Link to AP article via Google News
FDA now has jurisdiction over tobacco products (I do not know if this is focused only on cigarettes or cigars as well).
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Link to AP article via Google News
FDA now has jurisdiction over tobacco products (I do not know if this is focused only on cigarettes or cigars as well).
I guess that means no more Acids :smiley15:
The Acids will unfortunately probably still be okay. Ditto cased pipe tobacco. It'll be your Primetimes that'll be regulated first.
What they'll do with chewing tobacco and snus will be interesting to see.
For cigars, we'll hopefully finally see what brands use dyes, vaseline, casings, and/or bethunes (that don't say anything now). AFAIK, only Graycliff and Puros Indios have publicly admitted to it, and one manufacturer - Padron - has publicly said that they don't.
As an aside:
dye - to get consistent wrapper colour
vaseline (and similar) - to get oily wrappers
casings - flavours added to the tobacco
bethune - the Cuban term for casing
how many calories do cigars have? will they post a nutritional label?
You'll get something like the fun labels that we have (WARNING: disgusting graphics.)
http://www.hc-sc.gc.ca/hc-ps/tobac-t.../index-eng.php
When the labels first came out, some folks smoked more to collect the whole set. :smiley17:
This raises some interesting questions. I searched "cigar additives", and one of the sites is a long list of things added to tobacco on its way to consumers. I'm thinking a lot of this is cigarette additives, but some are listed as exclusively for cigars. One is sodium nitrate, which is a combustion modifier for wrappers and binders in cigars (#67). So, wtf?
The thing that comes to mind is a "razor sharp burn" that many use to market their product and that some expound upon in reviews. Now, I've had highly refined product (say, Casa Fuente) that sure enough had a line straight enough to plumb with. It kind of amazes me really how they're able to pull it off and I've always attributed this to superior skills of top rollers. Is this inaccurate? I've also smoked cigars that are not so refined (farmies from, well, I don't remember), although "unrefined" would be misleading. This would be like comparing bleached, fine, lotsa-shit-added cake flour to whole wheat. And, I'll take the latter over the former any time. As long as a cigar will draw, doesn't tunnel, and doesn't run too badly, I don't think I give a shit about a scalloped burn line.
Agreed. I ususally comment on the burn in my reviews, but haven't had a "bummer" yet.
Ted, do you know specifically of any brands that use KNO3 (Potassium Nitrate) to enhance the burn? I'd be interested in being able to identify when I'm not smoking something all natural.
Will
No, and really, that it is used as a "combustion modifier" is news to me, although not really surprising given how perfect some brands consistently burn. And, I'm not really sure this is what it's for. It could be for slower burn or to burn at the same rate as the filler or something, I don't know.
I guess one of my points is, is that some rollers churn out their own product, surely without that aid and benefit of any number of modifiers, enhancers, and additives, to no ill effect. Are they as cosmetically compliant (I hesitate to use the word "appealing")? No, but it is, IMO, a superior product.
Very interesting Ted, thanks for the post. Perhaps the new regs, while onerous on the surface, may provide some kind of benefit. Other than infused cigars, and dyed wrappers, I was ignorant of chemical modifications to cigar tobacco.
I thought cigar tobacco was pure and untouched by chemicals as well. Should be interesting to see where this goes.
One has to keep in mind that "cigar" in the link Basil posted includes machine-made cigars, "little cigars," cigars with binder and/or wrapper made of "homogenized tobacco product" (paper with made from stems, etc.), filler that might include reconstituted tobacco, White Owls :smiley36:, etc.
Anyhow, the truth is out there somewhere :smiley26: ...
I think what concerns me more than additives for flavor enhancement or dyes for color would be insecticides. As we all know, little holes in the wrapper are a big problem. Some of the small tobacco farms are hidden away in places where... who would know? A little DDT goes a long way to killing bugs. :smiley22:
Good point. I don't think about that stuff as cigars. :smiley11:
Yeah, I've wondered about this as well. You can bet that regs are either unenforced or nonexistent in other (3rd world) countries. And if using pesticides=higher yields=larger profit margins, then, well, that all equals pesticide use.
I know, I get geniuser every day.
That's it. I'm quitting.
Let me get on "the exchange" and start an auction... or a trade for a yugodor.
:smiley24:
Will