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Tobacco Discussion Forum
If Vacuum Sealing Stops Aging Does It Stop Lat Degradation?
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<blockquote data-quote="Puff Daddy" data-source="post: 458741" data-attributes="member: 3"><p>Aging and change does occur. There is no such thing as a way to preserve tobacco so that it will not change at all over anything other than a short time. I have cracked tins of McClelland virginia tobacco that are fresh, have several years and have as much as 20 years. Noticeable change takes place by at least the 5 year mark, mild degredation at about a dozen years. The sweet spot for aging seems to be between 5 and 10 years. You can vacuum seal a vacuum sealed tin or jar and it won't stop or even slow the aging process at all. You're getting honest firsthand experiences from several people, it's the truth. The only way to have good smokeable tobacco 40 years from now is if they're still making tobacco 25 years from now.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Puff Daddy, post: 458741, member: 3"] Aging and change does occur. There is no such thing as a way to preserve tobacco so that it will not change at all over anything other than a short time. I have cracked tins of McClelland virginia tobacco that are fresh, have several years and have as much as 20 years. Noticeable change takes place by at least the 5 year mark, mild degredation at about a dozen years. The sweet spot for aging seems to be between 5 and 10 years. You can vacuum seal a vacuum sealed tin or jar and it won't stop or even slow the aging process at all. You're getting honest firsthand experiences from several people, it's the truth. The only way to have good smokeable tobacco 40 years from now is if they're still making tobacco 25 years from now. [/QUOTE]
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If Vacuum Sealing Stops Aging Does It Stop Lat Degradation?
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