Aging a cigar?
How does one generally decide what cigars to age? In wines, there are plenty that don't benefit from aging. Is this true of cigars? Can/should you age all cigars, only the expensive ones, only the full body ones, etc.? I've quickly filled my humidor and am wondering which I should make a point of leaving and which I shouldn't.
Thanks! Okay, now I really thihnk I'm done with the questions. At least for today :-)
Comments
That is about as far as my experience goes, there are others here who have much more experience than myself and will have more thorough input. Though I will say that I personally do not feel that aging is a requirement, of course some would disagree strongly with that. The only way to know for sure is to try.
mild cigars will lose all their flavor if aged too long.
Back to deciding for yourself, my opinion is that you should only age cigars that you have smoked fresh as well. Try smoking one immediately(or within a few weeks of getting it) then one at 6 months, one at a year and another at 3 years, etc. Keep notes and compare. Then you can determine which cigars age best on your own.