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If Vacuum Sealing Stops Aging Does It Stop Lat Degradation?
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<blockquote data-quote="ZeroContent" data-source="post: 458710" data-attributes="member: 1367"><p>I think you missed my part of the post that said "in glass".</p><p></p><p></p><p>Who knows. Currently Obamacare made it illegal to charge more that 1.5x the rate of a non-tobacco user. It also defined a tobacco user as anyone who uses tobacco 4 or more times a week. So technically, according to current law, I am not a tobacco user since I smoke maybe every other day.</p><p></p><p>The GL Pease article was what I was basing my question on. Point number 3:</p><p></p><p>"3. Evacuated mason jars. Tobacco was practically unchanged from the day it was packed. Minor aging only. Different from the plastic-aged samples but (IMO) no worse or better. Note that if you are quick on the switch with the Tilia, you might be able to create jars with only a mild vacuum seal. This would more closely resemble professional "vacuum-packed" tins and might work very well."</p><p></p><p>So, sounds like the way to preserve the longest would be to fully vacuum seal in jars. As mentioned the tins that are vacuum sealed are only a light vacuum so that is why they still age.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="ZeroContent, post: 458710, member: 1367"] I think you missed my part of the post that said "in glass". Who knows. Currently Obamacare made it illegal to charge more that 1.5x the rate of a non-tobacco user. It also defined a tobacco user as anyone who uses tobacco 4 or more times a week. So technically, according to current law, I am not a tobacco user since I smoke maybe every other day. The GL Pease article was what I was basing my question on. Point number 3: "3. Evacuated mason jars. Tobacco was practically unchanged from the day it was packed. Minor aging only. Different from the plastic-aged samples but (IMO) no worse or better. Note that if you are quick on the switch with the Tilia, you might be able to create jars with only a mild vacuum seal. This would more closely resemble professional "vacuum-packed" tins and might work very well." So, sounds like the way to preserve the longest would be to fully vacuum seal in jars. As mentioned the tins that are vacuum sealed are only a light vacuum so that is why they still age. [/QUOTE]
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If Vacuum Sealing Stops Aging Does It Stop Lat Degradation?
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