There was, IMHO, one pipe tobacco that defined the
genre -- BSVa10. It was my all-day, every-day smoke, for years. Except for the occasional urge to try something different just to try it, it was THE tobacco.
The only other one that ever reached that exceptional quality level, again IMHO, was the original Fox Bankers, which was an English mixture with a cigar component. An aged tin of that was utopian.
Both were made with the legendary cigar tobacco from the forbidden island 90 miles south of the Florida Keys, and Syrian Latakia. (As was 123, but it missed the round, luscious fullness of the great ones that captured that aspect of a fine cigar without trying to taste like one).
As for the others, tastes vary. I privately (and very possibly, ignorantly) suspect that part of the problem is their using Connecticut Wrapper leaf. Which, absent the other components of a good cigar using it, comes across with a dry, bitter Marsh Wheeling stogie edge that (ditto above) doesn't ever meld with the other components.
Dominican Glory Maduro does match the full richness that BSVa10 had, but IMHO (we're seeing that a lot here), it's more than enough too cloyingly sweet to notice and, eventually, be turned off by (this after going through at least a pound or so of it). Wessex Brigade Campaign Dark Flake, (after ten pounds), although rich and full without the cigar note, similarly. Over the long haul, you just don't want to be smoking dessert all the time. (I suspect somebody boosted the candy of it way up -- it wasn't like that at all back when I was wearing it out).
Russ Oeullette's new take on it -- waiting for Monday with keen anticipation here as that's when Sam A's brotherly sample will make the last leg of its journey from the upper midwest -- well, stay tuned
FWIW
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