A couple of years ago after learning the hard way about Tobacco beetles I began to freeze every cigar I purchased or received even though I monitor my humidor regularly and never let it exceed 70/70. Do others do this or am I being overly cautious?
So you probably have zero food in the fride now after the air raidemodx said:I freeze everything that comes in a pass or trade, and a lot of stuff from the vendors. Double ziploc it and put it into the fridge for 24 hours, then into a deep freeze for 48-72 hours, then into the fridge for 24 hours, then room temp. The freezer has to get to below 0 degrees F or something like that. Hope that helps.
Emo
IMHO I do not freeze unless absolutely necessary, like there is a beetle hole. Otherwise, I feel like the expansion of the H2O as it crystalizes must have some effect. Think about the frozen foods and how the freezing changes the taste. However, sometimes I have found it necessary and it certainly doesn't totally ruin the cigar.texasaggie said:I don't because I figure freezing the water in the tobacco would probably either dry them out, or would crystalize the water, and when they thawed out would not be the same, they don't freeze them in the cigar making country's so I figure there's no need to do it at my house.
Just my 2 cents.
And I have never frozen mine.Scott1966 said:I have never freezed my cigars.
I may be mistaken, but if you see a beetle hole, isn't freezing them a moot point? That'd be kind of like throwing a match into a fireplace that was already burning.golfgar said:IMHO I do not freeze unless absolutely necessary, like there is a beetle hole. ...