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Tobacco Discussion Forum
Pressing tobacco cakes
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<blockquote data-quote="SpeedyPete" data-source="post: 499003" data-attributes="member: 1538"><p>I received my 2 presses on Friday and made some crumble cake during the weekend.</p><p></p><p>I'm quite happy with the results. Problem is, because I used bits and pieces, I don't have a placebo to compare it with.</p><p></p><p>My second batch will be of pure tobaccos and I will keep some for comparison purposes.</p><p></p><p>The presses are quite simple; 2 stainless steel boxes with lids which fit inside the boxes. G-clamps are used to compress the tobacco. </p><p></p><p>I'm not interested in making cakes for which I will need hammer and chisel to get them apart. I only want the blend to marry completely. What came out was what I wanted, a cake which I can crumble without using a lot of elbow grease.</p><p></p><p>I'm keeping part of the cakes to sit for a while. I'd like to see what happens over time.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="SpeedyPete, post: 499003, member: 1538"] I received my 2 presses on Friday and made some crumble cake during the weekend. I'm quite happy with the results. Problem is, because I used bits and pieces, I don't have a placebo to compare it with. My second batch will be of pure tobaccos and I will keep some for comparison purposes. The presses are quite simple; 2 stainless steel boxes with lids which fit inside the boxes. G-clamps are used to compress the tobacco. I'm not interested in making cakes for which I will need hammer and chisel to get them apart. I only want the blend to marry completely. What came out was what I wanted, a cake which I can crumble without using a lot of elbow grease. I'm keeping part of the cakes to sit for a while. I'd like to see what happens over time. [/QUOTE]
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