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Choatecav

Part of the Furniture Now
Dec 19, 2023
506
1,356
Middle Tennessee
I went to college in South Florida and I know you are correct that it is way to hot for garage storage.
The mason jars, screwed down tight, would be the best and then in the tote or a cooler would round it off nicely. Even my wife, whose sniffer is like that of a bloodhound, couldn't detect in those conditions.
 

sablebrush52

The Bard Of Barlings
Jun 15, 2013
20,714
49,036
Southern Oregon
jrs457.wixsite.com
I store the cellar in several closets, inside plastic totes, in heat sealed Mylar instead of jars, and an assortment of tins in various drawers of my antique dentist’s cabinet. No trace of tobacco smell.
The smell generally comes from square and rectangular metal tins as none of them provide a 100% seal. Keeping them in a sealed tote helps contain the smell.
 

kcghost

Lifer
May 6, 2011
15,141
25,692
77
Olathe, Kansas
Garages can be tough as temperatures can 100 degrees or more. Generally, you need to keep temps between 50 - 75 degrees. I am fortunate to have a downstairs den that is air conditioned with little sunlight coming through the windows and none of it is on the tobacco. I have enough to last me the rest of my life and it is on a floor to ceiling bookcase in the den.
 
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andrew

Lifer
Feb 13, 2013
3,073
453
Winnipeg, Canada
I seriously doubt mason jars are leaking enough there is a smell. Sounds like you have a wife problem not a storage problem.
No you have to be really careful with Mason jars. I find alot of them don't seal properly. Like you get a speck of dust between the seal and there is no seal. I've been opening a few disappointing jars lately like 8 years old and it's dry as a bone. I've since gone to mylar. It even says with Mason jars the seal lasts maybe 3 years. Alot of canned good go bad too I notice after a few years from the seal giving out. It's not like back in our grandparents time when you had those nice rubber rings and glass tops. Those seal forever
 
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Jan 28, 2018
13,921
155,730
67
Sarasota, FL
No you have to be really careful with Mason jars. I find alot of them don't seal properly. Like you get a speck of dust between the seal and there is no seal. I've been opening a few disappointing jars lately like 8 years old and it's dry as a bone. I've since gone to mylar. It even says with Mason jars the seal lasts maybe 3 years. Alot of canned good go bad too I notice after a few years from the seal giving out. It's not like back in our grandparents time when you had those nice rubber rings and glass tops. Those seal forever
I had several hundred pounds in Mason jars at one point. I didn't smell anything. But I did change to mylar bags. Less space, less weight and don't break.
 

BriarsAndBottles

Can't Leave
Sep 4, 2022
306
1,255
37
Hercules, California
Is your garage attached to your house? I keep most of mine in the garage, but I open the door to the house when it's really hot and it pretty much equalizes to my conditioned house air
 

andrew

Lifer
Feb 13, 2013
3,073
453
Winnipeg, Canada
I had several hundred pounds in Mason jars at one point. I didn't smell anything. But I did change to mylar bags. Less space, less weight and don't break.
Yeah I don't smell anything either. It sucks popping a jar and finding it's dried out though when you were thinking oh this is 10 years old going to be a treat. It's still smokable and has flavor and is enjoyable, but the thought that you've essentially wasted 10 years sucks. If you look on any canning thing they say you should only expect a seal to last a year. Now I don't think every jar I have is compromised, but I would of gone with mylar if I knew when I started cellaring about seals holding up
 

didimauw

Moderator
Staff member
Jul 28, 2013
10,674
37,421
SE WI
Yeah I don't smell anything either. It sucks popping a jar and finding it's dried out though when you were thinking oh this is 10 years old going to be a treat. It's still smokable and has flavor and is enjoyable, but the thought that you've essentially wasted 10 years sucks. If you look on any canning thing they say you should only expect a seal to last a year. Now I don't think every jar I have is compromised, but I would of gone with mylar if I knew when I started cellaring about seals holding up
I spent about 3 days painstakingly emptying all my jars into mylar. Roughly 30 to 40 pounds. Glad I did, because I ended up moving anyways, and it was much lighter, and safer if dropped. No good way to display it though, so Doesn't look as cool.

Now I just have 4 large fancy antique glass jars displayed that I keep my top blends in. The seals are shot but i like my tobacco dry. When a jar gets empty, I refill it from mylar. So I keep the cool factor. Lol
 

ziv

Starting to Get Obsessed
Sep 19, 2024
175
1,151
South Florida
I spent about 3 days painstakingly emptying all my jars into mylar. Roughly 30 to 40 pounds. Glad I did, because I ended up moving anyways, and it was much lighter, and safer if dropped. No good way to display it though, so Doesn't look as cool.

Now I just have 4 large fancy antique glass jars displayed that I keep my top blends in. The seals are shot but i like my tobacco dry. When a jar gets empty, I refill it from mylar. So I keep the cool factor. Lol
Wish I had someone around who could appreciate the display coolness. Haha.