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Question about sizes
I have some questions regarding cigar sizes and shapes and their relationship to their flavor. I don’t really know much about the differences you’ll get between different sizes and shapes, can anyone please help explain. I know that typically larger ring gauge and longer cigars have a cooler smoke, but besides that what are typical differences. I know there are no hard and fast rules, but I am just looking for some common or typical differences that one would expect to find.
Also, I’ve seen mention about the large ring size craze, what do most consider a large ring gauge. Robusto’s have been around a long time and are typically a 50 ring. My thinking is the 58’s and on up are probably what is mostly being referred to. |
Re: Question about sizes
On ring gauge: on smaller RG cigars, there's a higher ratio of wrapper:filler/binder, so you're likely to extract more of the flavors provided by the wrapper.
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Re: Question about sizes
For most I would think anything over 48 or 50 ring would be considered large/big.
Gerard is right. Conversely bigger ring smokes may have more filler that doesn't have much flavor. Think of a baking recipe. If it has 150 parts total and you get flavor from 3 types you find a balance. Lets say each is 50 parts. Well if you want the same recipe to be physically larger (300 parts) you might think you would keep the same ratio (100 parts each) , but often it doesn't work out that way. You may end up having 80, 120, and 100 to get the same flavor. Some might keep the 50, 50, 50 and add a fourth filler (100) that has less flavor to strech the recipe. So, while the brand and marca might be the same, the blend on each vitola is different. It is believed that most blenders use the corona vitola to blend to. If I understand it correctly the other vitolas are made in an attempt to maintain the flavor in the master (corona) blend. |
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Re: Question about sizes
So do you prefer a smaller ring? Do you think it is more true to the blend?
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Re: Question about sizes
Check out this post out:
http://www.cigarasylum.com/vb/showthread.php?t=46825 It might help? Well looking back at the OP I guess you where inquiring more about the flavor profiles of the different sizes and not the different sizes them selves. ;s |
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Re: Question about sizes
I think a smaller ring usually delivers sharper flavors, while a larger ring delivers smoother flavors. I think that's a real fair generality.
If you find a cigar you like, use that idea to move up or down in size to find what you enjoy. I also think a larger ring is going to develop flavors and nuance that you'll never find in a small ring, because there's just not enough time and tobacco to build to that crescendo. If I'd have stuck to just one size, or get into a small ring or large ring habit, I'm going to miss a lot of really good stuff along the way. I try to mix it up as best I can, but it's sometimes hard to devote all the time necessary to a big ring to get to all the goodness that an hour and a half of smoking can create. The difference between an Anejo 46 and a Shark comes to mind. Two similar, but very different experiences. :tu |
Re: Question about sizes
Thanks for the help guys. I will definitely have to keep this in mind more so in the future and start trying different size of the same brand to see what I like best.
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