The taste of Havana completely untouched.
Used throughout the 1940s and 1950s by the P. Lorillard Company and Consolidated Cigar Corporation, the predecessor to Altadis USA, this special packaging consisted of a vacuum-sealed can with a slotted key soldered to the lid. Similar to an old tuna fish can, you'd bend off the key from the lid and thread the tab on the strip into the key slot, twisting the key and slowly peeling away the metal strip to release the lid.
What makes the Murial Queens Vacuum Packed Tin such a valuable piece of vintage cigar memorabilia is that the tobaccos have undergone a very slow form of fermentation called anaerobic fermentation, which has left them in perfect smoking condition while benefiting the flavors of the tobacco. And what better cigars to collect, show off, and enjoy than the once so popular Muriel Queens blended with Havana tobaccos. If you've ever wanted to experience a true vintage cigar, here is your chance.