Some Sweet Tips for Your Cigars
At the time of the incident I realized that the roller’s glue a friend had given me a few months earlier was at the office. It’s not that far from my house, but I wasn’t going to get in my car and drive to the office on a Sunday for something like roller’s glue. (I had also bought some pectin for such emergencies, but wouldn’t you know, it was at the office, too.) So, I had a choice: take another cigar and put the damaged one away until Monday when I could repair it at the office, or try to fix the cigar with something else in the house. Since I really wanted to smoke and review this cigar, I chose the latter.
With no pectin or roller’s glue (usually gum Arabic) handy, I thought of a tip a reader sent me about how he used honey to fix his cigars. Say, I’ve got that! I found the honey, and with my fingertip, carefully applied a light coat to the underside of the wrapper and the body of the cigar. It worked like a charm. After about 15 minutes the honey solidified and the wrapper looked good as new. Not bad…and it didn’t come undone again after I relit the cigar.
Should you ever find yourself in a similar position, anything that’s naturally sticky will work. Besides honey, you can use jelly or jam, which are made with pectin. You can also try molasses, corn syrup, or dissolve some sugar in a very small amount of water. If you don’t want to use something so sweet, try using corn starch instead of sugar. It’s not the sweetness, but the adhesive property of the substance that counts.
Perhaps you’ve got your own household cigar repair remedy. If so, please share it. There’s no sense in wasting a good cigar if you don’t have to. Even if it doesn’t do the trick, it’s better to have tried and fail than not to try at all.