Kilning Burley and DAC

crasch

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Aug 14, 2023
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Location
Montgomery County, Texas
(1/5) I’ve been kilning some Burley and DAC over the last 8 weeks using the same setup that has been very successful in the past with cigar leaf, DAC, and Burley. The goal of this run was to end up with tobacco to be used in pipe blends. I’ve been keeping logs of the process this time and took some photos to share here.
 

crasch

Active Member
Joined
Aug 14, 2023
Messages
28
Points
28
Location
Montgomery County, Texas
(2/5) I started in early January 2026 with 4 lbs of Burley Leaf, 2 lbs of Burley Red Tips, and 2 lbs of Green River One Sucker from BigBonner. The leaf was in great shape, and (maybe because it had been raining in KY) everything arrived in high case. The leaf was very well cured with no green spots and a uniform light to mid brown color. According to Larry, the leaf was about a year and a half old, so I’m assuming it’s from the 2024 harvest.

I removed the midribs from most of the leaves in preparation for kilning, but I kept a few of them whole to take pictures.

TypeWhole leaf weightWeight after removing midrib
Burley1,875g1,290g
Burley Red Tips956g640g
GROS975g652g

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crasch

Active Member
Joined
Aug 14, 2023
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Location
Montgomery County, Texas
(3/5) There are many different kiln designs described on this forum. Here’s my setup: The leaf is brought to high case and placed into tubs with gasketed lids. All the stripped Burley and Red Tips fit into a 19-quart tote. The DAC fit into a small 7-liter box. I added 2 or 3 of the whole leaves for each type into the tubs and kept another 3 outside as a control. The control leaves spent their time in a box in ambient conditions while the rest was in the kiln.

I calibrated and placed SensorPush devices into the tubs to monitor temperature and humidity inside of the tubs during the run. The sensors recorded one data point every minute that I could monitor from my phone.

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The tubs are inside of a larger cooler with a set of incandescent light bulbs, a fan, and a temperature controller. The cooler sits on my back porch, fully exposed to the elements. The wiring was routed through the drain hole of the cooler. The tubs with the tobacco are sitting on a grate to one side. I stacked some bricks inside the cooler to the height of the light bulbs to even out the heat of the light bulbs so that one side doesn’t get toasted to a crisp. I think the added mass may also help with temperature hysteresis. The fan is wired to be permanently on while the light bulb cycles as required by the temperature controller.
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crasch

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Aug 14, 2023
Messages
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Points
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Location
Montgomery County, Texas
(4/5) I liked the results achieved in the past by giving burley a couple of weeks just below 120RH before cranking up the heat a moisture a few notches for the remainder of the run. Therefore, I started with the temperature set to 118F for a few weeks. I did not add moisture to the leaf at first because it already arrived in the mail in high case and the weather was very humid while I stripped the leaf and prepared the tubs.

I understand that 118F isn’t quite high enough to prevent 100% of vegetative mold growth, but there were no issues. An even distribution of heat and moisture likely helps. In the past I had made the mistake of adding kraft paper as a separator between leaf types, which caused moisture buildup around the paper and mold in that soggy area. There was only leaf in naturally high case in the tubs this time and all turned out well.

The gasket in the lid holds moisture well enough, but not perfectly. Once a week, I opened the cooler, removed the tubs, aired out and inspected the leaf, and misted the leaf with water while restacking if required.

After three weeks, I increased the temperature by a degree or two each week to end up in the 123-125F range.

Below are summarized data from the sensor readings for temperature and relative humidity inside of the two tubs.

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The kiln ran for a total of 8 weeks.
 

crasch

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Aug 14, 2023
Messages
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Location
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(5/5) I pulled the leaf today. Everything went very well. No issues.

The leaf darkened substantially during the run. Particularly the DAC turned into a beautiful Maduro and the texture is much more oily and delicate and not as thick and leathery as the unkilned leaf. The Burley has lost its waxy sticky feel.

Pictures of the kilned leaf side by side the control leaf below.

The smell is fantastic. Chocolatey, malty. The smell permeates the entire room as the leaf is sitting here drying down to a more reasonable case for storage. I can’t give pictures of the smell, but it’s so good.

The real test is of course the taste and aroma of the smoke. I’ll wait some time to let things settle down before I sample any of it, and I probably won’t really get into using this leaf until next winter. Given the smell and feel of the results, my expectations are high.

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WillQuantrill

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Aug 21, 2022
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414
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Location
Missouri
(5/5) I pulled the leaf today. Everything went very well. No issues.

The leaf darkened substantially during the run. Particularly the DAC turned into a beautiful Maduro and the texture is much more oily and delicate and not as thick and leathery as the unkilned leaf. The Burley has lost its waxy sticky feel.

Pictures of the kilned leaf side by side the control leaf below.

The smell is fantastic. Chocolatey, malty. The smell permeates the entire room as the leaf is sitting here drying down to a more reasonable case for storage. I can’t give pictures of the smell, but it’s so good.

The real test is of course the taste and aroma of the smoke. I’ll wait some time to let things settle down before I sample any of it, and I probably won’t really get into using this leaf until next winter. Given the smell and feel of the results, my expectations are high.

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I will be keeping up with your posts what flavor attributes turn into.
 

Dottle

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Mar 9, 2026
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Location
Montana
Based on this post, I've followed you. Want to learn more. Thanks for all the work and for sharing the results.
 
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