Im fairly new, so idk if this is the best way but I have made a small notebook where I do a personal review of each cigar I smoke. Personal notes How I lit it.every thing I tasted, how it Burnes, wrapper notes, and what I paired it with. Etc then store it with the band tape next to it. Nothing spectacular just a tiny pocket notebook.
Im fairly new, so idk if this is the best way but I have made a small notebook where I do a personal review of each cigar I smoke. Personal notes How I lit it.every thing I tasted, how it Burnes, wrapper notes, and what I paired it with. Etc then store it with the band tape next to it. Nothing spectacular just a tiny pocket notebook.
CI has a page you can print and do just what you said, itr has all kinds of different categories, I too am catalouging, at least until I narrow down which ones are worth re-buying
I use a spreadsheet. Store it on Google Drive so I can access it from my cell phone or any computer. I track size, quantity, where it's stored, single cigar price, whether I'm saving it to age or can smoke it, wrapper type, filler, description from ccom, my husband's rating and thoughts and my rating and thoughts. This really helped me to start seeing patterns in our tastes and to recognize when people say a cigar has this or that notes to it whether or not I might like it. Oddly enough, the notes I thought sounded really good to me, weren't really the cigars I was liking the most.
Taste is subjective so I try to read several people's takes on it to see if there are a few notes that are communally mentioned by all to get a better take on it. Mainly though I stick witch manufacturers and blenders that consistently make my favorite blends etc, that way if I see that it is them that blended or made the stick there is pretty much a solid chance that it will be something I seriously dig. I keep it simple now though, used to be much much deeper about it earlier on.
I have a console in my old truck full of cigar bands. I had plans to use them to remind me of my preferences. Had. In fact I have multiple stashes of cigar bands. I have no notebook. I have no app. I can barely remember the names of more than five favorite cigars in my head at one time. I say all this to encourage anybody reading this to, at the very least, keep an active running list of your personal top ten. Because at this point, if pressed for an answer, I could maybe utter six preferences. But, how many more have slipped my mind?
There are some good online humidor apps these days. I use one that I can update from my laptop or an iOS or Android app. You enter a date and some notes about where you got it. Once you get into the habit of entering new cigars you get and removing cigars you smoke, it becomes part of your smoking routine.
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