While I'm aware that airtight jars are ideal for longer term storage, what would the result be of keeping tobacco in a tin over the course of time (weeks vs months vs over a year)?
I ask because I see that the tins most smokers here refer to are the thin rubber lidded variety with a disposable metal ring-pull lid (these being common in American distribution but nonexistent among British) and am wondering, frankly hoping, that it's the poorer quality of these tins that necessitates the transfer as I'd certainly never store opened tobacco in those thing.
I don't have the room to put all my tobaccos into individual airtight jars so my compromise was to buy a large jar and keep all my small tins in there, these being the traditional rectangular tins as below:
From the mingled scent in the big jar, it's clear that these tins aren't airtight but being locked in the jar I'm reasonably confident they're protected enough. The ones I'm more wondering about are the larger tighter circular tins as below:
These have a much tighter fit and if I didn't know better, I'd just assume that when tightly closed they'd be sufficient for storing in a cupboard but with all the talk of transferring into jars, I'm concerned that the tobacco I love so much (e.g. Peterson's/Dunhill Elizabethan) will get worse as time goes by rather than improving or at least sustaining their quality.
They're too large to fit through the opening of my giant jar so currently they're just stacked up in my cupboard - is this the road to ruin?
Finally, the jars I'm using are the far more prevalent rubber seal flip latch variety as below:
And while Mason jars may be the best, are these ones really not airtight or is it more a case of them potentially leaking if the rubber is broken or degraded?
I love having a grand selection of tobaccos to hand and am not going to be finishing tins any time soon (Peterson's dwindling Irish Flake notwithstanding) so I'm in a bit of a...trying not to say pickle here.
Thanks as always.
I ask because I see that the tins most smokers here refer to are the thin rubber lidded variety with a disposable metal ring-pull lid (these being common in American distribution but nonexistent among British) and am wondering, frankly hoping, that it's the poorer quality of these tins that necessitates the transfer as I'd certainly never store opened tobacco in those thing.
I don't have the room to put all my tobaccos into individual airtight jars so my compromise was to buy a large jar and keep all my small tins in there, these being the traditional rectangular tins as below:
From the mingled scent in the big jar, it's clear that these tins aren't airtight but being locked in the jar I'm reasonably confident they're protected enough. The ones I'm more wondering about are the larger tighter circular tins as below:
These have a much tighter fit and if I didn't know better, I'd just assume that when tightly closed they'd be sufficient for storing in a cupboard but with all the talk of transferring into jars, I'm concerned that the tobacco I love so much (e.g. Peterson's/Dunhill Elizabethan) will get worse as time goes by rather than improving or at least sustaining their quality.
They're too large to fit through the opening of my giant jar so currently they're just stacked up in my cupboard - is this the road to ruin?
Finally, the jars I'm using are the far more prevalent rubber seal flip latch variety as below:
And while Mason jars may be the best, are these ones really not airtight or is it more a case of them potentially leaking if the rubber is broken or degraded?
I love having a grand selection of tobaccos to hand and am not going to be finishing tins any time soon (Peterson's dwindling Irish Flake notwithstanding) so I'm in a bit of a...trying not to say pickle here.
Thanks as always.