Aging vs just storing s stik...
Hawk55
Posts: 846 ✭
I have noticed in a lot of the threads that the BOTL often talk about letting a cigar "rest"...or aging a cigar for a period of time. Really starting to get a little confused with the aging concept. If a manufacturer produces a box of cigars in say 2005 and it gets to your humidor in 2009...does it have four years aging on it or does it begin to "age' once you open the box and start to "rest" in your humi. I guess I am thinking about boxes or singles that are being kept in a warehouse or somewhere..don't they age while they asre waiting to be sold? any thoughts on this..would love to get responses.
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I've read that aging a cigar for 5-10 years will enhance flavors and strengthen it.....but the conditions have to be perfect and it sounds like a lot of work.
I've heard from some "in the know" that a properly made cigar is already aged as much as can be and that letting it sit in your humi won't do anything better for it, just keep it fresh.
I'm more of a "smoke 'em if you got 'em" type and wouldn't have the patience for properly aging a cigar. But if you want to read more, cigaraficianado.com has some info on aging.
I'm not sure if what I'm doing with the second humi could really be called aging. I don't do anything special but keep the tempature and humidity fairly stable. I've only been doing it for about six months, so nothing is especially old, but I'll see what happens six months or a year down the road.
Resting cigars is not aging so much as just stabilizing the cigars at a consistant rh and temp so you don't smoke an off tasting stick.
i cant seem to find the one where Alex talks about it. he even went into age and fermentation. that was some good stuff.
Is THIS it?
"Long ashes my friends."
I help out where I can. Or I spend way too much time reading and searching through this addicting forum.
Thanks Guys.