I have found, through vast trial and error, there are three categories of cigar manufacturers.'
First, there are those committed to excellence and it shows in so many ways. Avo, Davidoff, Zino, Griffin, Don Pepin Garcia, Ahston, La Aurora and many others offer excellent construction, consistent taste and quality, with draw and burn being consistent and usually perfect.
Second, there are companies that are consistently good, but occasionally have a bad cigar. For example, I love Carlos Torano, La Flor Dominica, Fonseca, Camacho and Joya de Nicarauga cigars, but they do not have the near-spotless record of the the superior lines I listed above.
Third, there are cigars I smoke that are less than stellar in construction and quality, but their price makes them affordable, I do enjoy them, and since I smoke once per day, I need to smoke some lower priced cigars to stay within budget. Examples are Alec Bradley, Rocky Patel, Gran Habano and Gran Cubita.
Keep in mind the only way I came to these conclusions is by smoking dozens of cigars in each line before I made up my mind. That's what made it so much fun, I got to find out by trying lots and lots of cigars.
There is not always a direct correlation between price and quality. Graycliff is a good example. Very expensive and unimpressive cigars. I've had some 5-7 dollar Carlos Toranos that were better than Graycliffs I have tried.
Best of luck, try some of these and see what you think.
There's only two kinds of cigars, the kind you like and the kind you don't.
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