Cigar Flavor and Age???
jkallen83
Everyone, Registered Users Posts: 142
ok, being new to cigars, i dont understand this YET. the Olive Serie 0 cigars i can smoke as soon as i get them and they are amazing. Rocky Patel vintage 1990 was great. couple others ive had a couple of and fresh they have a bitterish harsh flavor, but after sitting a couple weeks they are better.....so is there a way of choosing cigars that already have some age and ready to smoke? like the RP vintage 1990, does that mean its already been aged??? i want to age some cigars on my own, but what if i just wanna buy one and smoke it right away, is there a way to tell if its ready to smoke? i know its all personal preference but im sure yall all know what im talking about with a fresh bought cigar being bitterish and harsh. anyone got any "rules" they use to choose a cigar to smoke right away??? like as of now i KNOW i can walk into any store and buy an Oliva serie 0 and smoke it. but what i dont know is, why it is smokeable right away and others are not.......
Comments
I was lucky enough to get some Oliva O with 4 years on them. They have almost a black wrapper (maddies) and smoke AWESOME. They only get better with age. Ideally you want to buy cigars to smoke right away and buy a whole bunch of others that age well you will not touch for a year or more. That is a big ideally when you are starting out. I have been smoking cigars for 6 months. I already have almost 300 cigars and prepared myself for a steady aging/smoking process. Long term it is the way to go.
In the meantime do some trades. You will get some cigars that have age on them and really see the light. Buy a long term storage (300ct + sized humidor or cooler) and READ READ READ. Learn as much as fast as you can. Ask questions and use the search function here.
First box I bought was Oliva V maduro 2009. Diesel d.x was my second. Both are a top 5 cigar for me.
It's hard to explain, but those BOTL that have experienced well aged cigars will back me up on this.(I hope)...some cigars are good ROTT, but almost every cigar will benefit from some age, most will be better after a couple years, and some will be great after 5, 10 or even 30 years. It takes time and experience to know the difference.
if the 2nd scenario is the case, then since the warehouse is technically a giant humidor, wouldn't the cigar be aged 2 years already???