Thanks for the suggestion.
- hard to see through it
- the product lists no dimensions
Thanks for the suggestion.
Bob
- hard to see through it
- the product lists no dimensions
Just squish some tobacco (any tobacco) for 3 months.I'd like to try this someday but I've got a lot more to learn first.
Just squish some tobacco (any tobacco) for 3 months.
Bob
In the past, I've estimated that a nice size batch would be a string of 40 large leaves (which is about 2 plants). When it is finally pressed in the container, it would come to a discouraging 1 inch thick. Sometimes a little more.
This time, I gathered enough leaf to possibly not even fit in the tall acrylic jar. Although I had to press it several times while packing the jar, every bit of leaf came to only 5". I would guess that it weighs about 2 pounds now.
When finished and dried, I expect this batch to be a little under a pound. For a Virginia/Perique blend that is 25% Perique, a pound of Perique will make up 4 pounds of the blend. So this represents, perhaps, a one to two year supply.
As a side note, while I was stemming the Red Rose, I was reminded why the leaf had been ignored for 2 years. Each and every leaf had bug holes, dead aphids, blotching of the color--just generally low quality leaf. The others were aphid free, but the Metacomet was blotched as well--not great for a wrapper, and the Moonlight had a lot of tiny holes. Only the Habano Colorado was beautiful leaf, but that specific variety is neither fish nor fowl. It is cigar-stinky when smoked in a pipe, but doesn't taste like cigar tobacco when used as filler. So if the entire batch turns to rot, the only major loss is the time that was required to stem 150 leaves and stuff them into the jar.
Bob
Packed Press Jar
![]()
I didn't count the leaves, but this batch is about 150 leaves. That's the equivalent of all the leaves from 7 or 8 plants. Compressed, it comes to roughly 1 quart (1 liter) volume.
In the photo, you can see the slight "rootbeer" foam at the top. The bubbles are formed by trapped air being physically squeezed from the mass of leaf.
Over the next week, I will need to frequently tighten the press, as the leaf gradually settles into a compact form.
Apparently, the whole story about Perique comes down to allowing a specific yeast, Pichia anomala, to take command. It requires a high osmolarity--high enough to suppress the growth of other microbes. So whatever grows in there early on doesn't matter much. As the expressed cellular contents thicken the liquid to a tarry goo, the Pichia will celebrate its competitive advantage, and begin the Perique transformation.
Bob
That batch finished several of weeks ago, and I've had the opportunity to smoke some of it. It is distinctly mustier than my other, fruity batches, but it does not smell like cigar. It's nicotine load is potent. So, to answer your primary question, using a cigar variety (or four) to make Perique gives you Perique--hefty Perique. So it is simply used in a lower ratio in pipe blending.Hi Bob -
How did the perique from cigar leaves turn out? I'm thinking of making some Corojo 99 perique... good idea, or...?
Do you remove the central veins before pressing?
Thanks!
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.