kaisersozei 10:04 AM 03-01-2011
Originally Posted by RevSmoke:
I put it down when I stop enjoying it. That being said, it can vary from stick to stick. I have had cigars that I would smoke till the nub was so small it was burning my fingers. I have put others down with a good 2 or more inches left.
Don't smoke it just because you want to get your money's worth out of it, thinking that it is a quantity thing - that only breeds resentment.
Peace of the Lord be with you.
This.
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kickerb 10:05 AM 03-01-2011
Originally Posted by Remo_5_0:
I have smoked some Macanudo's until my lips almost caught on fire.
haha, good stuff!
:-)
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Originally Posted by kickerb:
doesnt the flavor change throughout, i mean all the reviews talk about the flavor changes. why stop early and possibly miss good flavor? this is probably a n00b questions haha i'm just curious :-)
i notice flavor changes in almost all the smokes I have enjoyed.
I can't speak for Tom or Moe, but here's how I look at it...
Of course the flavor changes (in most cases anyway), this is part of the enjoyment of the cigar. Eventually though, it gets to a point where the flavor has changed into something that is no longer a pleasant or likable flavor. This is the point at which I will put the cigar down for the last time as not to detract from the memory of and reduce the experience of the enjoyable part that I have already finished. There's really no set rule as to when that point will occur.
On a secondary note, smoking a cigar past that point can really mess up your palate for the next cigar.
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md4958 10:21 AM 03-01-2011
Originally Posted by T.G:
I can't speak for Tom or Moe, but here's how I look at it...
Of course the flavor changes (in most cases anyway), this is part of the enjoyment of the cigar. Eventually though, it gets to a point where the flavor has changed into something that is no longer a pleasant or likable flavor. This is the point at which I will put the cigar down for the last time as not to detract from the memory of and reduce the experience of the enjoyable part that I have already finished. There's really no set rule as to when that point will occur.
On a secondary note, smoking a cigar past that point can really mess up your palate for the next cigar.
What Adam said
:-)
There is a point where a cigar just starts to taste "bitter" for lack of a better word. This is usually the point of no return. Sometimes that point can be an inch in, sometimes it can be down to the nub.
Sometimes cigars taste "off". Maybe they were improperly stored, in their sick period, etc. You dont know until you light it, and by then its too late to do anything to rectify the situation.
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Originally Posted by T.G:
On a secondary note, smoking a cigar past that point can really mess up your palate for the next cigar.
There lies the real danger...once you get a blast of tar on your tongue, it gets into all
the nooks and crannies in your sinuses and that might be all you taste of the next smoke.
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kickerb 10:42 AM 03-01-2011
Originally Posted by T.G:
I can't speak for Tom or Moe, but here's how I look at it...
Of course the flavor changes (in most cases anyway), this is part of the enjoyment of the cigar. Eventually though, it gets to a point where the flavor has changed into something that is no longer a pleasant or likable flavor. This is the point at which I will put the cigar down for the last time as not to detract from the memory of and reduce the experience of the enjoyable part that I have already finished. There's really no set rule as to when that point will occur.
On a secondary note, smoking a cigar past that point can really mess up your palate for the next cigar.
great explanation, thanks!
:-)
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wayner123 11:00 AM 03-01-2011
Originally Posted by T.G:
On a secondary note, smoking a cigar past that point can really mess up your palate for the next cigar.
Just a note from my experience. I have had cigars that got bitter and then became GREAT smokes. I have also had cigars that got bitter and no amount of purging or continued smoking improved it. But in my experience the former usually happens.
But it seems I am usually the exception when it comes to cigar smoking.
:-)
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TBone 11:17 AM 03-01-2011
I put it down when it gets hot or no longer provides enjoyment.
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icehog3 11:39 AM 03-01-2011
I agree with Adam, but also in certain instances with Wayne. There are times when a cigar gets a bit bitter early on, and I smoke through it for a short time and it changes for the better...but that is the exception to the rule for me,
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shilala 11:51 AM 03-01-2011
I'm with Todd.
If I don't enjoy a smoke, it's history. Sometimes that's a minute in. Sometimes I'll smoke a bit more out of respect for the BOTL that's given it to me, just to give it a fair shake.
Sometimes I'll smoke it down to where I want to eat the nub. Those are the really, really good ones, in my book.
Sometimes they go south on me halfway through. Even if they were fabulous for the first half, when it goes bad, it goes in the alley.
I'm just not going to smoke a cigar I don't enjoy. Like Tom said, life is way too short.
Boiled down, it's simply "when I stop enjoying it".
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Originally Posted by icehog3:
There are times when a cigar gets a bit bitter early on, and I smoke through it for a short time and it changes for the better...but that is the exception to the rule for me,
I will do that too, I just didn't want to muddy the explanation I gave earlier with trying to explain that.
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Krish the Fish 12:46 PM 03-01-2011
Until the enjoyment ceases. For some cigars that's the fourth puff. For others it will be a quarter of an inch left. All depends on the cigar.
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LostAbbott 02:22 PM 03-01-2011
Ok yeah that is what I am talking about. The stick I smoked last night started out with a really bitter/nasty flavor on my lips, so much so that I was actually wiping my face with my sleeve. I gave it five puffs and a block or two(walking the dog) and that totally went away and the smoke got enjoyable. Then with about 1.5 inches left it started to get a little harsh in the back of my throat but that only lasted for 2-3 puffs. Then it warmed up a little and had a nice flavor till it started to go to my head and I put it down...
What I am trying to say/ask is that I don't want to give up too early on a stick that might turn out to be good or at least worth smoking. The issues I had last night made it an ok stick that I will try again, and if I had put it down through the rough spots I might not have enjoyed it at all.
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tsolomon 02:29 PM 03-01-2011
I like to smoke them pretty far down if I'm enjoying the cigar, but that's when I slow down and let it rest longer bewteen draws. If I don't like it, or it gets boring, I might not even make it halfway through the cigar.
:-)
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beyonder 02:30 PM 03-01-2011
Gotta agree with the majority here, and put it down when it's not enjoyable anymore. Sometimes it's my fault that it went bad if I smoked a bit too fast and sometimes it's just a bad stick or a new cigar I'm trying and it's clear it's not my type. If it starts going bad maybe try a purge or let it sit but I'll throw it away at whatever point I realize I'm not going to enjoy it. Sometimes that's down to the last inch and sometimes that's within the first inch, just depends on the stick.
Kind of like cooking. If I ruined it with bad ingredients, improper preparation, cooked it too much or too fast, if its a new recipe I tried out that I never had before, or I just don't like how it tastes I might try to add a little something to it but at the end of the day if I don't like it I don't keep eating just because I paid money for the ingredients and took the time to make it.
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