicotine contact high in the process.
Part of our tour of the Drew Estate Cigar Co. facility in Estelí, Nicaragua included a peak into their massive tobacco warehouse where the best leaves from around the world are carefully stored before being turned into millions of cigars.
It’s not just the music and the art work that makes Drew Estate different. We learned that at Drew Estate they don’t call their cigars puros, as many other regional makers do, since they aren’t made with tobacco from a single source. Instead, Drew Estate blends tobacco from around the world, sort of like how a winemaker would blend grapes from different regions to come up with the desired flavor and aroma.
Also, unlike most other cigar makers, Drew Estate doesn’t rely on a machine to measure the “draw” of each cigar. That’s checked primarily by weight.
The only area we weren’t allowed to see during the Drew Estate factory tour was the on-site graphic art studio, called the Subculture Studio, where staff artists were busy cooking up new top secret marketing materials.
Tobacco air-drying at the Drew Estate cigar factory in Estelí, Nicaragua.
Taking the cigar world by storm
Though there were some lean years, today Drew Estate makes millions of dollars and millions of cigars with names like My Uzi Weighs a Ton (an uzi is an official measurement in the world of cigars). And then there’s Acid.
Named for the artist Scott “Acid” Chester (that’s him on the motorcycle in the Acid logo) this is one of Drew Estate’s top sellers. Cigar purists call Acid a “flavored” cigar but Drew prefers the term “infused” since the tobacco used in Acid cigars is steeped in a secret blend of flavors.
Drew Estate’s Liga cigar is not flavored or infused and even the purists love it. It was scored as high as 89 points by Cigar Aficionado magazine.
A selection of Drew Estate cigars with distinctive names including Acid, Liga Privada and My Uzi Weighs a Ton.
Here are some more of our favorite shots from the Drew Estate Cigar Co. factory in Estelí and don’t miss the aficionados-only info at the end of this post.
Sorting tobacco at the Drew Estate cigar factory in Estelí, Nicaragua.
Unlike other cigar factories we’ve toured, the work rooms at Drew Estate were airy, well-lit and even had rock music piped in.
Rollin’ and smokin’ at the Drew Estate cigar factory in Estelí, Nicaragua.
Many believe that women make the best cigar rollers.
This guy could probably do this in his sleep.
Almost done…
This wooden box helps ensure every cigar is well-packed so it has a good “draw” when you smoke it. Unlike other cigar makers, Drew Estate does not use a machine to measure the draw of each cigar.
Finished cigars pass through manual quality control at the Drew Estate cigar factory.
More quality control at the Drew Estate cigar factory in Nicaragua.
Finished cigars in all shapes and sizes at the Drew Estate cigar factory in Nicaragua.
Fancy labels and protective packaging are added before Drew Estate cigars are ready to be shipped around the world.
Fancy labels and packaging are added before Drew Estate cigars are ready to be shipped around the world.
The unique art of Drew Estate Cigar Co. is created by in-house artists who put a modern twist on traditional cigar box motifs.
Want to really get into the cool, cool world of Drew Estate cigars? Sign up for their four-day Cigar Safari guided tour of parts of Nicaragua and, of course, the factory which includes accommodation in the very hip and plush house next to the factory. There’s a swimming pool, decks with epic views, a poker table, full staff and, of course, all the cigars you can smoke. Just don’t hold your breath: the Drew Estate Cigar Safari is already sold out for 2014.
Estelí travel tip
Estelí doesn’t see a lot of tourists and hotel options in town are a bit slim. We were hard pressed to find decent budget accommodation with parking. There’s a budget hostel but they don’t have parking, there’s an over-priced seen-better-days hotel with a parking lot that just felt like a rip off and then there’s Hotel Los Arcos . Rooms start at US$45 but they’re big, clean and include breakfast and there’s a secure parking lot.
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That sounds like an awesome experience. Square cigars make for a good conversation starter lol. I’ve never been a fan of cigars but I love seeing how they are made. We’ll have to visit a factory while in the Dominican Republic.
