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Aging Tobacco in the Cigar?

GrowleyMonster

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If I am going to age my cigars for three years anyway, can I just roll the color cured tobacco and let it age in the cigar? What I am getting at is if I will age the cigar anyway, do I need to age my leaf for a year or two, or mess around with kilning it?
 

nextgenprinny

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I really would like to know what happens if you do roll only the "cured" leafs, than roll and kiln to ferment the rolled cigar.
Maybe that's a recipe for easy mold inside. I don't know.
 

deluxestogie

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Welcome to the forum, @nextgenprinny. Feel free to introduce yourself in the Introduce Yourself forum.

With the suggestion of rolling unfinished leaf:
  • You really don't know what tobacco you have, until a specific batch of leaf has finished fermentation.
  • Kilning leaf is an easily controlled process. During that kilning time, the leaf's physical properties change. Certain varieties and primings will mostly complete their fermentation during 2 months of kilning—compared to 3 to 5 years of unaided aging. Some require another 6 months to 3 years of additional "rest."
  • Stored cigars must be regularly monitored for humidity. Any rapid change will likely split the wrapper/binder. Too high a humidity will certainly result in mold. Within a kiln maintained above 122°F, there can be no vegetative growth of mold.
Bob
 
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