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Orlik Golden Slice - development with age
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<blockquote data-quote="Zeno Marx" data-source="post: 550198" data-attributes="member: 1211"><p>Two years seems like plenty to get a difference. I *think* you are running into an issue with popping a tin and then jarring it. Doesn't that get in the way of the aging? I mean...maybe that doesn't make sense, because we're all moving all tobaccos from one container to another before we declare it is now aging. We buy. We move to a jar. etc. Also, some would say 5 years is better than 2 years and so on. Theoretically, yes, but in practice, not always so. I know I've aged a tobacco too far. "Man, this stuff is stupendous. The next jar, with another year or two, is going to be even better!" Wrong. It kept aging. For sure. But for my tastes, it went beyond the sweet spot and into new, lesser territory. More isn't always better. End of diatribe.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Zeno Marx, post: 550198, member: 1211"] Two years seems like plenty to get a difference. I *think* you are running into an issue with popping a tin and then jarring it. Doesn't that get in the way of the aging? I mean...maybe that doesn't make sense, because we're all moving all tobaccos from one container to another before we declare it is now aging. We buy. We move to a jar. etc. Also, some would say 5 years is better than 2 years and so on. Theoretically, yes, but in practice, not always so. I know I've aged a tobacco too far. "Man, this stuff is stupendous. The next jar, with another year or two, is going to be even better!" Wrong. It kept aging. For sure. But for my tastes, it went beyond the sweet spot and into new, lesser territory. More isn't always better. End of diatribe. [/QUOTE]
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Orlik Golden Slice - development with age
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