If you are a cigar smoker, it’s just right to know how it is made and where it came from. This tour is to make people realize that there is an art in cigar smoking and why there are still a lot of people all over the world appreciate it.
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- December 12, 2016
Drew Estate — where they came from and what’s next in the “Rebirth of Cigars”
- Editorial , Stories
- Author: Nicolas Jimenez
Drew Estate
by Nicolás Antonio Jiménez
Sunday, January 29, 1995. Chances are you were stocking up on beer, prepping chip dip, and maybe rifling through your closet for your Stan Humphries Jersey (which you’d learn later that night wasn’t all that “lucky” after all). Everyone’s focus was on Miami, one of the epicenters of the American cigar industry, but cigars had nothing to do with it. Joe Robbie Stadium would play host to Super Bowl XXIX, in which the San Francisco 49ers wrote the unhappy ending to the San Diego Chargers’ Cinderella season.
In New York City, one guy who couldn’t have cared less about the game (he’s not a sports fan) was heading into the first chapter of his own unlikely success story. That was Jonathan Drew’s first official day in the cigar industry, and it surpassed all of his wildest expectations.
“It wasn’t Monday yet. I thought, ‘This is preposterous. Holy shit. I just made $500,” said Jonathan, recalling that day from his Miami apartment in the Wynwood Arts District. He didn’t know it then, but his retail cart in the World Trade Center was the start of a journey that would change the way many thought about how cigars are made and marketed. Some serendipitous meetings, a fresh perspective, and a tragic accident all converged to create the Drew Estate you know today.
New York Beginnings
Jonathan attended and graduated from law school, even interning at the Suffolk County District Attorney’s office. While he was a law student, he — along with some friends, including Drew Estate cofounder Marvin Samel — made some money with a beach share house on Long Island. They took it upon themselves to offer their tenants some amenities, which meant cooking breakfasts and — more importantly — providing stogies. That last one quickly became a service Jonathan was known for well beyond the walls of his share house.
“I was a cigar smoker and everyone knew I had the good cigars. People knew I was the cigar guy. So everybody in the Hamptons was coming from all sorts of different share houses to stop by and get cigars from me. So sometimes I would charge them what I paid, sometimes I would give out free shit, sometimes I would give out Macanudo Miniatures, or Macanudo Caviars, and I would have all this other shit. That’s when I started to think I would open my own cigar shop, because I needed cash. So I opened up my first cigar shop as a retailer at the World Trade Center in Manhattan on the ground floor.”
The roughly $500 he made on his first day selling cigars from a cart — keeping fans near the 5’ x 4’ humidor to keep it cool and getting some help with the setup from his mom and dad — put him on his way toward paying the cart’s monthly rent, which he says was about $3,000. It was also the beginning of the formation of the business’s identity, which is informed by not only the struggle of its leaders to keep it afloat and innovate, but also by the gritty hip hop culture in each of the places it’s called home. That identity developed as the business branched off into different aspects of the cigar trade — namely humidors, as well as cigar sales and distribution for other established brands.
“That was way back in the day. I had the red and black lumberjack jacket with the hat to match,” Jonathan said, alluding to the lyrics of Juicy. “It was good times. I was on J Street in Manhattan, and right next to me was Jay Z and Roc-A-Fella Records. They were nobody. In that time period, you had Biggie blowing up in New York, you had Puff Daddy, hip hop was in a transitional period.
And that’s really important to the earliest days of Drew Estate. Because one of the things that always distinguished us from everybody else is that we weren’t a cigar company. We knew we weren’t a cigar company from minute one.”
Rather than a cigar company, Drew Estate sees itself as dealing in lifestyle and experiences. It’s an approach that separated them from their competition in the earliest days and continues to do so today. In the earliest days, when Jonathan was running things from Dumbo, Brooklyn, just beyond the end of the Manhattan Bridge that’s a hallmark of Drew Estate branding, that lifestyle brand approach began to reflect the company’s New York City roots. In fact, a year after the cart business launched, the company’s first brand, La Vieja Habana, was rolled in New York City by a small company called La Rosa Cigars. And then it wasn’t.
