What i dont understand, the bottom of the pasta press has holes in it, so pasta can come out. Doesn't the bottom need to be sealed air tight in the chamber of the press, not to dry out the leaf?houtenziel wrote: ↑Fri Apr 12, 2019 3:35 pmWe are using these Pasta Presses to make the plugs:steamboat wrote: ↑Fri Apr 12, 2019 3:11 pm Ok, i think the home made plugs look amazing! I want to play. 2 Questions.
(1) What kind of presses are these? I searched Amazon, and all i came up with are pasta and pollen presses. Will these work just fine? Any preference over the other?
(2) If you guys are pressing cut tobacco, are you guys essentially making crumble cakes? If you were to use whole leaf wouldn't that press the tobacco into a plug to be able to be cut into flakes? Can those circle presses, press whole leaf, hard enough to cut flakes?
The possibilities are endless, and my brain in going into over drive with ideas.
https://www.amazon.com/Newcreativetop-S ... way&sr=8-3
And as far as using cut tobacco, that doesn't seem to be an issue. The plug I made is so dense that you could easily cut a flake off of it if you used a sharp enough knife. It was so hard that my pocket knife wouldn't even cut it without some serious sawing. You could probably press whole leaf easy enough as long as you ripped it into roundish chunks.
Your Blend Recipes
- Mr Beardsley
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It's been suggested (Ernie from watch city) that instead of spraying alcohol on the leaf that you should infuse it instead. Put your measured tobacco into a Tupperware container and a shot glass with your hooch of choice in the middle. Close it up and let them make friends for a week or so. Open the container, remove the shot glass and dry the tobacco to close to your smoking level, then press. It's an experiment I'm going to try soon.
As for them being crumbly. No. Both of the ones I've done so far are very much slicers. The codger plug is downright hard.
Helpful hint: you may not want to press as crazy tight as I am in this noodler. This thing is showing stress everywhere
“If you try to fail, and succeed, which have you done?” - George Carlin
- Mr Beardsley
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Cut a small circle of wax paper or parchment paper to fit in the lid and cover the holes. I'm using circles cut from a very well cleaned plastic milk jugsteamboat wrote: ↑Fri Apr 12, 2019 3:40 pmWhat i dont understand, the bottom of the pasta press has holes in it, so pasta can come out. Doesn't the bottom need to be sealed air tight in the chamber of the press, not to dry out the leaf?houtenziel wrote: ↑Fri Apr 12, 2019 3:35 pmWe are using these Pasta Presses to make the plugs:steamboat wrote: ↑Fri Apr 12, 2019 3:11 pm Ok, i think the home made plugs look amazing! I want to play. 2 Questions.
(1) What kind of presses are these? I searched Amazon, and all i came up with are pasta and pollen presses. Will these work just fine? Any preference over the other?
(2) If you guys are pressing cut tobacco, are you guys essentially making crumble cakes? If you were to use whole leaf wouldn't that press the tobacco into a plug to be able to be cut into flakes? Can those circle presses, press whole leaf, hard enough to cut flakes?
The possibilities are endless, and my brain in going into over drive with ideas.
https://www.amazon.com/Newcreativetop-S ... way&sr=8-3
And as far as using cut tobacco, that doesn't seem to be an issue. The plug I made is so dense that you could easily cut a flake off of it if you used a sharp enough knife. It was so hard that my pocket knife wouldn't even cut it without some serious sawing. You could probably press whole leaf easy enough as long as you ripped it into roundish chunks.
“If you try to fail, and succeed, which have you done?” - George Carlin
- Mr Beardsley
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- Houtenziel
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I put a piece of parchment in the bottom of mine to cover the holes. Even still, the tobacco is so compressed that there isn't any room for air to get in there and dry it out.steamboat wrote: ↑Fri Apr 12, 2019 3:40 pmWhat i dont understand, the bottom of the pasta press has holes in it, so pasta can come out. Doesn't the bottom need to be sealed air tight in the chamber of the press, not to dry out the leaf?houtenziel wrote: ↑Fri Apr 12, 2019 3:35 pmWe are using these Pasta Presses to make the plugs:steamboat wrote: ↑Fri Apr 12, 2019 3:11 pm Ok, i think the home made plugs look amazing! I want to play. 2 Questions.
(1) What kind of presses are these? I searched Amazon, and all i came up with are pasta and pollen presses. Will these work just fine? Any preference over the other?
(2) If you guys are pressing cut tobacco, are you guys essentially making crumble cakes? If you were to use whole leaf wouldn't that press the tobacco into a plug to be able to be cut into flakes? Can those circle presses, press whole leaf, hard enough to cut flakes?
The possibilities are endless, and my brain in going into over drive with ideas.
https://www.amazon.com/Newcreativetop-S ... way&sr=8-3
And as far as using cut tobacco, that doesn't seem to be an issue. The plug I made is so dense that you could easily cut a flake off of it if you used a sharp enough knife. It was so hard that my pocket knife wouldn't even cut it without some serious sawing. You could probably press whole leaf easy enough as long as you ripped it into roundish chunks.
