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Tim Ozgener Returns To Cigar Business

Photo/Nathan Morgan Photo/Nathan Morgan

Tim Ozgener is back in the cigar industry with a new brand bearing his family name. The man who once owned and ran CAO alongside his father and sister is about to launch Ozgener Family Cigars Bosphorus. It’s his first blend in around 12 years, and the beginning of what he expects to be several cigars launched under the Ozgener name.  “I still love cigars—and I found I appreciate them more and more,” said Ozgener during a recent visit to the Cigar Aficionado offices in New York City. “Some of the most satisfying portions of my life were in the cigar business. I love the traditions.” He’s been working on the new project, he says, “for close to two years.”

Bosphorus will debut next week in Las Vegas at the PCA trade show. The brand has four sizes, each with a name reflecting the ring gauge. B-50 measures 4 inches long by 50 ring, B-52 is 5 by 52, B-54 is 6 1/2 by 54 and B-55 is 5 1/2 by 55. All are box-pressed parejos. “I like the box press, and how the flavor travels across your palate,” says Ozgener. “I like how it hits all points of your tongue.”


The blend is a mix of Ecuadoran and Nicaraguan tobaccos. The wrapper is a dark leaf of Ecuador Sumatra; there are two binder leaves, one Ecuadoran Connecticut, the other Nicaraguan Jalapa; and the filler is entirely Nicaraguan, a mix of leaves from Estelí, Jalapa and the volcanic island of Ometepe.

The smokes are made at Tabacalera Pichardo, in Nicaragua. Prices will be around $13 to $15 (details are still being finalized) and Ozgener is hoping to ship them in July or August, with in-store events to follow.

The name Bosphorus refers to the Bosphorus Strait, a slim and historically important body of water that separates Europe from Asia, located in Turkey. The country’s largest city, Istanbul, straddles both sides of the Strait. The area was once the capital of the Byzantine Empire (when the city was known as Constantinople), and later the Ottoman Empire. When Constantine the Great ruled the area, he called it the New Rome.

Ozgener’s parents were born in Turkey (his father Cano, who died in 2018, was an Armenian Turk, his mother is Turkish). The Bosphorus name reflects not only the cultural mix of that part of the world, but how cigars can unite people from different backgrounds.

“People are always in a good mood when they light up a cigar—when people smoke a cigar they’re letting their guard down,” says Ozgener.

The boxes and bands are resplendent, decorated with a combination of modern and traditional artwork. At the center of the band, in gold, are the letters O and Z, a nod to Ozgener’s OZ Arts in his hometown of Nashville, Tennessee.

“We’re using the O and the Z as the primary symbol, the logo,” says Ozgener. The inside of the lid shows the brand logo for the new cigar, with the Statue of Liberty at the center symbolizing his parent’s arrival in the United States from Turkey. There’s also a picture of Turkey’s Mount Ararat, as well as the faces of Ozgener’s parents.

Cano Ozgener, Tim’s father, founded CAO International Inc. in 1968. It was a tiny business focused on pipes. Humidors and cigars followed, and the Ozgeners launched CAO cigars in 1995. The brand became a hit, with a host of variations often packaged in striking, non-traditional ways. In 2007, the Ozgener family sold CAO to European cigarmaker Henri Wintermans, for undisclosed terms.

In 2010, after the merger between Swedish Match and Scandinavian Tobacco Group, CAO was moved from Nashville to Richmond, Virginia, and Tim Ozgener left the company.

The cigars are being distributed by Crowned Heads, and Ozgener is now one of the owners of that Nashville-based cigar company. Other former CAO executives are part of Crowned Heads, including Mike Conder and Jon Huber.

Source: By David Savona - www.cigaraficionado.com 

Last modified onWednesday, 29 June 2022 16:00
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