“The guy who made those cigars, Antonio Al- manzar, got decapitated,” said Jonathan. “They slid in the rain under an 18-wheeler in his car and his head got taken off.” The freak accident created a need to find a new manufacturer for La Vieja Habana. That’s when Jonathan hooked up with Nick Perdomo.
“Nick was supposed to make them in Miami, but his dad had moved to Estelí,” said Jonathan. “So I was going out to Nicaragua every time he did, eight or nine times a year in ‘96 and ‘97.”
At the time, Jonathan was also considering having La Vieja Habana made by other companies. For instance, he said he came close to going with Ernesto Pérez Carrillo, who was making his cigars in the Dominican Republic. Instead, frequent trips to Estelí brought Drew Estate closer and closer to the next chapter in its story, and Jonathan Drew closer to his next home.
“It was very creepy. You would go to Nicaragua and everything was riddled with bullet holes,” Jonathan said. “People were not proud to be making cigars in Nicaragua. It wasn’t like it is now where ‘Nicaragua’ is written all over everything.”
It’s hard enough living under the conditions that seem to come standard in any Central American economic or political system. At the time Jonathan started getting to know the country, Nica- ragua was also reeling from the Contras and the Sandinista National Liberation Front. Goods and services were in scarce supply, and getting a business off the ground — especially as a gringo with more of a cultural gap to bridge than many of the Cuban families whose companies had put down roots (think Padrón, Perdomo, etc.) — wasn’t easy.
“No place in Central America is as loving of people as Nicaragua. Nowhere at all in Central or South America is as safe as Nicaragua. Nowhere,” said Jonathan. “Including Mexico, Panama, Costa Rica, nothing. But that’s not what it was back then. It was rougher. Women couldn’t get makeup. Forget cell phones. The roads were bad. Medical equipment and needs were really bad. Couldn’t get cars either. Getting a telephone line took a year. I couldn’t get a bank account open for almost two years.”
At first, Jonathan made the transition to Nicaragua by living in the Perdomo factory. That was about the time that he crossed paths with Jeff Borysiewicz, his longtime friend and owner of the Orlando-based Corona Cigar Company.
“I remember when my supplier of Lars Tetens cigars didn’t sell them anymore. I was all pissed off because the rumor was some young lawyer dude from New York named Jonathan Drew was the one doing the distribution. I immediately didn’t like him even though I’d never met him,” Jeff said.
“I was down in Nicaragua with Nick Perdomo, who was making our Cielo cigars. American Airlines had lost my luggage, and while I was over at Nick’s office this guy came by,” Jeff said. “Kinda looked like a hippie dude. It was Jonathan Drew. I was feeling kinda dirty because it was all dirt roads and working on the farm gets you even dirtier, right? I didn’t have any clothes and John said, ‘You look about my size. I’ll send my driver with some clothes for you.’ Sure enough, about an hour later, some dude came by with a backpack and a fresh change of clothes. The clothes weren’t my style. John was always wearing that funky stuff that he wears, but that’s all right. I had a clean shirt and a clean pair of shorts.”
Jonathan’s kind gesture had already begun to change Jeff’s impression of him. But what he saw later that night was probably what really cemented their friendship. Jeff is roughly Jonathan’s age, and Jonathan was proud of the way he’d begun to build Corona — getting minimal sleep on the couch, working long nights from his home, going years without writing himself a paycheck. When he dropped by the Perdomo factory to see Jonathan again, Jeff realized they had a lot more in common than he imagined.
“It was about 11:30 at night. I’ll never forget it. He had a bucket of white paint and a roller in his hands — like what you would paint the walls in your house with — and he was painting the wooden boxes for his new brand, Natural. It totally changed my perception. This wasn’t some rich, hotshot young lawyer. This was a hard workin’ dude who’s doing the same thing as me.”
