Have you stuck an Angry Beaver in your mouth lately? That is what Lou Piscitelli and Bobby Caruso from the Angry Beaver Cigar Company will ask you when you meet them at a cigar event around town. Angry Beaver Cigars are one of the fastest growing, small batch, premium cigar companies in 2025. Utilizing the services of Ismael (Ish) R. Olivan and his Rodriguez Olivan Cigars Factory in the Dominican Republic, the Angry Beaver 107 is the latest release from Lou and Bobby.

The company held a release party in August 2025 for the 107, which I was pleased to attend, dressed as a Bond villain.

The Angry Beaver 107 is expressed in a single toro vitola and comes packaged in 5, 10, and 20 count bundles with an MSRP of $15.99/cigar.
The blend is described as:
- Wrapper – Arapiraca Oscuro
- Binder – Dominican
- Filler – Dominican
For this review, I sampled two of the Angry Beaver 107 cigars with the most recent provided to me by the company for the purpose of revieing on Stogie Press.
Pre-Light Examination
The Angry Beaver 107 is cloaked in a dark brown and lightly marbled wrapper that has a slight oily sheen. There are a few bumps and veins running along the barrel. The packing is firm for the most part except for the foot, where there is a little extra give. Construction is completed with a simple cap.

Two bands adorn the cigar. The primary band is a bit of a homage to James Bond with the logo presenting the number “107” with the “7”shaped like a hand gun. There is a black circle around it with blood red flowing down from the top. The secondary, black and gold, band is placed just below the primary and declares this as an Angry Beaver Cigars product.

Running the 107 along the nose, I picked up a baking spice note off the barrel along with cocoa and nut notes emanating the foot.
I sliced the cap straight across the shoulder of the cigar and gave it some cold draw puffs that graced the palate with notes of spice and a woody essence.
Using my dual flame torch, I warmed the foot to an even orange glow and drew in the first burst of peppery spice to awaken the olfactory from the throat to the nose. Follow along as I burn the beaver to ash!
Cigar Review Notes






- Initial puffs offer peppery spice that is heavy on the throat and nasals
- A light grey ash forms on top of a medium thick char line
- There are mouth filling volumes of smoke on each draw
- The ash did fall early revealing a flat but centered burn cone
- Dark chocolate notes develop deep in the first third
- A sweet molasses aroma wafts off the foot
- The burn is wavy and the ash is a tad flaky
- Pepper spice morphs into a cinnamon note moving into the second third
- Pleasant creaminess and fruit notes grace the palate midway adding a nice balance
- Peppery spice resurges moving into the final with an continued molasses aroma
- Medium to Full in Strength
- Total Smoking Time was 1 hour and 30 minutes
Final Analysis

The Angry Beaver Cigars 107 Toro delivered a bold and pepper-forward start that smoothed out nicely in the middle before returning to its spicy roots in the end. The transitions—pepper to cinnamon, chocolate to cream and fruit—kept the profile engaging. Construction showed some inconsistency with a wavy burn and flaky ash, but smoke output was excellent throughout. The molasses aroma tying the experience together was a highlight. Fans of medium-to-full cigars with a spice-forward personality will find this a satisfying option. This is worth grabbing a fiver of.
Point Deductions: (-1) Flat Burn Cone; (-1) Flaky Ash; (-1) Ash Split
Bonus Points: (+1) Pleasant Profile

