Miscegenashing
Thinkin thinkin always thinkin ... it's a curse and a blessing.
A white ash on a black cigar is wonderfully attractive to me. I googled white ash and read somewhere that it means magnesium in the soil, and also tastier tobacco. I haven't tested that part. Have to go back thru the reviews I have on my android app and see if I find a correlation there. I also like the looks of black ash on a tan cigar. Dunno what makes it black; let's figure less magnesium. You've got to suppose how much magnesium means how dark or light the grey.
Wait on a minute -- Then there are some cigars which sport a tiger striped ash. What the heck? Does that mean a mix of leaves from mag rich soil with other leaves from mag poor dirt? Is it one leaf laying down one color then the adjacent leaf laying down the other?
Kuzi, can we pick your brain on this one?
A white ash on a black cigar is wonderfully attractive to me. I googled white ash and read somewhere that it means magnesium in the soil, and also tastier tobacco. I haven't tested that part. Have to go back thru the reviews I have on my android app and see if I find a correlation there. I also like the looks of black ash on a tan cigar. Dunno what makes it black; let's figure less magnesium. You've got to suppose how much magnesium means how dark or light the grey.
Wait on a minute -- Then there are some cigars which sport a tiger striped ash. What the heck? Does that mean a mix of leaves from mag rich soil with other leaves from mag poor dirt? Is it one leaf laying down one color then the adjacent leaf laying down the other?
Kuzi, can we pick your brain on this one?
Comments
i think the tiger stripe has more to do with how you smoke than the minerals.
Magnesium does have some flavor effects but it more about the structural strength of the leaf. this is commonly seen in the ash. too much magnesium is a more flaky ash. too little Magnesium and there is not proper leaf and root development.
Magnesium is the key to good pH in soil. good pH, good tobacco.
I am no Newton, but I do like his fig cookies.
i just play it off well. i dont deserve it i assure you.
My trip to Nicaragua really brought me down to earth. i may know a bit for a consumer but as far as being in the industry goes i know nothing.
Then I have been told by couple cigar makers in Nicaragua that white ash represents the use of more fertilizer and the black ash represent less fertilizer.
During my visit to Robina and other tobacco farms in Pinar del Rio, I asked the same question to Cuban cigar makers and the tobacco farmers and the answer was:
white ash means the soil has more phosphorus and calcium.
Gray ash means the soil has more magnesium.
Black ash means the soil has more phosphorus than calcium.
So what color represent the higher quality tobaccos? Most of the people I asked in Nicaragua and Cuba answered- gray which represent more balanced soil and provides better flavor, aroma and sweetness to the tobaccos.
This picture shows an acceptable smoke, a Cortez Brazilian wrapped cigar, sporting a long white ash, nestling in a stogie rack which I bent from baling wire and mounted aboard Biffy Bullfrog the KLR650, with an Angry Orchard hard ginger apple cider in the bottle cage bolted to the other front of her clutch side bark buster. I ought to point out also that at this very moment Roller Girl Heather Graham was baring her bazoomz in the movie Boogie Nights on the TV atop the beer fridge. Yes, life in the man cave is very satisfactory, thank you.
At any rate, my longest ashes have been white ones I think. Tight rolled cigars without cellophane feeling hard as a rock and producing white ash.
fertilizer and the development of better methods of applying the fertilizer has come a long way.