The transition from having a retail cart in New York City to sleeping in a factory in Estelí happened in a relatively short time. By 2002, Drew Estate had grown to the point of having more than 200 employees. But the struggles hadn’t ended; the company made headlines in Nicaragua when it was forced to lay just about all of them off.
“I’m a true tobacco guy. I lived in the factory for 14 years. I didn’t go to Nicaragua once a month, once a quarter, and stay at the hotel near the factory. I lived in it. Me here and the tobacco there,” said Jonathan, motioning toward a spot a few feet away. “I was constantly doing the dumbest shit you could ever imagine, number one because I didn’t know what I was doing, but also because whatever I did do that was working, there was no one else to do it but me.”
You were smoking graffiti, you were smoking hip hop, you were smoking the life and struggle that is now considered a lifestyle. Jonathan Drew
Just as Drew Estate owes its Estelí identity to the moment the decision was made to have cigars manufactured by Perdomo, it owes its survival to a woman named Candida, who owns an Estelí restaurant called La Confianza. The restaurant’s name translates to “trust,” and she put two years of it into Drew Estate, feeding the team for that long before they were able to pay the tab.
“These are not rich people,” Jonathan said. “So, many years later, when we opened factory 2 across the street (from our main facility), I called Candida to the stage and told the story.”
Candida was doing more than feeding a cigar company. She was fueling ideas that, as Jonathan likes to put it, were disruptive in their industry. And that started with an infused cigar brand called ACID.
“So you had three market segments: premium, short filler, and flavored. What is ACID? ACID is its own segment. That’s one of the things Drew Estate is known for: creating market segments that didn’t exist. With the ACID brand, we created a market segment in the infused premium cigar,” said Jonathan, noting that tobacco was altered or blended with flavoring ingredients by ancient people long before there was such a thing as the long filler cigar. “That was modern era. We journeyed back in time to where the taste profiles were based with taste and aroma that wasn’t straight tobacco. ACID was nothing new, but it was new for the market at our time. ACID was raw. You were smoking graffiti, you were smoking hip hop, you were smoking the life and struggle that now is considered to be a lifestyle.”
ACID went on to become (and still is) a monster brand in its own right; it is among the world’s best-selling long filler cigar brands and comes in more than two dozen variations. Further innovation in infused cigars came in the form of the company’s partnership with the Kahlua brand, which spawned the industry’s first coffee-infused cigar. Drew Estate became known for the infused market segments it had created.
“You take an Acid Kuba Kuba, and it looks a thousand times nicer than a lot of the other high-end stuff out there. Appearance, construction, consistency,” said Drew Estate Master Blender Willy Herrera.
That success brought with it a new set of challenges. As the company looked to expand into more traditional cigar products, it needed a way to challenge the perception that it couldn’t possibly compete with companies with more legacy and expertise in that space. As Jonathan points out, many consumers assume that the addition of Liga Privada cigars to its portfolios was enough to pull that off. But the truth is that another, far more innovative project opened the door for things like T52.
“When our transition time came, we weren’t known as Drew Estate; we were the ACID guys,” Jonathan said. “Think of what happens with a child actor. They’re already locked into people’s minds as a set value. How did Drew Barrymore transition into becoming a real actress? It’s very difficult. Everybody’s interpretation is set in stone, so you have to disrupt people’s impression and make them decide whether what you stand for fits in their value set. There was something that opened the door for Liga Privada, and that was Cigar Safari.”
Considering the state of Estelí when Drew Estate got its start, it shouldn’t be surprising that there wasn’t much cigar tourism to speak of there at the time. Cigar Safari helped not only to make Estelí a leisure and learning destination for cigar smokers, but also to open their eyes — for the first time — to the idea that Drew Estate could be a credible player in traditional cigars. Cigar Safari hasn’t changed a whole lot since it began. Guests still visit the Drew Estate facilities, experiment with creating their own blends, and get to know Nicaragua through a variety of cultural experiences.
