Chris A
Well-Known Member
Bob did say that. I printed it out.
They are good cigars IMHO but they are not a value by any measure. That little stick is a 4.3" by 40 ring and it was 9 dollars. Good to have every once in a while but an everyday smoke for sure. The budget used to allow for a larger cigar "chunk" than it currently does so I have a fair number of 10-18 dollar cigars in the Humi that I purchased a couple years back. They are going to be replaced with home rolled after I have smoked them. My tastes have been shifting to the South American cigars anyway specifically Dominican tobacco.
Pete
I've found for Cubans regular lines, that I much prefer the bolivars. The cohiba I was referring to its the Behike which ran me $60, believe it or not. It was a treat, and very different from cohibas regular line.
I've never smoked a Cohiba in my life.Bob did say that. I printed it out.
BobTo create a knockoff of the original Montecristo Dominican:
I know that seems stingy on the ligero, but it does the trick. It really does taste like one of those fine, flavorful, mild sticks.
- 6 parts seco
- 1 part ligero
Just give me my Partagas Shorts, for a tre petite I still haven't found better.
I've never smoked a Cohiba in my life.
Bob
Left a company yesterday after 16 years. Started my new job today.
Had a nice glass of scotch before a delicious roast dinner. Smoking a 10E with a burbon and 7up. Great day. Better evening. Life is good.
Your cigar looks good. You may want to work on adjusting the case of the leaf that you roll:This was 8 days after rolling. Still a bit wet...
Your cigar looks good. You may want to work on adjusting the case of the leaf that you roll:
Filler feels easier to roll when it's in too high a case, but that often results in packing that's too tight, and a wet cigar, even after days of Arizona air.
- wrapper: high case (damp and stretchy)
- binder: medium case (dry, but flexible as vinyl)
- filler: low case (may crack, but not crumble)
Bob
Thank you for the feedback and kind words! I have been following those guidelines for casing my leaves but may have brought up to case more than intended. Instead of resting the sticks in the open for fear of them turning to dust I have been keeping them in a cooler converted to a humidor that is sitting at 65%rh. I did a small experiment placing a few sticks in a ziplock bag with a hygrometer on day 7 and they were reading 69%rh so if I am not going to be patient to let them dry out in the coolerdor I plan to try dryboxing.
This is why I love this forum! Great information to have and I will definitely start leaving them out of the coolerdor a few days after rolling. I'm very happy with how good they have tasted so far, but I think most of the credit for that goes to Don at WLT for having a quality product. Cheers!It's about 40%rh in the house here, I just sit them on my desk for 3 days on a paper towel first. Bob is right on target with his advise as usual.
We discuss any variety of tobacco, as well as numerous approaches to growing, harvesting, curing, and finishing your crop. Our members will attempt to provide experience-based answers to your questions.