In 1962, José Orlando Padrón, a third-generation Cuban tobacco grower, ended up in Miami after the Castro regime confiscated his family’s farms. It took only two years for him to set up shop ...
“Buenos días,” welcomes Nubia Gomez from behind her espresso machine. A royal blue apron guards her sweater from coffee ...
“We're also further restricting the importation of alcohol and Cuban tobacco,” the Republican president said at the ceremony honoring Bay of Pigs veterans and commemorating the 40th ...
Through a pair of thick velvet curtains, a hidden 30-seat cocktail den brings fat-washed freezer door Martinis and brie and kimchi toasties from a bartender’s dream to a popular pub.
Some will be bitter, others sweet, and the flavors you pick up — from nuttiness to cream or chocolate — are all different.
A paradise for hedonists, a special shop where dreams come true. Spoil yourself with a wide selection of Cuban, Dominican, Nicaraguan and other premium cigars, pipes, lighters, humidors, cigar ...
As the heart of Miami’s immigrant Latino community, Little Havana smells like tobacco, tastes like Cuban coffee and beats like a timbal. This is one ill of Miami’s most culturally rich, iconic ...
Father and son duo Roberto and Luis Molina started the cigar shop in Covington in 2010 and then expanded to Baton Rouge in 2013. Next year, the family will celebrate 15 years in business. " ...
He was an orphan boy from rural Cuba who did very well exporting tobacco leaves to the United States ... these stories about ...
Carlos Acosta's guide to Havana: dancing, the seawall of the Malecón and the Meliá Cohiba hotel - The legendary dancer shares ...