“I had never been to Central America before,” said Billy Walsh, an Orlando police sergeant and part-time employee at Corona Cigar. “It was amazing all the way around. The only thing was that it was short; it was only like three days. So it felt like when we flew in, we were flying right back out. I thought, ‘The next time I come here, I have to spend more time because the country is beautiful.’”
This coming March, Billy will embark on his tenth and eleventh Cigar Safaris.
“In the beginning, I was more of a Padrón and Fuente guy,” Billy added. “But after going on the Safari and experiencing their blends … Yeah, that definitely hooked me. I’ve smoked most of what they make, and it’s exceptional to me. I think each Safari reinforces that over time.”
Early on, Cigar Safari guests tended to be people with wider influence in the cigar world: retailers, media, that sort of thing. It had at least a somewhat similar impact on them, and Drew Estate had a much easier time of breaking into traditionalists’ humidors with products like the ones in the Único Serie. The company has expanded on that experiential marketing model with more accessible (because you don’t need a passport) Barn Smoker events, which bring smokers closer to the farms that produce some of the more unique American tobaccos used in Drew Estate products. For instance, one recent Barn Smoker was held at Jeff Borysiewicz’s Florida Sun Grown farm just outside Orlando.
“That was where people could see and experience the commitment of everybody (at Drew Estate),” Jeff said of Cigar Safari. “These guys are the real deal. They’re legitimate cigar makers.”
The next episode
All these years later, a trip to La Gran Fábrica Drew Estate can make it easy to lose sight of where the company came from. The facility that produces Drew Estate products and hosts Safaris feels — especially as compared to other cigar factories — like it’s part museum, part theme park, part factory. Jonathan Drew has been at the center of that from the beginning, but he hasn’t been alone. Aside from having benefitted from the generosity, example or mentorship of people like Candida, Nick Perdomo, Kiki Berger and José Orlando Padrón (to name just a few), the company has managed to create a culture that generates real buy-in from its employees.
“People feel like they’re part of something,” Jeff said.
It’s why those smokers most familiar with the company know Jessi Flores, who is now the director of Subculture Studios (the arm of the company that produces so much of its custom art and swag), but started out as Jonathan’s driver and translator shortly after his arrival in Estelí. It’s why Manuel Rubio, who many remember seeing at the Drew Estate factory working a low-level job when he was 18 years old, is now the factory’s manager.
And it’s why another guy who started at the bot- tom in Estelí, Pedro Gómez, went from manag- ing Cigar Safaris to running around the United States as one of Drew Estate’s most beloved ambassadors.
“Everybody is equal in the company,” said Willy, who created blends like Herrera Estelí and Norteño. “We bring up from within. All our management in Nicaragua are people who started at the ground level, whether it was stripping veins off of wrapper, or drivers, or as assistant to one of the key people. Those are all in our management now. I like the fact that everyone is happier (at Drew Estate). You go to some other factories where people don’t even look up from their tables. Here, you walk into our factory, people are looking and smiling and saying hello.”
The team Drew Estate has built now pumps out some of the most respected cigars in the world across a variety of segments, including infused products, traditional cigars, and more recent additions to the portfolio, like Kentucky Fire Cured.
“I would say (the variety) makes things different for me in that, because of all these different branches, I have a much broader audience. So I’m not just dealing with the traditional guy,” Willy said. “I deal with the infused guy, I deal with the traditional stuff, the Herrera stuff, everybody. I have a much bigger audience than the guy who just has a brand with two or three lines. I’ll talk to a lot of these hardcore infused guys, and by the end of the day they’re smoking a Herrera Estelí, or an Undercrown Shade. It’s always good because the bigger the audience, the more chance you’ll have to introduce something new to them.”
The newest addition to their team is CEO Glenn Wolfson, who is a newcomer to the premium cigar industry and is transitioning from a long career consulting for companies like Walt Disney Company, Purina, Kraft, and United Airlines.
