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Tobacco Discussion Forum
Aging tobacco in a vacuum?
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<blockquote data-quote="AdamCordray" data-source="post: 473246" data-attributes="member: 4053"><p>That's where the heavy duty foil Mylar bags come into play, they have great air/oxygen/moisture barrier properties and also don't leach plasticizer into the contents. Important to note, the heavy duty bags won't seal properly with normal food saver type sealer, not enough heat to bond the material. You can use an iron or an impulse-sealer. You can get them with a ziplock seal, or without, and there is enough space past the ziplock to still heat-seal the bag closed. I've actually thought about buying some 2x3inch bags so once I crack a tin I can split it up into a few different sample size bags. That way I can smoke through a small pouch of a blend and the rest stays just as fresh as when I opened the tin, indefinitely.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="AdamCordray, post: 473246, member: 4053"] That's where the heavy duty foil Mylar bags come into play, they have great air/oxygen/moisture barrier properties and also don't leach plasticizer into the contents. Important to note, the heavy duty bags won't seal properly with normal food saver type sealer, not enough heat to bond the material. You can use an iron or an impulse-sealer. You can get them with a ziplock seal, or without, and there is enough space past the ziplock to still heat-seal the bag closed. I've actually thought about buying some 2x3inch bags so once I crack a tin I can split it up into a few different sample size bags. That way I can smoke through a small pouch of a blend and the rest stays just as fresh as when I opened the tin, indefinitely. [/QUOTE]
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Aging tobacco in a vacuum?
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