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Got a "Top 10 Cigar Tips" email

Jaster

Resident Who-Dat
Joined
Feb 28, 2008
Messages
84
Location
Fort Worth, TX
I won't say where the email is from, but I received it a few days ago. Maybe I'm wrong, but some of the "tips" they offer sound... well, a little questionable...

1. To make sure your cigar cutter stays sharp and clean, keep the wrapper on your cigar before cutting.

2. Placing your guillotine cutter flat on a table and placing the cigar straight up and cutting will ensure a clean, even cut every time.

3. When your cigars tastes too bitter, blow through it. You'll see a bluish smoke come out the lit end. Wait a few seconds, and you should get a nice, clean draw.

4. Lost your cutter and don't feel like biting the end off your $10 stick? If you're on the golf course, use the end of your tee to punch a small hole in your cigar. If you have a steel barrel pen, you can remove the top and use the bottom portion as a quick punch cutter.

5. To make sure your cigar is burning evenly, without canoeing, rotate the cigar after every few puffs. You can also blow slightly on the slow burning side to speed it up, and apply a little saliva with your finger tip to the faster burning side to slow it down.

6. Having a hard time drawing from your cigar? You can take a skewer or straight coat hanger and insert it into the cigar from one end to the other. You can also roll the cigar around in your fingers to loosen up the leaves.

7. Take your time when smoking. If you puff too quickly, your cigar will get too hot, and the taste will be altered. Try one puff every minute as a general rule of thumb.

8. Humidity in a humidor is not a science, despite what you hear. Don't concentrate so much on the ideal level. Instead, try to keep the level constant. Fluctuation can cause problems with leaves swelling and shrinking. Most people prefer to keep their humidors at the 65 percent range, which is a little drier.

9. Concerned that your humidor doesn't have a good seal? You can try the drop test or the dollar bill test. In the drop test, you drop the lid of your humidor from half open and listen. If it puffs when closing, you have a good seal. If it bangs, you're in trouble. You can also open the lid, insert a dollar bill half way in the humidor, and then close the lid. Tug slightly on the bill. If it gives resistance and is hard to remove, you have a good seal.

10. A cigar also needs to be judged by its wrapping. A perfect cigar is one that has an intact, undamaged wrapper. (If the wrapper is damaged, don't buy it.) The wrapper should also be consistent in color, and it should have a nice scent to it. If the wrapper is heavily "veined," this is another reason to reject a cigar. While feeling it, the cigar should be wrapped nicely--not too tight (very difficult to draw in) or too lose (loss of flavor).
Any thoughts? Some of them make sense. But jamming a coat hanger through the cigar?! ???
 
I won't say where the email is from, but I received it a few days ago. Maybe I'm wrong, but some of the "tips" they offer sound... well, a little questionable...

1. To make sure your cigar cutter stays sharp and clean, keep the wrapper on your cigar before cutting.

2. Placing your guillotine cutter flat on a table and placing the cigar straight up and cutting will ensure a clean, even cut every time.

3. When your cigars tastes too bitter, blow through it. You'll see a bluish smoke come out the lit end. Wait a few seconds, and you should get a nice, clean draw.

4. Lost your cutter and don't feel like biting the end off your $10 stick? If you're on the golf course, use the end of your tee to punch a small hole in your cigar. If you have a steel barrel pen, you can remove the top and use the bottom portion as a quick punch cutter.

5. To make sure your cigar is burning evenly, without canoeing, rotate the cigar after every few puffs. You can also blow slightly on the slow burning side to speed it up, and apply a little saliva with your finger tip to the faster burning side to slow it down.

6. Having a hard time drawing from your cigar? You can take a skewer or straight coat hanger and insert it into the cigar from one end to the other. You can also roll the cigar around in your fingers to loosen up the leaves.

7. Take your time when smoking. If you puff too quickly, your cigar will get too hot, and the taste will be altered. Try one puff every minute as a general rule of thumb.

8. Humidity in a humidor is not a science, despite what you hear. Don't concentrate so much on the ideal level. Instead, try to keep the level constant. Fluctuation can cause problems with leaves swelling and shrinking. Most people prefer to keep their humidors at the 65 percent range, which is a little drier.

9. Concerned that your humidor doesn't have a good seal? You can try the drop test or the dollar bill test. In the drop test, you drop the lid of your humidor from half open and listen. If it puffs when closing, you have a good seal. If it bangs, you're in trouble. You can also open the lid, insert a dollar bill half way in the humidor, and then close the lid. Tug slightly on the bill. If it gives resistance and is hard to remove, you have a good seal.

10. A cigar also needs to be judged by its wrapping. A perfect cigar is one that has an intact, undamaged wrapper. (If the wrapper is damaged, don't buy it.) The wrapper should also be consistent in color, and it should have a nice scent to it. If the wrapper is heavily "veined," this is another reason to reject a cigar. While feeling it, the cigar should be wrapped nicely--not too tight (very difficult to draw in) or too lose (loss of flavor).
Any thoughts? Some of them make sense. But jamming a coat hanger through the cigar?! ???


I think it's too opinionated. I can find points that I disagree with in practically all 10, or at least, can prove some of the "statements" wrong in a general sense. Everyone smokes their own way, and has their own routine. I think this email may be nice for someone that doesn't know what they are doing, as sort of a "push start," but over time, at least I attest for myself, Ive deviated from most everything on the list.


Edit: to add
 
To make sure your cigar cutter stays sharp and clean, keep the wrapper on your cigar before cutting.

Well, that explains a lot. I had been peeling the wrapper off my cigars before cutting them. No wonder I was having draw and burn issues...
 
To make sure your cigar cutter stays sharp and clean, keep the wrapper on your cigar before cutting.

Well, that explains a lot. I had been peeling the wrapper off my cigars before cutting them. No wonder I was having draw and burn issues...
I was about to comment on that line, you beat me to it.

ROTFLMFAO!!!

Brian
 
I won't say where the email is from, but I received it a few days ago. Maybe I'm wrong, but some of the "tips" they offer sound... well, a little questionable...

6. Having a hard time drawing from your cigar? You can take a skewer or straight coat hanger and insert it into the cigar from one end to the other. You can also roll the cigar around in your fingers to loosen up the leaves.

Any thoughts? Some of them make sense. But jamming a coat hanger through the cigar?! ???

If you do it carefully, it can actually make a decent draw poker and be effective.
 
Did it come from some place that sells Cheap Humidors. :whistling:
As a matter of fact, yes. ;) Though I've seen the same tips in the same wording on other sites as well.

So I noticed that the subject of the thread got shortened -- no offense, but what was the point of that?
 
Haha. I had to read tip #1 a few times too. #6 sounds ridiculous, using a coat hanger? Maybe rolling it around a bit. Could also be a moist cigar problem more than anything! Deffinatly looks opinionated to me, sir.
 
#6 sounds ridiculous, using a coat hanger? Maybe rolling it around a bit. Could also be a moist cigar problem more than anything! Deffinatly looks opinionated to me, sir.

While a coat hanger sounds strange, I have used a paper clip or a toothpick to achieve the same result. Besides all of my coat hangers are the those thick plastic ones, I think that would do more damage than anything. :laugh:
 
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