El Presidente Posted August 7, 2017 Posted August 7, 2017 I haven't heard of the term "soft crush" before. I am not sure of the science but perhaps others with expertise in fermentation can have a crack at the effect of such a process. http://www.irobusto.com/ipcpr-2017-bloodline-cigars/ 1
zeedubbya Posted August 7, 2017 Posted August 7, 2017 From their website: "During the fermentation process, tobacco leaves generate natural heat. Our Soft Crush Fermentation process adds pressure, a gentle squeeze under weight, that increases the temperature and duration of this naturalheat. Bitterness sweats out while desired flavors blossom. That's why Bloodline cigars- made with up to 75% rich ligero leaves - offer truly complex flavor with surprisingly little bite"
Fugu Posted August 7, 2017 Posted August 7, 2017 Sounds like a method making subpar tobacco smokeable. 3
Doctorossi Posted August 7, 2017 Posted August 7, 2017 75% ligero sounds more like a smack in the face than "truly complex flavor" to me, but I'll reserve judgment. 2
Spanishcedar Posted August 7, 2017 Posted August 7, 2017 Interesting indeed... well the soft crush marketing [gimmick] will work on me, I look forward to giving at least one of these a try. Thanks!
PigFish Posted August 7, 2017 Posted August 7, 2017 Hmmm... it appears to me that the tobacco on the bottom is always crushed more than on the top. This is averaged out by reversing the stack. A taller stack means more pressure than a shorter one. Dependence on the height of the stack is everything then! Another gimmick in the cigar world. Next thing you know they will be fermenting the bands so that you can smoke through them... -LOL -the Pig 2
Doctorossi Posted August 7, 2017 Posted August 7, 2017 10 minutes ago, PigFish said: Next thing you know they will be fermenting the bands so that you can smoke through them... -LOL I've seen bands made from leaf- it's been a thing.
Toast & Taste Posted August 7, 2017 Posted August 7, 2017 So they squeeze out the bitterness, but not the 'good' taste? How do it know? (insert Big Al laughing....) Big Al
MrGlass Posted August 7, 2017 Posted August 7, 2017 2 hours ago, Toast & Taste said: So they squeeze out the bitterness, but not the 'good' taste? How do it know? (insert Big Al laughing....) Big Al That's easy - start with tobacco that has no good taste. 1
ethosan Posted August 8, 2017 Posted August 8, 2017 This is nothing more than a marketing term, created around a game of cards, laughed about by all in the room That said the bloodline is a good cigar
El Presidente Posted August 8, 2017 Author Posted August 8, 2017 7 hours ago, PigFish said: Next thing you know they will be fermenting the bands so that you can smoke through them... -LOL -the Pig Too Late Ray! 2
JohnS Posted August 8, 2017 Posted August 8, 2017 75% ligero leaf in the blend? Seriously? (I'd advocate to) Just walk away!
dangolf18 Posted August 8, 2017 Posted August 8, 2017 The proof is in the pudding....however, I'd venture to say it's probably nothing more than a gimmick. 1
Fugu Posted August 8, 2017 Posted August 8, 2017 There is a reason why Cuba ferments slowly and at comparatively low temperatures. Permanent restacking (and as Piggy alludes too, a certain, limited pile-size), moisture and pressure control are means of making sure temps don't rise above certain tobacco-specific levels. That's the art of it. More elevated temperatures will produce flat, overfermented tobacco. You can do that with ligero (and only with ligero), as it will likely still retain some of its structure and body. But a blend based on >70% over-fermented ligero, I bet, will rather end up in an unbalanced and (for me) boring cigar lacking in complexity. However, not few prefer fuller-bodied, less complex and less refined smokes, so there may be a market for it. 4
canadianbeaver Posted August 8, 2017 Posted August 8, 2017 Interesting how the brand levels are similar to beer... Reg. Blonde. Dark. Just saying because they are NC. CB
PigFish Posted August 8, 2017 Posted August 8, 2017 7 hours ago, Fugu said: There is a reason why Cuba ferments slowly and at comparatively low temperatures. Permanent restacking (and as Piggy alludes too, a certain, limited pile-size), moisture and pressure control are means of making sure temps don't rise above certain tobacco-specific levels. That's the art of it. More elevated temperatures will produce flat, overfermented tobacco. You can do that with ligero (and only with ligero), as it will likely still retain some of its structure and body. But a blend based on >70% over-fermented ligero, I bet, will rather end up in an unbalanced and (for me) boring cigar lacking in complexity. However, not few prefer fuller-bodied, less complex and less refined smokes, so there may be a market for it. ... sound thoughts on the matter Paul. "What tobacco we getting this month...?" "Well, they are out of everything but ligero..." "Crap... really? What the hell we gonna' do about that?" "I understand if you ferment the shit out of it, we can make a cigar that won't kill anyone. Wanna' try it?" "How cheap was the ligero?" "Real cheap..." "...lets get it..." -the Pig 2
Fugu Posted August 8, 2017 Posted August 8, 2017 Haha - yup, that's exactly the kind of scene springing to mind here.
RijkdeGooier Posted August 9, 2017 Posted August 9, 2017 If you believe that I have a bridge for sale 1
Recommended Posts
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 accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now