Perique Snake
I began with a string of 40 to 50 leaves from my stunted Colombian Garcia. This was harvested late, and has been hanging in the shed for several weeks. As you can see, it has not fully color-cured. There were 3 leaves that were so totally green that I simply discarded them. Yellow-green was acceptable.
Since all this leaf needed to be wet for rolling, I took the opportunity to wash off any dead bugs, and piled the washed leaf in the sink.
All the washed leaf was stemmed, which turned out to be easy and fast. I set aside 6 large, intact strips to use as wrappers.
To roll this into my snake, I just grabbed a bunch of leaf, and started it like a somewhat loose cigar. Toward the final 1/3 of each bunch, I overlapped the next bunch, without much attention to the diameter. Additional wrappers were started just before the previous wrapper paid out.
In order to actually roll this, the "snake" needs to be straight. In the photo below, it is posed in a curve to fit it in the picture.
No glue was harmed in the making of this snake. It's soggy, and just stays together. One wrapper strip was left over.
I formed a coil until its diameter slightly exceeded the diameter of my Perique jar.
Since my Perique jar already contained about 1/2 inch of leaf that had been pressing for a month, I laid the leftover wrapper strip onto the "old" leaf, then squeezed the coil into the jar, forming a second layer of coil with the remainder of the snake.
I added my HDPE follower (the white plastic thing) and a small wood block, then pressed with my clamp.
The section of poly-nylon bag (from WLT) is just there to keep bugs and debris from dropping into the jar during its 3 months of sitting there.
What will this produce? How will I air it?
To answer the second question, I plan to periodically release the pressure, allow the snake to reabsorb the juice, then reapply the pressure. Each time this is done, the nicotine in the water (which is exposed to oxidation) is drawn into the leaf, then squeezed back out. My expectation is that the leaf will eventually assume the color of the liquid.
As to what this will produce, I'm not sure. I have little doubt that by January, I will have a flattened snake of Perique. I suppose that I could just store the damp snake in the fridge (inside double freezer Zip-lock bags), and dry out portions of it as needed. Another option would be to slice the wet snake into coins, then gently dry them in the oven--yielding a batch of Perique coins. Or I could uncoil and gently bake the entire snake, to end up with a more traditional "Perique."
Bob