I deal with the infused guy, I deal with the traditional stuff, the Herrera stuff, everybody. I have a much bigger audience than the guy who just has a brand or two with three lines. Willy Herrera
“I’ve never come across a culture like this in my life,” Glenn said. “The thing that makes it really wonderful, wacky, and wild is that it’s incredibly familial. The way people pull for each other, the family values, the fact that they really care for each other. We are the brand in many ways. The way we dress, the ink on our arms. It’s a creative, innovative organization. We’re rebels with a cause. It will forever be Rebirth of Cigars. We’ll always be progressive, innovative and disruptive. It’s been in our blood since Marvin and Jonathan founded the company.”
These days, Jonathan is branching out even further. After the sale of Drew Estate to Swisher, he’s launched his latest project, John Drew Brands (expected to launch officially in February 2017), which will introduce a selection of craft spirits to his résumé and present new challenges in terms of how people perceive his expertise and credibility. He knows he’s not known as a “whiskey guy,” and because of that, he might have an uphill battle making a success of products like his new Brixton Mash Destroyer, which is a four-year Kentucky bourbon mashed with a five-year Florida rum — another instance of Jonathan’s insistence on changing the status quo. With the grit and hustle that he drew from after moving to Estelí in the late ‘90s, along with the help of the institution he’s built in Drew Estate, he might just pull off his next disruption.
“John Drew Brands is based right at Drew Estate. They were really great to me, they built out my offices for me and my team,” said Jonathan. “If you want to know what the early days of Drew Estate was like, all you need to do is look at John Drew Brands. We’re going through those early growing pains that Drew Estate went through when I came into the cigar industry.”
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Nicolas Jimenez
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Drew Holcomb Shares His Weekend Essentials For a Laid Back Summer
From the lake house to the golf course, find out what he's bringing along.
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Now, this isn't a unique experience for a Memphis kid. We all know famous names like B.B. King, Booker T., and Elvis Presley put Memphis on the map as a music city. When you've got colossal acts like that coming from your hometown, you're bound to have a bit of the bug for music. Some odd years between his childhood and now, he's made a lot of music that's easy for everyone to sing along to.
On the tail end of his "Find Your People Tour," Holcomb and his bandmates recently announced a new album. Stangers No More , the same album the tour was named after, has a second volume that is being released in the fall.
"It was always the plan to release the album in two parts," the frontman explained. "Twenty songs was probably too much to overwhelm people with. We let the first volume run its length."
The album has definitely been running, but without any slowing down.
One of the first singles from the record was "Dance With Everybody," a sing-songy tune that really does make you want to get up and dance with everybody. The song outstretched Holcomb's normal fanbase when it became the featured hit of a NCAA March Madness commercial. A compilation of teammates dancing, coaches laughing, and fans cheering goes right along with the theme of the song.
And the track "Find Your People" has become an anthem of gratitude, and a viral song on TikTok. Music causing people to dance and celebrate the people they love? What's not to like?
Between a whole lot of song writing and touring, you would think a busy man like Drew would soak up all the downtime he can get. But on top of being a touring musician, he's also over the music festival Moon River , owns Magnolia Record Store , and has a hand in Sweetens Cove Bourbon . Not to mention, a husband and father of three.
"My rest tends to be pretty active. I like to play golf, I like to sit on the porch and smoke a cigar with my friends, going on a hike with the kids. My rest is more fun."
You're speaking Country Living language, Drew!
Drew and his fam are making the most out of their weekends with trips to the lake and spending time with their closest friends and family. Here's a look at some of the products that help make their weekends so special!
Strangers No More Album on Vinyl
"Records... You can't have a good weekend without music. I recommend our latest, Strangers no More ."
Wildsam Field Guides: New Orleans (American City Guide Series)
"Everywhere we go, we see if Wildsam has a field guide about that place. They are the most unique and in depth travel guides I have ever read. "
Solo Stove Ranger 2.0 Smokeless Fire Pit
"I was skeptical of the smoke-free fire claims, but they actually work. And they are portable! We take ours to the lake, to the hunting cabin, and even the front yard on Halloween."
