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Cigar Color

Last post 12-05-2009, 10:27 PM by T. Gervais. 18 replies.
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  • Cigar Color

     11-15-2009, 11:26 PM

    • Joined on 09-11-2009
    • Capital Wasteland
    • Posts 676
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    OK so this is showing my inexperience, but do cigars change color while aging? I'm not talking drastically mind you but I've noticed some of my sticks are slightly darker than when I first got them.
    Is this an issues or am I just paranoid?
    "Those who can make you believe absurdities can make you commit atrocities." - Voltaire
  • Re: Cigar Color

     11-16-2009, 1:11 AM

    if you have a different batch then the color may be a bit different, i mean it is a natural product.

    to tell the truth, i never noticed it.
    Kuzi's cigar catalog blending 101 developing your palate
  • Re: Cigar Color

     11-27-2009, 2:43 PM

    Cigars changing color?


    The only thing I know that will change the color of a cigar, and possibly damage it is direct sunlight. Are your sticks in a glass top humidor or a cabinet humidor with glass doors? If they are, move the humidor. That sunlight will heat up your humi and cause a load of problems for you.




    Yes, I really do work from home building E-Learning Websites!
  • Re: Cigar Color

     11-28-2009, 3:30 PM

    • Joined on 09-11-2009
    • Capital Wasteland
    • Posts 676
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    None of my Humis are glass top... it's just some of the sticks are getting darker.
    "Those who can make you believe absurdities can make you commit atrocities." - Voltaire
  • Re: Cigar Color

     12-01-2009, 1:20 PM

    Are they in the celophane? It could just be the oils from the cigars getting put on the celophane wrappers.
  • Re: Cigar Color

     12-02-2009, 2:56 PM

    • Joined on 09-11-2009
    • Capital Wasteland
    • Posts 676
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    You know I never thought about that....
    "Those who can make you believe absurdities can make you commit atrocities." - Voltaire
  • Re: Cigar Color

     12-02-2009, 4:05 PM

    Excellent point...oil will make the cello darker and Ihave noticed that on mine...basically attributed it to oil.
    JUST ANOTHER DAY IN PARADISE...
  • Re: Cigar Color

     12-03-2009, 12:58 PM

    I don't know how long it would take to actually make a differance, but that's the only thing that popped into my head when I was thinking about it.
  • Re: Cigar Color

     12-03-2009, 1:13 PM

    i had some cello in my car from a cigar that i bought fresh from the shop... the cellophane has been there about a year (i dont know why i never clean that one compartment) it is now a deep yellow. this leads me to think that cellophane colors with age on its own, not by steeling oils from cigars.
    Kuzi's cigar catalog blending 101 developing your palate
  • Re: Cigar Color

     12-03-2009, 1:41 PM

    kuzi16:
    i had some cello in my car from a cigar that i bought fresh from the shop... the cellophane has been there about a year (i dont know why i never clean that one compartment) it is now a deep yellow. this leads me to think that cellophane colors with age on its own, not by steeling oils from cigars.

    Almost any plastic will age poorly, and clear plastics will change color, but that is due mostly to the sun and heat, neither of which should be a problem in the humi. Oils and age are both a factor, but the sun will speed both of those up, ruining the cigar and the cello.


    Yes, I really do work from home building E-Learning Websites!
  • Re: Cigar Color

     12-03-2009, 3:16 PM

    cellophane is not "plastic" at all.

    however i do agree that age and heat will yellow cellophane a bit as well. this saw no sun. only heat. if cellophane actually stole oils from cigars then the cigar companies would not put cellophane on the cigars. cellophane was actually designed to repel liquids (oils) rather than absorb them. i think age and heat are a much larger factor than oils.
    Kuzi's cigar catalog blending 101 developing your palate
  • Re: Cigar Color

     12-03-2009, 7:53 PM

    I guess I mispoke/typed

    The cello does not steal any oils from the cigar. The oils in the cigar will 'leak' over time. This is a fact of aging. Those oils will deposit on the cello, and can actually be cleaned off of the cello, if someone was anal enought to do it, heheheh. The well aged cigar will look 'oilier' and may even have bloom, which I think is dried oils (looks like white powder, but unlike mould it can be wiped off the cigar). This act of leaking oil will stain the cello from the inside, but this will not harm the cigar at all, as the oils will have leaked anyway.

    The sun and heat will cause yellowing, but also drying and make the cello very brittle

    Since the outside leaf of a cigar is far less porous than a paper lined cigarette, for example, it can take years for these tobacco oils to leak. Not something you would observe in just a few months.


    Yes, I really do work from home building E-Learning Websites!
  • Re: Cigar Color

     12-04-2009, 2:49 AM

    i see what you are saying now. the oil will touch the side of the cellophane, and be deposited there. in theory you are right, the cello could be cleaned off but after that amount of time the cello would be yellow anyway.

    so is it really taking the color from the oil?
    kinda makes me wanna press some aged tobacco for "tobacco oil" just to see the color of it.

    i wonder if the maduro process changes the color of the oils?

    i wonder if tobacco oil would be good for cooking....


    to far?


    camgfs:
    The well aged cigar will look 'oilier' and may even have bloom, which I think is dried oils (looks like white powder, but unlike mould it can be wiped off the cigar).
    bloom (or plume) is crystalized (sp?) oils on the surface of a cigar.
    ... and for clarification, mold can be wiped off of a cigar as well (according to the august 7, 2009 cigar.com podcast and personal experience).
    Plume will almost sparkle and is evenly distributed on a cigar and look two dimensional (no depth in relation to the surface of the cigar). mold will be patchy and have some depth to it because it has a bit of structure to it. after the mold is brushed off there can often be a discoloration left in its place.
    Kuzi's cigar catalog blending 101 developing your palate
  • Re: Cigar Color

     12-04-2009, 10:16 AM

    • Joined on 06-11-2008
    • The City of Salt and Lake
    • Posts 640
    • Top 50 Contributor
    kuzi16:
    i wonder if tobacco oil would be good for cooking....


    to far?

    You just brought a whole new meaning to the term "smokey flavor". I think you really might be on to something. That would be like a full blown meal, that had the flavor infusions of really good cigars... (drooling)
    Tim B. (The Beard) -Coffee- "A patented mixture of ritalin and prozac with a little bit of jameson for taste."

    "If I cannot smoke in heaven, then I shall not go" Mark Twain
  • Re: Cigar Color

     12-04-2009, 3:52 PM

    my wife and i (we own a chocolate business) have been toying with the idea of a tobacco truffle.


    ...well i have. she doesnt know about that yet.

    also in the works:
    chocolate stout truffle
    eggnog truffle
    blueberry muffin truffle
    Kuzi's cigar catalog blending 101 developing your palate
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