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Download Episode 11 Here (mp3)
Video version of this episode:
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Stogie of the Week: Original Release Opus X Double Corona (Click here for more pictures)
"When you die, someone else is going to smoke your cigars…"
The cello gets very yellow, I've even heard of fakes going around, and people dying the cello.
Origin: Dominican Republic
Wrapper: Opus X rosado
Binder: Opus X rosado
Filler: Opus X rosado
Strength: FULL
Vitola: Double Corona
Size: Double Corona
Age: 1995
MSRP: $14.50-$16.00 (Original releases now go for between $40.00 (which is what I paid) and $80.00+)
Background Information
Here is some more information about this stick from www.vitolas.net:
Ecuadorian Rosado seed planted in 1992 ("seeds of hope") yielded the first Dominican puro when the Fuente Fuente Opus X cigars debuted for sale in late 1995, and more widely in 1996. The original name for these cigars was "Project X from Planet 9" which is what they were known as inside of Fuente before the name "Opus X" had been decided upon.They were not sold west of the Mississippi river until the late 1990's.
All Opus X cigars use 100% Dominican tobacco that is cured in rum barrels for a few months before being rolled into cigars.The cigars are then aged for a year or so before they are color sorted, boxed, and shipped to customers.Even prior to rolling, the tobacco is aged: current 2006 production Opus (which will be on sale in 2007) are made up of tobacco predominantly from the 1999 crop. ...an Opus X cigar is a blend of 5 distinct types of tobacco rolled together.
The original cigars had no gold lettering on the cellophane, and came in slide-top boxes that were eventually discontinued due to warping issues with the box top. The last Slide Lid Box (SLB) Opus were sold in 1997. Opus X's of this age typically have a rather yellowed cello, and only 7 sizes were sold in the original slide lid boxes.
Some great pictures of original release Opus X
More information from Gartrader
This week we are drinking
Woodford Reserve Master's Collection Maple Wood Finish
Paul's List
Tim's List
Stogie Tech Segment: Building A Wine Humidor - Part 3 - Humidification, Fans, and Maintenance
Humidifaction
This is obviously very important to your Wineador project! At this point you've gotten your fridge, cleaned it out, put in some shelves and/or drawers, run the unit to stabilize the temp, so now your ready to humidify this bad boy. Here are some options:
Side note: You will want to plug your fridge into a UPS, making sure that power spikes or outages do not turn it off! Some fridges when they lose power will turn back on and set the temp to the LOWEST setting. This means humidity will drop. I'd hate to be on vacation and come home to cold, dry cigars. This is why beads are great too, as they don't need power :)
Fans
Moving air is important. If your fridge is not that full, the built-in fan is okay. There are several options for fans:
Articles on fans
This will require some power source, computer fans, and some wiring. So make sure you do this before you put your cigars in so that you can run wires.
You can buy kits too from the high end humidor companies:
These kits will include humidification and fans. Likely a bit overkill for your small humidor, so check the size requirements.
Oust fans work great (small fans that are intended for air fresheners).
They can be hard to find now, but typically kick on every minute or so and run for 3 minutes on a C or D cell battery.
Maintenance Check-List
4.1
2727 ratings
Download Episode 11 Here (mp3)
Video version of this episode:
Audio Feeds:
Video Feeds:
Stogie of the Week: Original Release Opus X Double Corona (Click here for more pictures)
"When you die, someone else is going to smoke your cigars…"
The cello gets very yellow, I've even heard of fakes going around, and people dying the cello.
Origin: Dominican Republic
Wrapper: Opus X rosado
Binder: Opus X rosado
Filler: Opus X rosado
Strength: FULL
Vitola: Double Corona
Size: Double Corona
Age: 1995
MSRP: $14.50-$16.00 (Original releases now go for between $40.00 (which is what I paid) and $80.00+)
Background Information
Here is some more information about this stick from www.vitolas.net:
Ecuadorian Rosado seed planted in 1992 ("seeds of hope") yielded the first Dominican puro when the Fuente Fuente Opus X cigars debuted for sale in late 1995, and more widely in 1996. The original name for these cigars was "Project X from Planet 9" which is what they were known as inside of Fuente before the name "Opus X" had been decided upon.They were not sold west of the Mississippi river until the late 1990's.
All Opus X cigars use 100% Dominican tobacco that is cured in rum barrels for a few months before being rolled into cigars.The cigars are then aged for a year or so before they are color sorted, boxed, and shipped to customers.Even prior to rolling, the tobacco is aged: current 2006 production Opus (which will be on sale in 2007) are made up of tobacco predominantly from the 1999 crop. ...an Opus X cigar is a blend of 5 distinct types of tobacco rolled together.
The original cigars had no gold lettering on the cellophane, and came in slide-top boxes that were eventually discontinued due to warping issues with the box top. The last Slide Lid Box (SLB) Opus were sold in 1997. Opus X's of this age typically have a rather yellowed cello, and only 7 sizes were sold in the original slide lid boxes.
Some great pictures of original release Opus X
More information from Gartrader
This week we are drinking
Woodford Reserve Master's Collection Maple Wood Finish
Paul's List
Tim's List
Stogie Tech Segment: Building A Wine Humidor - Part 3 - Humidification, Fans, and Maintenance
Humidifaction
This is obviously very important to your Wineador project! At this point you've gotten your fridge, cleaned it out, put in some shelves and/or drawers, run the unit to stabilize the temp, so now your ready to humidify this bad boy. Here are some options:
Side note: You will want to plug your fridge into a UPS, making sure that power spikes or outages do not turn it off! Some fridges when they lose power will turn back on and set the temp to the LOWEST setting. This means humidity will drop. I'd hate to be on vacation and come home to cold, dry cigars. This is why beads are great too, as they don't need power :)
Fans
Moving air is important. If your fridge is not that full, the built-in fan is okay. There are several options for fans:
Articles on fans
This will require some power source, computer fans, and some wiring. So make sure you do this before you put your cigars in so that you can run wires.
You can buy kits too from the high end humidor companies:
These kits will include humidification and fans. Likely a bit overkill for your small humidor, so check the size requirements.
Oust fans work great (small fans that are intended for air fresheners).
They can be hard to find now, but typically kick on every minute or so and run for 3 minutes on a C or D cell battery.
Maintenance Check-List