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Tobacco Aging
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<blockquote data-quote="tiltjlp" data-source="post: 188850" data-attributes="member: 548"><p>First off, not all house blends are equal, and not all are simply relabeled Lane or Altadis blends. As for aging, yes, all tobacco ages, but some will change more, and in better ways, than others. Mostly, Virginia ages the best, Latakia and all Orientals tend to soften with age, and aromatics, which usually contain lots of Cavendished tobacco, will lose some of it's aromatic/flavor over time.</p><p></p><p></p><p>Burley, which some say doesn't age, does age, just differently than Virginia does. Burley tend to mellow and lose much of its sharp edge over time. While aging is spoken of as a positive, not all change is for the better, and each smoker has to decide yea or nay for him/herself.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="tiltjlp, post: 188850, member: 548"] First off, not all house blends are equal, and not all are simply relabeled Lane or Altadis blends. As for aging, yes, all tobacco ages, but some will change more, and in better ways, than others. Mostly, Virginia ages the best, Latakia and all Orientals tend to soften with age, and aromatics, which usually contain lots of Cavendished tobacco, will lose some of it's aromatic/flavor over time. Burley, which some say doesn't age, does age, just differently than Virginia does. Burley tend to mellow and lose much of its sharp edge over time. While aging is spoken of as a positive, not all change is for the better, and each smoker has to decide yea or nay for him/herself. [/QUOTE]
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