ROTT
rossdavey2
Everyone, Registered Users Posts: 979
So I know we all enjoy aging cigars, but part of me thinks a good stick shouldn't take 6-12 months to be enjoyable.
I do think a rest of a few weeks is needed after sticks going in the mail, and maybe a box or two to age, but what sticks do you think are just great after the two week rest window.
Don't get me wrong I love aging a good cigar and seeing it change, but for people with limited budget aging just takes to long. I wanna smoke next week not next year.
What do you BOTL say to that.
I do think a rest of a few weeks is needed after sticks going in the mail, and maybe a box or two to age, but what sticks do you think are just great after the two week rest window.
Don't get me wrong I love aging a good cigar and seeing it change, but for people with limited budget aging just takes to long. I wanna smoke next week not next year.
What do you BOTL say to that.
Comments
The Humi packs sometimes maybe over Humidfy a stick in transit so that might make us rest them a bit more, and yes some Cigars definatley are better with some time, I recently picked out a Cain F that i have had for over a year and fired it up..... I love this cigar but With a Year on it IT IS LIKE WAY BETTER! AMAZING....
I guess another thing is all the trades and bombs we do and introducing Cigars from other peoples humis etc into our own might be like a shocker, I know i have recieved some not so well kept cigars, and i have probably passed along a few that i just never liked. Sooooooo I dont Buy into that ROTT debate i guess, Ill go to My B&M today and pick out an LFD Like I do every thursday and sit down with the other guys watch some Golf or True Tv, shoot the Bull and have a Good Time. Enjoy the Day
I can't smoke them fast enough.
I agree though I shouldn't have to wait for a cigar to be good. I think sometimes manufactures have such a high demand for product that they may rush out a specific line rather than take their time with it.
And to answer your question, here are some of the cigars I think are phenomenal straight from the B&M:
Alec Bradley Tempus
Alec Bradley Prensado
Any Illusione
Most Tatuajes
RP Decade (I've heard they changed factories though, and aren't nearly as good anymore)
And for some cheaper sticks that are awesome with just a little rest, check out the Indian Tabac Super Fuerte or the Tatuaje Series P.
any additional age is up to you.
I guess what I'm trying to say is: I don't think about it, I just smoke them as they are, and the age of the stick comes as a by-product.
Then I have my coolers. One for boxes, one to smoke out of, and one for trade stuff. Like most of the other guys, a lot of this stuff gets age just because of the volume. I guess it's not a big deal to me either way. Lot's of cigars taste fine ROTT, so I smoke those while the others wait.
Now take that situation and follow if forward a little. In my case if I only wanted to smoke aged sticks then I would have to have at least twice as many sticks on hand as I do now. If I were to buy two of everything, everytime I buy something and then put one of them away for aging then my costs for smoking would double, at least in the first year. Of course I would have to continue this (buy a replacement stick each time I lit an aged one) or at the end of the second year I would have smoked all of my aged sticks from year one and would have to start the whole thing all over again.
Like everyone else I like to smoke a stick with some age on it. But until I am rich enough to own my own walk-in Humi and be able to fill it with fav's, then smoking only aged sticks is just not feasible.
On another note. We all know that ANY stick regardless of cost and rep. can be a bum stick. Imagine waiting a year or more for a stick which you are just dying to spark up, and when you do... DUD!! Yeah, that was worth waiting for wasn't it? LMAO
So to answer your question, every cigar i've ever enjoyed, I liked just fine ROTT.
I've never had a burn or taste issue with these cigars... not a mindblowing cigar, by any means, but a great $2 smoke.
I really think it's up to the individual, and how much space/budget you have for your sticks. The more you have, the more age they will have on them by the time you get arround to smoking them.