Bex
Well-Known Member
Hmmm....I've never smoked raw tobacco.  I did a 'process' last year that I found on the internet, by towelling the leaves and putting them into a seed propagator (which, funnily enough, I have since found heats up to 95F.  Life can be a strange thing).  I would open them each day, re-arrange them, roll them up in the towels again, and put them back until the following day.  After about 3 days, the leaves had turned fairly yellow.  But then the technique kind of strayed.  At first, I tried 'wadding' the leaves, as per the internet instructions, rolling them up tightly into a little wad, tying them tightly, putting them into a plastic container over the range (I have no central heat here - it's a solid fuel range that heats the kitchen, and, in that instance, the wadded tobacco).  Each day, again, the wad was unrolled, re-arranged, and re-rolled.  The leaves would sweat in the wad, be very moist, and become very thin.  A poor man's perique??  I would lay them out to dry when they were done - and upon trying to smoke them, they were pretty darned harsh.  A couple of times I tried drying them in the microwave, and upon opening the door, the steam that emanated from it was truly eye-watering with ammonia.  Conversely, a few times I took the yellow, towelled leaf, and just hung it by the window for months.  It still tasted pretty harsh and grassy when I tried smoking it.  Aside from the rather unpleasant result, the thought of finding enough towels, and buying enough propagators to service the number of plants that grew this year was a bit overwhelming.
The few cigarettes that I've sampled from my flue curing has none of this harshness, however, so I guess this is a positive sign. So, onward and upward....!!
			
			The few cigarettes that I've sampled from my flue curing has none of this harshness, however, so I guess this is a positive sign. So, onward and upward....!!
 
				
 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		