GtrSmoker
Well-known member
Wait, don’t answer that.
I’m still a relative rookie when it comes to tobaccos. I know what I like, and I seem to like more than I dislike. Or maybe I just choose carefully.
Anyway, I’ll get to the point. It involves how jarred tobacco ages. For our purposes here today, we’ll be discussing Virginias and VaPers, mainly.
I should give a little backstory first. My first pipe smoking experience lasted for a couple of years around 2007-10. I had just discovered Virginias and VaPers, when a series of major life events, in relatively rapid succession, led to me switching to exclusively snus for several years.
Over the next decade, I would occasionally smoke one of my pipes, but usually multiple years would pass between these rare smoke sessions. Then, just before last Christmas, I casually mentioned my pipes to my fiancé… and a light went off in my mind. It was like John Belushi’s church experience in the Blues Brothers: “My pipes!!!”
So I picked them back up with abandon, and I’ve been ordering way too much tobacco over the past six months. Which brings us back to the issue.
I’ve found that I can recognize a cellaring-induced improvement in some tobaccos in as little as three months. Luxury Bullseye Flake is a great example. I can hardly stand it when it’s fresh from Stokkebye. It tastes acidic to me. Weird, I know.
But within three months, it’s begun it’s transition into something special.
One of the first big orders I made was in January, when I ordered a pound of Sam Gawith St James Flake, and a half pound of Full Virginia Flake from Switzerland.
By the time I actually got the tobacco, my taste had evolved a little, so I’ve actually smoked very little of either SG blend. And it’s had nearly six months of jar time now.
But I have to admit, I can’t really detect any improvement or change in either the FVF or the St James.
Am I crazy?
I expected it to maybe mellow/smoothe out a little, kind of like with the LBF. But I really can’t tell if it has. It’s almost like all the SG casings are acting like a formaldehyde or something, just keeping it as “fresh” as it was the day I got it.
What’s going on here? Do some brands of Virginia and Virginia Flakes age faster and/or better than others?
For instance, a good portion of my stash (in addition to the SG I mentionedis Rattray’s. Marlin, Hal, Gowrie… the usual suspects. I also have a decent amount of GH flakes. And at least a pound each of Newminster Superior Navy Flake, Sutliff Virginia Slices, C&D Yorktown and Bright Virginia ribbon, and the aforementioned luxury bullseye.
Which of these are likely to be the stars? Who are the likely duds?
I’m still a relative rookie when it comes to tobaccos. I know what I like, and I seem to like more than I dislike. Or maybe I just choose carefully.
Anyway, I’ll get to the point. It involves how jarred tobacco ages. For our purposes here today, we’ll be discussing Virginias and VaPers, mainly.
I should give a little backstory first. My first pipe smoking experience lasted for a couple of years around 2007-10. I had just discovered Virginias and VaPers, when a series of major life events, in relatively rapid succession, led to me switching to exclusively snus for several years.
Over the next decade, I would occasionally smoke one of my pipes, but usually multiple years would pass between these rare smoke sessions. Then, just before last Christmas, I casually mentioned my pipes to my fiancé… and a light went off in my mind. It was like John Belushi’s church experience in the Blues Brothers: “My pipes!!!”
So I picked them back up with abandon, and I’ve been ordering way too much tobacco over the past six months. Which brings us back to the issue.
I’ve found that I can recognize a cellaring-induced improvement in some tobaccos in as little as three months. Luxury Bullseye Flake is a great example. I can hardly stand it when it’s fresh from Stokkebye. It tastes acidic to me. Weird, I know.
But within three months, it’s begun it’s transition into something special.
One of the first big orders I made was in January, when I ordered a pound of Sam Gawith St James Flake, and a half pound of Full Virginia Flake from Switzerland.
By the time I actually got the tobacco, my taste had evolved a little, so I’ve actually smoked very little of either SG blend. And it’s had nearly six months of jar time now.
But I have to admit, I can’t really detect any improvement or change in either the FVF or the St James.
Am I crazy?
I expected it to maybe mellow/smoothe out a little, kind of like with the LBF. But I really can’t tell if it has. It’s almost like all the SG casings are acting like a formaldehyde or something, just keeping it as “fresh” as it was the day I got it.
What’s going on here? Do some brands of Virginia and Virginia Flakes age faster and/or better than others?
For instance, a good portion of my stash (in addition to the SG I mentionedis Rattray’s. Marlin, Hal, Gowrie… the usual suspects. I also have a decent amount of GH flakes. And at least a pound each of Newminster Superior Navy Flake, Sutliff Virginia Slices, C&D Yorktown and Bright Virginia ribbon, and the aforementioned luxury bullseye.
Which of these are likely to be the stars? Who are the likely duds?