Recommended Posts

Posted

I had a lot of 2013 monty 2's.  Took me a long time to go thru them.  They were best between 4 to 6 years.  7 was not bad.  8 was where I was glad I only had a few left.  Definitely not the flavor power from when they were 4 to 6.    I'm with others here in thinking that Monty just doesn't age well.  After that chocolate disappears after year 6, they just aren't the same.

  • Like 2
Posted
7 hours ago, RDB said:

Nice, thanks for the review. Still quite a bit of oil in that by the look of the ash.

Could you explain that, please?  What do you notice about the ash that tells you about the oil?  I don't know much about ash science...

Posted
1 hour ago, oneizzzz said:

Could you explain that, please?  What do you notice about the ash that tells you about the oil?  I don't know much about ash science...

I see that darker ash in cigars that seem to still have lots of oil in them. Young sticks especially. As they age and dry out, it moves towards a more complete combustion and a dry, white ash.  That’s my experience anyway.

  • Like 1
Posted
41 minutes ago, RDB said:

I see that darker ash in cigars that seem to still have lots of oil in them. Young sticks especially. As they age and dry out, it moves towards a more complete combustion and a dry, white ash.  That’s my experience anyway.

Huh?  The white/gray has more to do with the magnesium level in the soil.  Cuban soil has less magnesium apparently, so that is why they are not as likely to burn white like non cubans.

Posted

I’m happy to be corrected. I’ve noticed a correlation with young and oily / dark ash, vs older and paler / ‘cleaner’ looking ash. But I ain’t a chemist or farmer!

Posted

Learnt something here about Ash, thanks. A nice long white ash always always enhanced the cigar experience for me . Darker murky brown / green just ruins the aesthetics a bit, No bearing on taste. Interesting that it’s the oil bleeding through. I wonder if colour of ash and oil content plays a role in how even the cigar burns .

Posted
6 hours ago, joeruby said:

Learnt something here about Ash, thanks. A nice long white ash always always enhanced the cigar experience for me . Darker murky brown / green just ruins the aesthetics a bit, No bearing on taste. Interesting that it’s the oil bleeding through. I wonder if colour of ash and oil content plays a role in how even the cigar burns .

oil of the cigar plays zero impact on the color of the ash.

if anything, oil would make the ash darker.

Posted
8 hours ago, Monterey said:

oil of the cigar plays zero impact on the color of the ash.

if anything, oil would make the ash darker.

I think that's what he said. Oily/young dark, dry/aged white.

  • Like 1
Posted
2 hours ago, Bijan said:

I think that's what he said. Oily/young dark, dry/aged white.

as I said, oil of the cigar plays no role in the color of the ash.  Only the magnesium level.    But good catch.

  • Like 1

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.

Community Software by Invision Power Services, Inc.