Home made toppings?

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I have had 4 oz of #5100 Red Cake split on two paper plates for about a week.

And it's not even close to what I would call "dry".  Closer to maybe 70-80% of it's moisture right out of the bag.

Twitch.gif
 
Hate to say it, but it sounds like PG to me.....

Unless you have high humidity.

 
DireWolf":5swjr17t said:
I have had 4 oz of #5100 Red Cake split on two paper plates for about a week.

And it's not even close to what I would call "dry".  Closer to maybe 70-80% of it's moisture right out of the bag.

Twitch.gif
Do you live ON the coast? I've smoked 5100 RC for a few decades and NEVER had it as moist as you claim !! It's always ready to smoke when i get it and have NEVER had problems loading, packing or lighting or keeping it lit at all as it comes from my retailer !! How dry do you want it to be to smoke ? :twisted: :twisted:
 
Ozark Wizard":uaxks780 said:
Hate to say it, but it sounds like PG to me.....

Unless you have high humidity.
NW Oregon, but I have dried out things crispy before. We have been unseasonably warm and rainless for a record time now.

It smokes OK out of the bag, but isn't drying to the point you advised in this thread - enough to add the booze topping. The room it's in is on the cool side, but I had something that needed some air out time due to moisture, that was left in my prep bowl. It got crispy dry in about two days in the same room.

I have some GLP that was a bit dry out of the tin. I've been reading and rehumidifying slowly, careful not to over do it, and if I put too much in a roll-up pouch - it was getting crispy quick. Like I was getting it just past crumbly, but it was still drying out in a roll up bag.

So - it's not too humid for that to happen, but apparently the 5100 will not dry out. I don't want it to turn crispy, really, but it's too wet to add topping too, I think. So I was thinking - it has something on it.
 
Wolfman, I'm in WA state so have conditions very similar to yours and I've not had any issues with 5100. Yes, I do dry it for an hr or so prior to smoking but have not found it unduly moist right out the gate.

You might try putting it out in the direct sunlight for 10 or 15 minutes, or even under a desk lamp. And you might even put it in the fridge for a while as the R/H in the cold tends to be lower anyway.

5100 is a staple of mine and I get an hr's worth out of a bowl with few relights.

HTH


Cheers,

RR
 
Again - I am not having issues smoking it with no dry time.

Per the thread, I am trying to dry it out enough to try out rum and whiskey toppings.

Take it to the dry side, add the juice, let the alcohol dissipate a bit, and pack tight for a few months.
 
Might as well jump in and top some, see what happens. All I know is, as with anything, tobacco can only hold so much moisture. Once saturation occurs, it stops holding moisture. However, you may find that the alcohol will drive out moisture, much like it does when you use a methanol additive to your gas tank to drive out water.

Odd though, that it won't get crisp. Seeing as how you are getting other leaf to dry, but not the 5100. What the heck, drown it in booze and let it dry. Never know until you try, right?
 
DireWolf":510g4qbd said:
Again - I am not having issues smoking it with no dry time.  

Per the thread, I am trying to dry it out enough to try out rum and whiskey toppings.

Take it to the dry side, add the juice, let the alcohol dissipate a bit, and pack tight for a few months.
Ah yazz, guess I forgot about the intent. My bad, no harm no foul....

Cheers,

RR
 
Brewdude":dgryq6k3 said:
Ah yazz, guess I forgot about the intent. My bad, no harm no foul....

Cheers,

RR
No worries. :D

Mostly I find it odd that a supposedly plain Jane red ribbon cannot dry out.

It's a side observation.

I turned a ceiling fan on and will leave it overnight.

One I'll hit with rum tomorrow, and I will do the other in bourbon or read up on stoving.

Not sure what I'd do then - smoke it as-is, blend with some unstoved 5100, blend it with something else, or case it with hootch and then smoke it.
 
If it's not dry enough by morning, try stoving....

My notes say for VA, Preheat oven to 120 degrees, spread tobacco on a cookie sheet about 1/2 inch thick. Place on center rack and check every 5 minutes, stirring the weed. Should only take about 20 minutes to start to turn brown. Pull, set aside to cool. If you want full stoved, cook until just about black, then pull. As they say, 'sauce will thicken as it stands'. keep stirring until cooled. Viola, "stoved " Virginia

Stoving mellows the tang out of the leaf and starts to give more of a caramel scent and flavor when smoked. Think of burnt sugar..

 
Sounds good.

I'll have to see if  my oven goes that low.

