You can’t spend 30 minutes reading threads here without being advised to “dry your tobacco.” The need for this necessarily will vary from blend to blend, based on how it was tinned. But I get the impression that a number of forum members dry their blends as a matter of course, regardless of the blend. They simply prefer drier—even “crunchy”—tobacco.
Sure, the drier it is, the easier it will burn. But it seems that folks might be robbing themselves of flavor for the sake of “dry.”
In a recent PMRS, Jeremy Reeves mentioned drying tobacco during a conversation about something else, and he mentioned drying for 5-10 minutes and how flavors can disappear from a blend that is no longer at its optimal humidity.
Confession: There is no blend that I dry as a matter of course. And I only rarely run across blends that require drying at all; when they do, it’s a matter of minutes…not hours or days.
Sure, the drier it is, the easier it will burn. But it seems that folks might be robbing themselves of flavor for the sake of “dry.”
In a recent PMRS, Jeremy Reeves mentioned drying tobacco during a conversation about something else, and he mentioned drying for 5-10 minutes and how flavors can disappear from a blend that is no longer at its optimal humidity.
Confession: There is no blend that I dry as a matter of course. And I only rarely run across blends that require drying at all; when they do, it’s a matter of minutes…not hours or days.