I don't like tobacco to age too much, I don't know why, I like that relative freshness. Although I have a modest cellar, I have stopped storing any more tobacco.
La música es reversible, el tiempo no, ¡retrocede!I don't like tobacco to age too much, I don't know why, I like that relative freshness. Although I have a modest cellar, I have stopped storing any more tobacco.
I don't like tobacco to age too much, I don't know why, I like that relative freshness. Although I have a modest cellar, I have stopped storing any more tobacco.
I never would have expected those results. Very interesting.Howdy gang and I sure have enjoyed reading through this thread. I ran a survey on my website about a year ago asking my customers to tell me what the main reason was for making purchases on my website. I was actually a little surprised (make that a lot surprised), to find that the vast majority of responses was NOT due to their belief that pipe tobacco tasted X times better with age. The main reason they made purchases was to be able to get either no longer produced great old blends to try out, or stock up on out of production blends that they liked, or try to grab some hard to get still in production blends that they either liked or wanted to try.
Number two on the list of responses was that they could taste the enhanced flavor of well aged tobacco, and number three on the list was that they enjoyed collecting pipe tobacco like some people enjoy collecting, coins, stamps, guns, knives, etc.
It was a fun survey, but I admit that I was surprised at the outcome.
Steve
I wish I could say I'm surprised, but that lines up pretty well with my thinking. I haven't been around to get the satisfaction of cracking open a 5 year old va/per that's been waiting patiently for its time.Howdy gang and I sure have enjoyed reading through this thread. I ran a survey on my website about a year ago asking my customers to tell me what the main reason was for making purchases on my website. I was actually a little surprised (make that a lot surprised), to find that the vast majority of responses was NOT due to their belief that pipe tobacco tasted X times better with age. The main reason they made purchases was to be able to get either no longer produced great old blends to try out, or stock up on out of production blends that they liked, or try to grab some hard to get still in production blends that they either liked or wanted to try.
Number two on the list of responses was that they could taste the enhanced flavor of well aged tobacco, and number three on the list was that they enjoyed collecting pipe tobacco like some people enjoy collecting, coins, stamps, guns, knives, etc.
It was a fun survey, but I admit that I was surprised at the outcome.
Steve
My thought is don’t buy any tobacco to age. That was easy, why the thread?Some of my fellow pipe smokers tell me they have tobacco which was bought in 1990 and carefully stored and aging still. At my age of 52 I may not last 35 years from now if I started aging tobacco that long today. I don't see the point of buying tobacco and letting it age for me in my case because I want to enjoy it today not when I'm close to 90 years old. If I make it that long I probably won't buy green bananas as the saying goes. Even 10 years is too long for me.
Perhap one to five years would be sufficient but I'd like not to waste that time were it not.
I suppose perhaps aging is meant for the next generation if the aging process all goes well.
I find the process of aging runs antithetical to the process of smoking. Maybe for some folks it's for different reasons. I just don't see them.
Aa for me, in the tone of Dr. McCoy, "Dammit Jim I'm a pipe smoker not a tobacco museum curator!"
Thoughts?