Blackstone 36" Omnivore Griddle
"This was a game changer for us. We both come from big families and love to host, this thing can cook for 20 people, no problem."
Faherty Legend™ Sweater Shirt
"I have about 5 of these. Great in any color. I have worn these on date nights and as a layer on ski trips, around the fire drinking bourbon with my friends, or to the top of the Grand Teton with Ellie."
Titleist Vokey SM9 Tour Chrome Wedge
"Golf clubs go with me pretty much everywhere. I use a Titleist driver and wedges, and PING Irons . I have a MacKenzie Walker bag and my favorite one is a custom Flag Bag . You send in your favorite golf course flags and they make a custom bag out of it."
Theo of Golden
"A great book... my latest read is Theo of Golden by Allen Levi. It's a great rumination on how to live a quiet and respectable life."
Lucchese Sunset Roper Boot
"I have worn my Lucchese Ropers onstage almost every night for over 15 years."
Sweetens Cove Kennessee Bourbon
"This is a fantastic bourbon that I happen to be involved with. Born out of a legendary nine hole golf course in East Tennessee, it’s the bourbon that kills pretense. I love it."
Memphis Corduroy Rope Hat
"I love representing my hometown no matter where I am on stage."
Billy Reid Shoals Denim Shirt
"I wear Billy Reid stuff all the time. This is the best classic denim shirt I know of. It's born out of Florence, Alabama."
Peach Truck Peaches
"A peach truck subscription is a Nashville classic. Get Georgia peaches delivered to your door every week of the summer."
Revelshine Wine
"This wine is made for adventure and sustainability."
Blue Delta Jeans
"Blue Delta Jeans are custom pants from Mississippi. I wear them every night on stage, and many nights off stage."
Anna Mahan is the Associate Commerce Editor for Country Living. She finds and shares a variety of the best lifestyle products, from fashion and beauty to cast iron skillets.
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Cigar Safari Itinerary. Day 1: Arrive at Managua Airport. Grab lunch at a top-notch steakhouse. Travel from Managua to Estelí, where the Drew Estate factory resides and where you will stay. Have dinner at the Drew Estate factory, unpack. Free time at night to hang out in our lounge, play poker, sip on scotch. Day 2:
Events. Load more events. Leave this field empty if you're human: ©2024 Built by Drew Estate | 11000 NW 29th ST Miami, FL 33172 | BARN SMOKER| PRIVACY POLICY| CALIFORNIA - PRIVACY NOTICE AT COLLECTION. To The Top. YOU MUST BE AT LEAST 21 YEARS OF AGE TO ENTER THIS SITE. I AM OVER 21I AM UNDER 21. REMEMBER ME.
About. Take a once-in-a-lifetime trip to Drew Estate's Nicaraguan Cigar Factory and begin exploring the eco-tourism of Nicaragua. Visit our Esteli-based factory, La Gran Fabrica Drew Estate, and blend your own cigars using some of our most sought-after tobaccos. Esteli, Nicaragua. Contact.
The Drew Estate cigars you know and love are hand made by our... Join us on a video tour of La Gran Fabrica Drew Estate, the largest cigar factory in Nicaragua. The Drew Estate cigars you know and ...
Today we go through Drew Estate head to toe starting at pre industry and head to the factory floor. We visit Subculture Studio's and get our swag! This was t...
On the 2013 Cigar Safari, Drew Estate's CEO, Steve Saka, talks about their method of bunching cigars, then Willy Herrera demonstrates an older, more traditio...
Travel & Countries. Drew Estate announces the soft re-opening of the Cigar Safari Program, the cigar tour to Esteli, Nicaragua hosted at La Gran Fabrica Drew Estate for 4 days and 3 nights. Safari presents an opportunity for Consumers and Retailers to take a trip to Drew Estate's Nicaraguan cigar factory and explore the eco-tourism of Nicaragua.
