Fresh vs Jarred

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elvergun

Starting to Get Obsessed
Oct 21, 2017
122
21
I smoked a bowl of Scottish Cake from a jar (2017) I had not touched in ages and I absolutely loved it. It was so good that I told my friend that has 5 tins of the stuff in his cellar (also from 2017). He opened a tin in the morning and I went over to his house in the afternoon to smoke some of it with him. We speculated that it was probably not a good idea to smoke from a tin that had just been opened, but we took a chance.

Man, his Scottish Cake was tasteless. A night and day difference between his and mine. We will try again in a couple of weeks.

Did he just happen to open a crappy tin or does a week or two of resting in a jar really makes such a big difference?

I'm asking because we never smoke from newly opened tins, so I/we don't really know.
 
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didimauw

Moderator
Staff member
Jul 28, 2013
11,140
39,713
SE WI
Dry time or rest time...or both?
Probably both but mostly dry time. I get much more flavors with dry tobacco.

I am a bit extreme though, as most of my blends have dried out months ago, and I still enjoy them like that. I pre dry them, and then put them in big fancy jars with bad seals.

I've been trying more fresh blends lately, to no avail. I just prefer them dry.
 

SBC

Lifer
Oct 6, 2021
1,882
8,544
Yoopsconsin
Depends on the tobacco.
It's well known that LBF is startlingly better with each year in the jar, up to about 5 years.
Whereas, as I was just telling another forum member the other day, GH No. 7 Broken Flake is amazing fresh, but gets very dull after some time in the jar.
 
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BingBong

Lifer
Apr 26, 2024
2,763
12,467
London UK
I like FVF or Cabbies either fresh and aged in a jar. Germain's SLF fresh .. meh... after some weeks in a jar, nice, after some years in a jar, jackpot. The C&D blends I've tried get much better once the can has been open a few days. Solani ABF, fresh from the tin please.

So it depends on the blend.
 
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Waning Embers

Captain of the Black Frigate
Nov 12, 2014
47,718
128,992
Aging ruins tobacco for me as it is no longer as the blender intended but at least I have tobacco now that I can no longer justify the cost.
 
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andrew

Lifer
Feb 13, 2013
3,229
893
Winnipeg, Canada
I find it's a similar analogy as to wine, snuff, whisky, etc, once you crack the tin, just like a bottle, it's exposed to air and it starts to "open up". I find mcclellend Virginia's to be the best example of this personally. A freshly opened tin is dull and flavorless, after 2 weeks it's a tangy wonderful smoke
 
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Oddball

Part of the Furniture Now
Dec 29, 2022
523
2,817
TN
Like others have said, I have found it depends on the tobacco. Some stuff is dynamite out of the tin, and some stuff has to have a jar nap.
 
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Sparcdude

Starting to Get Obsessed
Feb 9, 2023
117
454
New Hampshire
I am a bit extreme though, as most of my blends have dried out months ago, and I still enjoy them like that. I pre dry them, and then put them in big fancy jars with bad seals.
I’m in this camp, too. I find the taste more enjoyable when dried out almost to dust. It may smoke a little hotter if you don’t pace yourself, but it’s what I like.

And it’s also why Molto Dolce when into the bin - that stuff NEVER dries out!
 

Skippy Piper

Part of the Furniture Now
Jun 19, 2023
969
11,465
St. Paul, MN
It's all rather subjective, but in my personal opinion any tobacco—whether it's a freshly opened tin or a bulk blend—needs at least 2 weeks in a jar to bring out it's full flavor profile and aroma. Whenever I get a new tin or bulk blend in the mail the tobacco gets transferred to a Ball jar immediately upon arrival and I don't touch it until it's sat in the jar for two weeks or more. I've universally found tobacco fresh out of a tin or bulk bag to be much less flavorful than when it's had just a couple weeks to breathe in a jar.

There are some blends that benefit from longer jarring, like bright Virginias where the longer you give them in a jar the more they mellow and smooth out (I like to give them at least 6 months jarred) and weirdly I find Lane's aromatics to have the most intense flavor after about a year in a jar; which is definitely counter to the commonly held belief that aromatics only worsen with age. That's how I like 'em best though! puffy
 

elvergun

Starting to Get Obsessed
Oct 21, 2017
122
21
It's all rather subjective, but in my personal opinion any tobacco—whether it's a freshly opened tin or a bulk blend—needs at least 2 weeks in a jar to bring out it's full flavor profile and aroma. puffy

Well, it seems like the consensus is that we should have waited a week or two. We should have waited after all.

I'll report back in a couple of weeks.
 
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