Hilarous--I was literally just going to post a rant about the SAME thing! Here, I'll just cut-and-paste what I wrote before I read the rest of these comments
The Hypocrisy of Aging Cigars:
Please feel free to argue or post why I'm crazy here, but this is something that's been bugging me for a while now.
Why is it that most Cuban cigar lovers don't even bat an eye when they say something like "I don't bother smoking a RASS until at least the 5-year mark, it's just a waste of money. But by 5 years, they're awesome!"
But when I say, "You don't think the La Riqueza has enough flavor? Rest it for a year or so, I think they get MUCH better!" the response is usually something to the fact that "CIGARS SHOULD BE GOOD RIGHT OUT OF THE BOX!"
Now, I have no problem with those who think a cigar should be good out of the box, but the issue is "good for whom?" We all have different tastes, and as such some like cigars better after some time. Take Tatuaje. Pete Johnson, Patrick B, and Elderboy and I discussed this a few months ago. Pete intentionally releases things on the early side because some prefer their cigars that way. Others--like me--then have the option to age them to their own tastes, and everybody wins. I have no problem with that.
What I don't get, though, is why so many people expect to have to age a Cuban, but don't afford the same courtesy to a non-Cuban cigar. The typical argument you've no doubt all heard:
"They don't age the tobacco very long in Cuba before rolling them, whereas most domestic cigars use well-aged tobacco and therefore don't require further aging."
I'd like to suggest that the above statement is false.
First off, many domestic cigars don't use "well-aged tobacco." Take Tatuaje again as an example. The most pre-aged Tat--the new La Verite 2008--uses tobacco that's like 16-months old or something, right? Less than a total of 2-years from soil to today. That's it, and that's their most aged product, I believe. (The non-Anniversary Padrons are likewise very young tobacco). So why wouldn't people afford something like a Tatauje the same courtesy they would automatically give to a Montecristo? Maybe it used to be the case that NCs used "well-aged tobacco," but I think very often that is not true anymore, certainly not to the degree that it would make the difference.
I just don't get it, guys.
Discuss.