Saturday, July 20, 2019
Cigars :: essays research papers
 Cigars           There are signs everywhere that cigars are becoming popular again. For  example, you can't pass a magazine stand without seeing two or three new  magazines glorifying the subject, and restaurants all over the country are  devoting entire nights to "smoke dinners." So why is the cigarette still  considered offensive and is generally scorned by all? This seems strange since  cigars and cigarettes have so many things in common: both are made of tobacco,  both are rolled into tube-like shapes, and both are smoked. However, it must  be the differences that make the cigar so much more popular. Cigars are made  from better quality tobaccos, cigars are hand rolled, and cigars have a more  pleasing aroma.         Both cigars and cigarettes are constructed of tobacco, but the care used  in raising fine cigar tobacco is second to none. Only the finest leaves of the  plant are selected. The drying and fermenting process is long (nine months for  filler leaves and up to two years for wrapper leaves) and closely watched.  Cigarette tobacco is grown for quantity; not necessarily for quality. No  regard is given to the aroma and smoke of the different types of tobacco. The  only type of tobacco grown is fast-maturing strains they can get to the market  quickly. Careful and attentive raising is non existent. The leaves are  quickly dried and thrown into boxes for shipment to the rolling factory.         Fine cigars are hand rolled, whereas all cigarettes are machine rolled.  Including the type and quality of the leaf, rolling is the ultimate judge of  whether a cigar is good or bad. Cigar companies go to great pains to be sure  they hire only the best "Torcedores" (cigar rollers). If a cigar is  underfilled it will burn hot and harsh; if it is overfilled it is "Plugged" and  will not draw. To be sure that the cigars are of the best quality, one out of  ten is inspected (that's two out of each box). On the other hand, cigarette  tobacco is first jammed into cutting machines where the leaves are shredded.  Second, they go into the rolling machines where the shreds are perfectly  measured out, rolled, and wrapped in paper. The only humans who come in  contact with the tobacco, at this point, are the monitors who sweep up the  debris and add it back to the hopper. Since machines are doing the work, there  is very little quality control. Only one out of a thousand is checked (that's  one cigarette out of fifty packs).         Cigar smoke is savored and appreciated, while cigarette smoke is  considered nasty and smelly.  					    
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