Went to another local B&M last week and decided to smoke a Headley Grange (new for me and very delicious!). They'd just gotten in several boxes from Crowned Heads and made room for them in the walk-in.
I started to pick through a box of HG, looking for the right stick, and noticed several of the ones on the left side of the box had white spots on them around the cap. The shop guy was in the humi with me, and I said, "Umm... looks like you may have a mold issue with this box of new sticks. This other box looks fine, but these..."
I was quickly corrected that the spots were "bloom" and not mold. Well well.
I may be relatively new to cigars (couple years) but I know this much: plume/bloom does not appear in spots. And these were *spots*.
I politely reiterated that this was mold, not plume. And was told again, this was plume. And to illustrate, he pulled another cigar from a different line -- from the same area of the humidor (which I had never known to have an issue before or since) and showed it to me. "See this nice plume?" It was more mold, even hairier than the HGs. Yuck.
We good naturedly went back & forth and I bought a HG from the non-mold box and smoked it happily.
This past weekend, I went back and the shop owner was there. With 15 years of experience, even he had some serious misconceptions about what is mold and what is plume! Things like "mold can't be white" and "mold doesn't rub off without leaving a spot on the wrapper." Not true, not true.
I had fortunately brought my iPhone with me, and my little Olioclip macro lens for it, and snapped a couple of photos (at his urging) to show what these spots were really all about.
That, my friend, is a patch of fibers. Not hardened oil crystals.
Thar's mold in them thar Headleys!
In the end, we agreed it was "probably" mold, but not so bad the sticks needed to be tossed -- just cleaned and monitored. And I have a feeling his distributor is getting a call today.
I started to pick through a box of HG, looking for the right stick, and noticed several of the ones on the left side of the box had white spots on them around the cap. The shop guy was in the humi with me, and I said, "Umm... looks like you may have a mold issue with this box of new sticks. This other box looks fine, but these..."
I was quickly corrected that the spots were "bloom" and not mold. Well well.
I may be relatively new to cigars (couple years) but I know this much: plume/bloom does not appear in spots. And these were *spots*.
I politely reiterated that this was mold, not plume. And was told again, this was plume. And to illustrate, he pulled another cigar from a different line -- from the same area of the humidor (which I had never known to have an issue before or since) and showed it to me. "See this nice plume?" It was more mold, even hairier than the HGs. Yuck.
We good naturedly went back & forth and I bought a HG from the non-mold box and smoked it happily.
This past weekend, I went back and the shop owner was there. With 15 years of experience, even he had some serious misconceptions about what is mold and what is plume! Things like "mold can't be white" and "mold doesn't rub off without leaving a spot on the wrapper." Not true, not true.
I had fortunately brought my iPhone with me, and my little Olioclip macro lens for it, and snapped a couple of photos (at his urging) to show what these spots were really all about.
That, my friend, is a patch of fibers. Not hardened oil crystals.
Thar's mold in them thar Headleys!
In the end, we agreed it was "probably" mold, but not so bad the sticks needed to be tossed -- just cleaned and monitored. And I have a feeling his distributor is getting a call today.