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#1 |
Still Watching My Back
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When I was in college in 1988 or so, I bought a humidor and cigar sampler from Thompson, I believe. Throughout the years, my dad would give me cigars: La Gloria Cubana, Por Larranaga, some off-brands, etc. They sat in that table-top humidor for years. No humidification, no hygrometer, moved a dozen times, totally neglected it, thrown in a closet or garage, wherever.
About a year ago, I got into cigars. I now have 5 big humidors and 3 wine refrigerators that I use for cigars, with Heartfelt beads, digital hygrometers, etc. Yet that old cheap humidor has a smell that melts my knees. It smells so great...sweet, complex, intense. ![]() My other humidors just smell like cedar or the cigar itself. Is the other humidor so awesome because of age ? Because I had cigars in there for years without even opening it ? How can I get that "seasoning" in my other humidors....time? |
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#4 |
Rollin' with the Tide!!!
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Did you have any flavored smokes in the desktop humi? If so, that's probably what has 'seasoned' it. I have an old 50ct and stored my fiances falvored CAOs in it...it totally smells like those honey flavored smokes. I don't store anything in it now, but can still smell the sweetness and aroma of what was in there at one time.
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#5 |
Guest
Posts: n/a
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It is possible that all cigars and the cedar just married together. The cedar could have absorbed that "scent" and now is just releasing it out of the wood. I haven't heard of someone not opening the humidor for years so I have never header of it before.
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#6 |
Still Watching My Back
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That's what I'm thinking, Meadmaker...the cigars were in there for so long that the cedar just absorbed all those flavors. Dang I wish I could get my other humidors to smell like that one !
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#7 | |
I'm nuts for the place
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Hmm, sounds like you already know how to get it done..... Just gonna be a long time before they are ready for use ![]()
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Curing the infection... One bullet at a time. |
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#8 |
C A P S...CAPS CAPS CAPS!
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Wood can hold odors for many, many years. Temperature and humidity changes can release the smell of something that may have been stored in there decades before.
So time is the answer to your question. That and the type of wood that was in your humi. If your humi is more MDF with a liner you'll not get the same odor retention.
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I'm the most interesting man in the world... but only if you find stupid stuff really interesting. |
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