Through conversation, learn how he creates a well-balanced, flavorful cigar and his blending techniques. Drew Estates Cigar Ambassador Pedro is the co-master of the ceremony at Barn Smoker. He'll be hand-cutting, lighting cigars for our VIP attendees, and giving tobacco presentations in the tobacco fields.
Events & Tickets - Barn Smoker by Drew Estate. Keep it original with a General Admission ticket that includes a selection of our specialty swag cigars, full access to local food and drink vendors, and more. A VIP ticket is like a premium filler- you choose it for a customized experience. You're welcome into our all-new Black Widow Saloon with ...
Drew Estate is going on tour across the United States, and eventgoers will be the only ones who have a chance to get their hands on one of the Nicaraguan cigar company's most coveted smokes: the Liga Privada Único Serie Velvet Rat. Called the Drew Diplomat Event Series, the tour kicks off at 5 p.m. tonight at The Beer Sellar in Newport ...
The rebirth of cigars. That's the slogan of Drew Estate and the personal goal of its co-founder Johnathan Drew, a 43-year-old guy from New York City who was selling cigars in a tiny kiosk in the World Trade Center in downtown Manhattan while dreaming of bigger things. Using cool art, irreverent names, inventive, modern cigars, and high quality they're aiming for a new breed of cigar ...
In the earliest days, when Jonathan was running things from Dumbo, Brooklyn, just beyond the end of the Manhattan Bridge that's a hallmark of Drew Estate branding, that lifestyle brand approach began to reflect the company's New York City roots. In fact, a year after the cart business launched, the company's first brand, La Vieja Habana ...
Drew Estate Cigar Safari tour in Esteli Nicaragua, hosted by Cigar Vixen and Nica Travel. Hope you enjoy this unique look inside the factory and safari of Dr...
In 1998, Jonathan Drew & Marvin Samel began their operation in NYC, selling cigars in the World Trade Center. Later that year, Drew moved to Nicaragua, trying to start the "rebirth of cigars." With hard work and persistence came great rewards, and the Drew Estate brand has gone on to create some of the most successful blends in the business.
Drew Estate - The Rebirth of Cigars. The Drew Estate story is one of trials and tribulations, failures and successes, but most of all, a drive to innovate and reinvent. DE was started in 1998 with two frat brothers selling cigars in the World Trade Center in New York - these men were Jonathan Drew and Marvin Samel.
Drew Estate Factory Tour Sampler II. SKU: KP-SAM031. Pack Size: 20 CIGARS. Availability: In stock. $32.20. MSRP: $40.30. Earn 32 Cigar Points. Each sampler includes: 5 x Drew Estate Factory Smokes Sun Grown Robusto (5"x54), 5 x Drew Estate Factory Smokes Robusto (5"x54), 5 x Drew Estate Factory Smokes Maduro Robusto (5"x54), 5 x Drew Estate ...
4.29 5,615 Reviews. Drew Estate Cigars, an absolute behemoth in the premium cigar business, produces some of the most popular brands on the market like ACID, Liga Privada, and Undercrown. Unlike many of the other famous cigar brands and makers on the market today which are decades, even centuries old and founded in Cuba, Drew Estate Cigars ...
Pack of 5 Corona. $47.99. qty 1 . Add to Cart. Add To Wish Lists. Description & Details. Blackened Shade to Black S84 is the second collaboration between Jonathan Drew Co-founder and president of Drew Estate Cigars, Metallica's James Hetfield Rob Dietrich - the master distiller of Blackened Whiskey following up the 95-rated Blackened M81.
Official YouTube account for Drew Estate Cigars. Founded in New York City in 1996, Drew Estate has become one of the fastest growing tobacco companies in the...
Drew and his fam are making the most out of their weekends with trips to the lake and spending time with their closest friends and family. Here's a look at some of the products that help make their weekends so special! Now 13% Off. $20 at Amazon $20 at Walmart. Credit: Drew Holcomb & The Neighbors.