Do you keep a cigar log?
Rhamlin
Posts: 9,031 ✭✭✭✭✭
I'm just a lazy SOB by nature. It just always seemed like to much work for me and would take away from my expierence. Ive never been much on trying to identify flavors. Just like to sit back relax and enjoy. I always remember what I didn't like and usually they didn't stick around long.
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I tried to keep a log, but it ended up being one page of a few cigars.
A bit ago, I got one of those programs for my phone to keep track.
It has 4 cigars on it. All Torano's. Go figure. LOL!
Money can't buy happiness, but it can buy cigars and that's close enough.
1) Makes me really buckle down to identify just what it is I like or don't. Makes me concentrate. Makes me find out what wrapper, what filler, what's in the thing that I like, so that I can look for that in the next stick. Crillo versus corojo, for instance.
2) Helps me remember what I've tried and how it worked out. That's what written records are for. In ye olde days, before printing, mnemonics used to be an important part of every education. No longer. Now we are so accustomed to written records that our memories have atrophied, the same way as our legs have since the automobile.
3) Afterwards, I compare my notes to some reviews on line. I want to see whether my flavor vocabulary meshes with how others have described a stick. It won't do much to consult other reviews on a new stick unless you can tell what someone means by "tastes like cashews" for instance.
I think the work put into a log really pays off for a newb. Dunno if I'll have to keep it up five years from now. But as a yearling stogie sucker, it's invaluable for me.