I have a fancy oven that has a dehydration cycle, but it only goes to 140* with convection.

Or did you mean 220*?
 
Just found something about using a canning jar with you "220 method". 220* for 2 hours and 20 minutes.

:dunno:
 
I'm going on recollection now, ( away from my notes), but as I recall if you get too hot you risk "smoking" the tobacco, meaning it will be combusted in your oven....

Perhaps if you have a food dehydrator you could toss it in there and see if it will dry out.

I talked with a couple of tobacco sages yesterday and I was informed that it is not uncommon to find an antidessicant additive in even untopped "English" blends. This is to keep the product at a stable consistency of moisture content. (I think it may have something to do with the fact that water is cheaper than tobacco, call me paranoid)..

Propylene glycol is the most common additive, and it has been in use for some time now.

http://www.tobaccoproducts.org/index.php/Propylene_glycol

http://www.puff.com/forums/vb/general-pipe-forum/135584-propylene-glycol-pg-pipe-tobacco-pro-con.html

The second link hit's your nail on the head I think...

"Propylene glycol and other humectants are heavily used in drugstore tobaccos and jar blends to keep them from drying out. Some of these tobaccos will not dry out if left loose on a newspaper for a week. Premium blends, however, usually do not have as much PG as drugstore blends, but it's hard to find one that has [absolutely] none. [...] Proplylene glycol can prevent tobacco from drying out and helps retard mold growth. It is, however, a chemical that many of us would rather not have in their tobacco. Discovering that a favorite blend has a small amount of PG in it is not going to keep me from buying it. But knowing that a blend is treated with PG and other chemicals might very well keep me from even trying it."

"Propyline glycol is not the evil chemical that some believe it to be, but, like anything else, it can be abused, and often is in "cheap" tobaccos. Glycerin, glycerol and alcohol were widely used in the past in flavoring tobaccos. Why so much of the industry switched to PG is a question that can PROBABLY be answered by economics.

In a relatively pure state, PG is viscous, and somewhat slimy to the touch. It binds readily with water, and is often used in humidifying units in cigar humidors to maintain a fairly constant relative humidity of about 70%, considered ideal by many. It has a distinctive sweet taste and substatially lower toxicity than ethylene- and diethylene glycols, but high ingested doses have correlated with hepatic and renal diseases. Don't drink it. If your tobacco is sticky, and it won't dry out, you've probably got a good dose of PG present. It's also found in oil-free salad dressings, and a lot of cosmetics.

And, no, I don't use it, though tested samples of some ingredient leaf have shown small amounts present."

GL Pease, 2001-12-14

Hope this sheds some light on what you have going on...
 
Pre oven:

20150307_095306-M.jpg


20150307_095136-M.jpg


220* for 2 hours 20 later:

20150307_133846-M.jpg


You can see the condensation in the jar. It smells like stewed prunes in the oven, but there is zero color change in the ribbon. I put it back in the oven a but to drive off what moisture condensed on the glass.

I figured it was PG, and that doesn't bother me much. I vapid for a bit and wondered about the PG and tech and read up on it. It's somewhat similar to water, and is responsible for the huge plumes of "smoke" (steam) people blow out while vaping.

My problem here, I suspect (and this is a guess), tobacco stoves at a higher temp than PG will volatilize.

I'll drive over the moisture that's in there, and see where I'm at.
 
Wet weight was 2.56 oz, pre-stove (a week air drying) was 2.41 oz, post-stove is 2.09 oz.  

After another 20 or so minutes in the oven at 220*, in the jar with no lid, we're not quite crispy now, but close.

On the left is air dried, on the right is post-stoving.

20150307_143115-L.jpg


Smells a bit toasty/prunier, but may not have gotten all the way to "stoved".
 
Well, you got a half ounce of something out of there, that leaves a half ounce of something you can add to it and have it the same moisture content as when you bought it. I like the darker tone too, not quite what you get from a true "stoved". I'll bet it's smoothed out a bit too, eh?
 
Tried a wee bowl and it was a bit mellower and sweeter. The vinegar tang was gone.

I split the dried and the stoved in half and mixed them, so two 2 oz Jars.

On one, I misted with 1.5 oz of Ron Zacapa Solara 23.

The other with 1.5 oz of Lagavulin 16.

Put them into plastic bags for a night to hydrate, and will dry down to storage moisture tomorrow before jarring.
 
You and me both.

:lol!:

2 oz each of Red Solara and Lagavulin Cake are happily drying out on plates in a cool room with a ceiling fan on.
 

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