Cigars
and the Good Life in New Orleans

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Top
to Bottom: Holy Smokes Cafe, Hand-rolled cigars from New Orleans
Cigar Factory, Cigar Rolling Demonstration at Cigar Factory,
Dickie Brennan's Steakhouse. |
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Cigars may not
be native to Louisiana, but they have certainly taken firm root
in the city's celebrated culture of indulgence.
The traditional finale to a rich meal, the cigar is also used
to mark an important event such as the birth of a child or the
completion of a big business deal. It's no surprise then that
a city that loves its fine cuisine and is willing to launch into
boisterous celebration on the smallest pretext should prove a
welcoming home for the cigar.
On A Roll
A fine cigar, after all, is to a common smoke as a bowl of dark,
rich gumbo is to a can of soup: incomparably finer and more lavish.
It's also a handcrafted product made by artisans, rather than
a mass-produced commodity, as one visit to the New Orleans
Cigar Factory (415 Decatur St., 504-568-1003) will demonstrate
vividly. In a bustling atmosphere fueled by meringue music and
the ever-present aroma of just-lit cigars, a team of cigar makers
works rapidly and with focus at a line of rustic wooden booths,
rolling the establishment's proprietary blends as visitors look
on. Turning a pile of tobacco into a properly formed, appropriately
aged and carefully maintained cigar is a long process, and each
step is on display here, from the rolling table to the aging room
to the walk-in humidor. The Cigar Factory operates
a second location closer to the all-night action on Bourbon Street
(206 Bourbon St., 504-568-0168), which is open much later.
While these cigars are New Orleans originals,
many aficionados have brand loyalty and are only willing to stray
from their favorites for so long. The French Quarter has several
tobacconists offering large selections from well-known cigar makers,
as well as specialty cigarettes and pipe tobacco. For example,
the Crescent City Cigar Shop (730 Orleans Ave.,
504-522-4427) and JAI Bawani (729 St. Louis St.,
504-586-0994) both look and function much like the cigar shops
visitors are likely familiar with from home. Much more exotic,
however, is the retail experience at Rev. Zombie's House
of Voodoo (723 St. Peter St., 504-486-6366), where altars
of religious statuary, ritual totems, candles and other curios
share shop space with a wide selection of cigars and other tobacco
products.
Where There's Smoke,
There's Dinner
At Broussard's Restaurant (819 Conti St., 504-581-3866),
one of the "grande dames" of Creole dining, cigars
are part of what the restaurant calls the "Three Fine C's." Fine
cigars, fine cognac and fine coffee form a veritable holy trinity
of after-dinner luxury at the 84-year-old Creole restaurant,
which stocks Davidoff cigars, a highly-regarded brand from Switzerland.
Cigars are paid similar respect at Dickie
Brennan's Steakhouse (716 Iberville St., 504-522-2267),
an upscale steakhouse where the aroma of a cigar rounds out
a distinctly gentlemanly atmosphere of polished wood interiors
and a no nonsense menu of USDA prime steaks and New Orleans
seafood favorites. The steakhouse offers a selection of cigars
from the Dominican Republic, Nicaragua, Honduras and Jamaica.
Cigar smoking is allowed in the bar, and upon request in private
dining rooms.
Holy Smokes Cafe (533 St.
Louis St., 504-588-1811) truly lives up to its billing as a smoker's
cafe. In addition to a walk-in humidor, the cafe has a gourmet
coffee bar as well as a selection of gelato, the luxuriously
rich and creamy Italian ice cream. Try a cup of the coffee gelato
for a mellow and flavorful icy treat. Big comfortable rocking
chairs and a selection of magazines invite lingering over a freshly-lit
stogie.
And where there's alluring smoke, there's
not necessarily always a cigar. Hookahs, or Middle Eastern water
pipes, are attracting a wider following in the New Orleans area
and Holy Smokes Cafe is one of several local venues which now
offer them.
Most of the cigar shops also sell smoking
accessories, from utilitarian cigar cutters to beautiful humidors.
But a stop in to M.S. Rau Antiques (630 Royal St., 504-523-5660),
gives a unique historical perspective to just how seriously the
cigar culture was regarded in the gilded age and earlier. This
immense antique mecca boasts a collection of cigar smoking accessories,
including some crafted by renowned makers such as Tiffany, Faberge
and Cartier.
Often made from gold and sterling and sometimes
even encrusted with gemstones, these antiques can command kingly
sums. For much less treasure, however, visitors might well feel
like kings and queens themselves with a fine cigar in hand strolling
under the balconies and Creole moon of a French Quarter evening.

Ian McNulty is a freelance food writer and
columnist, a frequent commentator on the New Orleans entertainment
talk show “Steppin’ Out” and editor of the
guidebook “Hungry? Thirsty? New Orleans.”