how to restore dry cigars
JOEPEPRX
Posts: 1
can anyone give me some pointers on restoring old cigars(they are pre-embargo cuban cigars dated 1940 and 1950) they are not brittle, but are a little dried out.thanks for any input
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Holy crap. How have they been stored?JOEPEPRX:can anyone give me some pointers on restoring old cigars(they are pre-embargo cuban cigars dated 1940 and 1950) they are not brittle, but are a little dried out.thanks for any input0 -
whoa...where did you find these0
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You should very carfully and very gently deposit them priority mail to my address........I'll let you know if they survive or if I had to smo...errr...dispose of them
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That's an incredible find. To answer your question, for cigars that old that have not been maintained properly, I don't think you could really restore them. As a cigar dries out, it loses it essential oils which are responsible for its flavor and you can't restore what is lost. That amount of age coupled with the drying out would lead me to the assumption that those cigars are little more than really old, dried out sticks of tobacco.
If you want to try and get them properly humidified to see if they're worth anything, the best way would be to gradually raise the humidity they are in, start them low probably around 50% and let them sit in that environment undisturbed for probably 2-3 weeks. You would then want to graduate them into a slightly higher humidity, no higher than 60% and leave them be again for 2-4 weeks. After that, I would bump the rh% up to 65% and leave them for 90 days minimum.
Good luck with restoring them, but don't get your hopes too high.0 -
On the upside, the wrapper turns into rich, Corinthian leather.j0z3r:That's an incredible find. To answer your question, for cigars that old that have not been maintained properly, I don't think you could really restore them. As a cigar dries out, it loses it essential oils0 -
THis is why I asked how they'd been stored.j0z3r:That's an incredible find. To answer your question, for cigars that old that have not been maintained properly, I don't think you could really restore them. As a cigar dries out, it loses it essential oils which are responsible for its flavor and you can't restore what is lost. That amount of age coupled with the drying out would lead me to the assumption that those cigars are little more than really old, dried out sticks of tobacco.
If you want to try and get them properly humidified to see if they're worth anything, the best way would be to gradually raise the humidity they are in, start them low probably around 50% and let them sit in that environment undisturbed for probably 2-3 weeks. You would then want to graduate them into a slightly higher humidity, no higher than 60% and leave them be again for 2-4 weeks. After that, I would bump the rh% up to 65% and leave them for 90 days minimum.
Good luck with restoring them, but don't get your hopes too high.0



