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Re: Cigar Aging Article
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Re: Cigar Aging Article
It appears Yahoo has removed the article from the cache. I have made the article available as a PDF here.
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Re: Cigar Aging Article
The article has now disappeared! I did a search and results come up BUT... all of the links result in a 404 Forbidden error.
:( That sucks!!:confused: |
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Re: Cigar Aging Article
Thanks alot NathanKing. Great article.
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Excellent article, and very informative. While my many years of cigar smoking experience causes me some minor disagreement with the length of aging :2, I now understand aging to a greater degree as well as understanding better the process through which the cigars pass.
Thanks very much for providing this excellent and informative article! Steve:tu |
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How many of you are of the opinion that if you have a humidor that is 90% full, that all of the smokes in there are going to suffer as it applies to aging? I'm not refuting or confirming it, I just would like to hear the opinions on this.
Personally, I'm in the middle of building a custom cabinet humidor, have had a couple of my desktops packed with good smokes for a while. I throught I was doing the right thing there so that humidity stays pretty stable and ages the smokes better, but part of that article seems to say that leaving little or no space means that I get little to no aging. I would like to disagree with that, based on opening and closing the humidor to get more fresh air in every so often while checking humidity/recharging beads. I'm going to leave any possible benefits from active humidification devices and the "ammonia scavenging" of Shilala beads out of this. |
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I just read the Volume 1 is there any other volumes available ?
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http://www.en.cigarclan.com/ |
Re: Cigar Aging Article
Great Article, after reading some of the responses here I thought it would be full of a bunch of hooey.
He talks of two types of aging, not that one is better than then other, nor one is faster than then other. Just different. I've never tasted mushroom in a cigar, but I've never aged my cigars in that method (oxidation a couple cigars in a large box with lots of air) and I think 99% of the people on this board age the other way (reducing, humidor chocked full with less air) the reducing method he says creates the tertiary aromas we most often hear about, earthy nutty, and the marrying of the aroma's. As far as the 10 year comment, he says FEW cigars can clear the 10 year hurdle and that the quality of the tobacco is the biggest factor on how long you can age a cigar. Not than NONE can be aged over 10 years. |
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