When one tin is empty you open another.Not sure about diminishing returns, but I’d like to come up with some type of schedule for when they’ll each be opened and smoked.
When one tin is empty you open another.
As it happens, I went on a serious Dunhill tin buying spree in May 2005, at just about the moment the new Orlik produced stock was reaching B&M shops. I also bought around the same time quite a few tins that had been bought and cellared between 1998 and 2000 (with date of purchase written in magic marker on the bottom). Based on the 70 or so tins I have all three of your tins are definitely Murray's (who took over Dunhill's "factory" blends in 1980). And since they have a CA warning sticker, they should also have a small white oblong Lane Ltd import label on the bottom of the tin.
When was the last year that Dunhill actually produced their own products? Must have been before '80.
NB the "speculation" took place circa 2005 (NOT the mid-90s! proofreading/scriveners error. Apologies.)As it happens, I went on a serious Dunhill tin buying spree in May 2005, at just about the moment the new Orlik produced stock was reaching B&M shops. I also bought around the same time quite a few tins that had been bought and cellared between 1998 and 2000 (with date of purchase written in magic marker on the bottom). Based on the 70 or so tins I have all three of your tins are definitely Murray's (who took over Dunhill's "factory" blends in 1980). And since they have a CA warning sticker, they should also have a small white oblong Lane Ltd import label on the bottom of the tin.
Some CA stickers are white and others are yellow. And I lean toward the theory that the yellow ones came later. There was speculation in the mid-1990s that Orlik used up a supply of Murray painted tops (before the printed labels) but that these all had the new big EU label on the bottom of the tin. In sum, you can be certain that what you have cannot be later than 2003-2005 but might be a few years earlier.
The danger with aged tobacco is that you focus on aging but not smoking it.
VA ages best, and latakia and orientals start to lose intensity after a decade. By that logic the EMP should age the best for the longest but the Nightcap is past its prime and should be smoked (it may still be fantastic, but the lat will have lost some edge). 965 may also be a bit past its prime as well, but the VA Cavendish should be extremely delicious and the orientals may add a lot to the fruity bouquet, especially when a tin is first opened. The lat may have eased up, but I would think it would be the best of the bunch because of the Cavendish. Still though, they are all likely pretty close to a "peak" in flavor. Years from now they will still be interesting and valuable relics, and they'll still be smokable, but I doubt they'll get any better than they are right now.That's why I'm trying to figure out what I've got and where I might start experiencing diminishing returns so I can make sure to get it all smoked before then. If I keep all of these, they'll definitely be smoked. I'm far too impatient to try to age anything. If I hadn't gotten them at this age, they never would have made it.