“To educate a person in the mind but not in morals is to educate a menace to society.”
― Theodore Roosevelt
― Theodore Roosevelt
- Houtenziel
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Doing a small test batch.
1.5 oz Lane White Burley
.75 oz Lane Virginia
Casing made with a touch of molasses. The casing was so good I could have poured it on pancakes.
Into the press nice and hot, and will pull it out in about 3 days. For this one, my goal is not to make a plug so much as to get things to marry, so I probably won't crank it down too much(it's already as tight as I could get it).
1.5 oz Lane White Burley
.75 oz Lane Virginia
Casing made with a touch of molasses. The casing was so good I could have poured it on pancakes.
Into the press nice and hot, and will pull it out in about 3 days. For this one, my goal is not to make a plug so much as to get things to marry, so I probably won't crank it down too much(it's already as tight as I could get it).
“To educate a person in the mind but not in morals is to educate a menace to society.”
― Theodore Roosevelt
― Theodore Roosevelt
- Mr Beardsley
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I bet that's going to be really delicious. Mine is one good twist away from total destruction so I guess I should start going a little easier on the actual pressinghoutenziel wrote: ↑Sun Apr 14, 2019 4:27 pm Doing a small test batch.
1.5 oz Lane White Burley
.75 oz Lane Virginia
Casing made with a touch of molasses. The casing was so good I could have poured it on pancakes.
Into the press nice and hot, and will pull it out in about 3 days. For this one, my goal is not to make a plug so much as to get things to marry, so I probably won't crank it down too much(it's already as tight as I could get it).
“If you try to fail, and succeed, which have you done?” - George Carlin
- Houtenziel
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- Joined: Mon Aug 13, 2018 12:58 pm
I hope it will be good. As far as pressing goes, I sort of take the view that, yeah, being able to make insanely dense plugs is cool.. but ultimately I am going to rub it out anyway, so I'd rather just use the press to thoroughly marry everything. If I want to be able to cut flakes, I might just have a go with some of that magical "glue".Mr Beardsley wrote: ↑Sun Apr 14, 2019 5:08 pmI bet that's going to be really delicious. Mine is one good twist away from total destruction so I guess I should start going a little easier on the actual pressinghoutenziel wrote: ↑Sun Apr 14, 2019 4:27 pm Doing a small test batch.
1.5 oz Lane White Burley
.75 oz Lane Virginia
Casing made with a touch of molasses. The casing was so good I could have poured it on pancakes.
Into the press nice and hot, and will pull it out in about 3 days. For this one, my goal is not to make a plug so much as to get things to marry, so I probably won't crank it down too much(it's already as tight as I could get it).
“To educate a person in the mind but not in morals is to educate a menace to society.”
― Theodore Roosevelt
― Theodore Roosevelt
- Mr Beardsley
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- Joined: Mon Apr 23, 2018 12:16 am
I need to change my thinking to that as well, It makes good sense. Or certain ones get pressed a little longer and harder than others and maybe the length of time in the press will help make it stick together betterhoutenziel wrote: ↑Sun Apr 14, 2019 5:40 pmI hope it will be good. As far as pressing goes, I sort of take the view that, yeah, being able to make insanely dense plugs is cool.. but ultimately I am going to rub it out anyway, so I'd rather just use the press to thoroughly marry everything. If I want to be able to cut flakes, I might just have a go with some of that magical "glue".Mr Beardsley wrote: ↑Sun Apr 14, 2019 5:08 pmI bet that's going to be really delicious. Mine is one good twist away from total destruction so I guess I should start going a little easier on the actual pressinghoutenziel wrote: ↑Sun Apr 14, 2019 4:27 pm Doing a small test batch.
1.5 oz Lane White Burley
.75 oz Lane Virginia
Casing made with a touch of molasses. The casing was so good I could have poured it on pancakes.
Into the press nice and hot, and will pull it out in about 3 days. For this one, my goal is not to make a plug so much as to get things to marry, so I probably won't crank it down too much(it's already as tight as I could get it).
“If you try to fail, and succeed, which have you done?” - George Carlin
- Houtenziel
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- Joined: Mon Aug 13, 2018 12:58 pm
I had a hunch that pressing for longer than 24hrs wasn't really going to do much good on this one, and after opening the press I got confirmation. This thing is a total brick.
66 grams, and even has a shine on it like commercial plugs. I think cohesiveness of the tobacco has more to do with heat, topping, and initial pressure, than it really does with time(past 24 hours anyway).
66 grams, and even has a shine on it like commercial plugs. I think cohesiveness of the tobacco has more to do with heat, topping, and initial pressure, than it really does with time(past 24 hours anyway).
“To educate a person in the mind but not in morals is to educate a menace to society.”
― Theodore Roosevelt
― Theodore Roosevelt