DiasFlak:i havent viewed this thread in awhile and it went from aging to locking your kids in the basement wow
madurofan: DiasFlak:i havent viewed this thread in awhile and it went from aging to locking your kids in the basement wowYou mis-read, not YOUR kids.
urbino: madurofan: DiasFlak:i havent viewed this thread in awhile and it went from aging to locking your kids in the basement wowYou mis-read, not YOUR kids. Except in a private property sense.
kuzi16:you dont always have to age. no cigar NEEDS to age. some benafit and others dont. what you like aged is up to you. In general though stronger cigars age better. as far as how they age... most cigars mellow out a bit. this will et flavors that you may not otherwise notice come through. they also tend to smooth out a bunch. a harsh cigar when rolled could end up smooth after a few years of aging. somewhere around here i outlined my timeline for fresh/rest/age. I cant remember what the thread name was. long story short... the more mild a cigar is the quicker it will age. you could have an anged cigar that is 1 year old if its of a lighter body.
A. De Mello:There is not a single moment in your life when you do not have everything that you need to be happy.
dutyje: I can say from experience that giving cigars a couple weeks to rest in your humi makes the smoking experience more consistent, predictable, and enjoyable.
madurofan: dutyje: I can say from experience that giving cigars a couple weeks to rest in your humi makes the smoking experience more consistent, predictable, and enjoyable.This is assuming your humi is being consistent and that the enviroment they came from was not. I tend to rest mine a couple weeks as well. Kuzi and some others have strict LONG resting periods.
j0z3r:Luko, if you look around at some of kuzi's older posts, he will list 6 weeks as him minimum "resting" period, it is not so much an aging thing as it is letting the cigar get used to his humidor's climate.