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About Tobacco
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Virginia: Virginia is by far the most popular
tobacco type used in pipe tobacco today. About 60% of the nations tobacco
crop is Virginia. Virginia is mildest of all blending tobaccos and has
the highest level of natural dextrose (sugar), which basicly gives it
a light sweet taste. Virginia is used in virtually all blends, is a good
burner and aids in lighting. Pure Virginia tobacco is best known from
flake types. Dunhill's Light Flake is a very good example. Medium in
strength and rather sweet in taste. Several blends by Rattray comes into
mind also. Marlin Flake being a rather heavy member of the family, but
still very sweet. The Danish manufacturer A&C Petersen has the Blue
Caledonian. Mild to medium in strength, and a nice pure taste of Virginia
tobacco.
Burley: Burley tobacco is the next most
popular tobacco for pipe tobacco blending. It contains almost no sugar,
which gives a much dryer and full aroma than Virginia. Burley is used
in many aromatic blends because it absorbs the flavorings. Burley tobacco
burns slowly and is a cool smoke, which makes it a nice addition to blends
that tend to burn fast and strong.
The technical term for Burley is "air cured". This air curing
is done in large open barns, by the natural air flow, for one or two
months. The color is ranging from light brown to mahogany.
Pure Burley blends are mainly produced by U.S. and Danish companies.
Blends like Blue Edgeworth, Old English and Half-and-Half are classic
examples. The latter being slightly flavoured. Burley is also the main
ingredient in most of the Danish McBaren blends.
Spice tobacco: Spice tobacco is actually
not one type of tobacco, but rather a broad variety of more special types,
used in small amounts to create an interesting blend. These would include
Oriental, Latakia, Perique and Kentucky among others. Most of them are
frequently used in English blends.
Oriental: A variety of tobaccos, grown in
Turkey, the Balkans, and Russia. The best known types are Izmir, Samsun,
Yedidje, Cavella and Bursa. A common characteristic is a dusty, dry and
sometimes slightly sourish aroma. Some of them are also used in "exotic" cigarettes
from Egypt and other Arab countrys.
Latakia: Latakia is the result of a curing
process involving fire curing the leaves over controlled fires of aromatic
woods and fragrant herbs. Probably the most well known spice tobacco.
Mainly grown in Cyprus and northern Syria. After the leaves are harvested
and dried, they are hung in tightly closed barns and smoke-cured. Small
smouldering fires of oak and pine fill the barn with smoke, and covering
the leaves with smoke particles.
Latakia produces a very rich, heavy taste, with an aroma that has a "smokey" characteristic.
Latakia is an indispensable ingredient of traditional English mixtures.
The content can vary from a few percent to about 40-50%, or even more.
A few smokers like it at 100%. This would tend to be harsh, not because
Latakia is a strong tobacco, but because it burns and tends to dry out
your mouth and throat.
Perique: Perique is a Red Burley type of
tobacco, grown and processed in St. James, Louisiana near New Orleans.
Perique is a rare, slow buring, strong-tasting tobacco. Production is
small, so its value is quite high.
Perique is cured like Burley, but for a shorter time. Thereafter the
leaves are put in large oak barrels under heavy pressure, which will
squeeze some juice out and make the whole thing ferment. Once in a while
the leaves are taken out for a period and then repacked and refermented.
This process takes at least one full year. Some times even longer.
The aroma of a tobacco treated by this method is full bodied. The nicotine
content is overwhelming, thus Perique can not be smoked by itself. Due
to its full-bodied nature, Perique is used on a limited basis in blends.
About 5% in a blend is the maximum. It is usually blended with Virginia
to give it more body. Escudo is a good representative of a Virginia blend
with Perique. Dunhill's Elizabethan Mixture is a very nice example of
Virginia mixed with a touch of Perique.
Kentucky: This is actually a specially treated
Burley tobacco, produced in Kentucky. Unlike Burley, Kentucky is fire-cured.
Its aroma is not as heavy as with Latakia, but very aromatic and unique.
The nicotine content tends to be rather high, and therefor is used in
limited amounts.
Havana: Cuban and other cigar tobaccos are
used in a limited range of Virginia blends and mixtures.
Cavendish: Cavendish is more a method to
treat tobacco than a type. English Cavendish uses a dark flue or fire
cured Virginia which is steamed and then stored under pressure to permit
it to cure and ferment for several days to several weeks. When done well,
this tobacco is really fine stuff. Cavendish can be produced out of any
tobacco type (mainly Virginia's and Burley's are used). The original
English Cavendish is produced out of Virginia tobacco, which is slightly
flavoured and heated by high pressure. This will give you a very dark,
black tobacco. A few English Cavendish blends exist on the market - Rattray's
Dark Fragrant and Black Virginia plus McConnel's Maduro.
The modern version of Cavendish is generally much more flavoured. The
natural taste of tobacco is almost gone. The flavouring is also called "Casting".
This is the term used when you add a considerable amount of additives
to the tobacco. This is usually done by producing a fluid mixture of
sugar, liquorice or any kind of aromas in which the tobacco is soaked.
The goal is to produce a sweet and smooth aroma. Modern Cavendish tobacco
comes in numerous flavours, cherry, vanilla, rum, chocolate, strawberry,
coconut .......and many other flavors.
Tobacco Classifications
Air-Cured: These tobaccos are dried naturally, sheltered from sunlight
in large barns. The drying is carried out on the whole plant or as individual
leaves. Sugar is the by-product of this three month drying process.
Dark Tobaccos: These tobacco plants
are very mature and developed at the time of picking. The leaf is subjected
to a second fermentation process. These leaves are used to make cigars.
Fire-Cured: Akin to Dark, its natural
drying is completed by a wood-fired fumigation (oak used by most of
the traditionalists)
Sun-Cured: Almost all of Oriental
Tobaccos are cured by this method. Oriental Tobaccos are grown in Greece,
Turkey, Bulgaria and adjoining countries.
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