will I need to age fresh rolled?
I've been gifted several AJ Fresh Rolled Habano coronas. Each has been absolute aces. Loads of flavor and no bite. If I buy a bundle of these, do I need to age them to make the new supply as good as the old? If so, how long? I'd like to score a bundle and give them away. Should I salt them away first before mailing?
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But if you are gifting them, send them when you want. Let who ever is getting them know that they are a new supply and may need some aging.
But I would definitely squirrel some away for aging. Especially if you plan on herfing with them. Not that they'll be bad to herf with, just better with some aging.
Money can't buy happiness, but it can buy cigars and that's close enough.
the way AJ uses spice is a bit much for me. i like less than that. after a year or more some of that is gone and they are damn fine smokes.
A week seems a bit short. I recently had some Johnny-Os that were just under a month old and they were fantastic. A friend had one about two weeks later and he said it was just starting to go downhill. I'd say between two weeks and a month, depending on a few factors.
when kept at the RH we keep out humidors at the fermentation process is so slow that it is almost non existent. its still there to the degree that the oils are breaking down over time (what we call aging your cigars) but when the temp and moisture levels get higher the fermentation process speeds up.
when you are rolling a cigar the leaves themselves have been fermented and aged to the degree that you want them to be. then you bunch them, add a wet binder and add a wet wrapper. this dampness starts fermentation again.
of course fermentation is not instant. that is why you have a week or so to try em out and then you need to let them sit for 6-8 months before they are good again. in that middle time you will have an ammonia smell and taste to it.
if you ever have the opportunity to get into an aging room at a cigar factory you can get a wiff of it.
some are not as bad as others.
for example:
AJ fresh rolled seem to be decent even though most have smoked them in that 6-8 month time period. however, when i smoked a Cain Daytona 4 weeks from the roll, i was very disappointed.
and on a related note...
Padron does not have an aging room. In the Cuban tradition they roll, pack em up and ship em off. this is one of the reasons why many people say a Padron cigar or a Cuban cigar ages well.