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first latakia bowl
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<blockquote data-quote="jefe1037" data-source="post: 274174" data-attributes="member: 2290"><p>Rev, I find that the perfuminess of some tobaccos comes from the oriental leaf in thr blends. This is fairly typical in several samples of english or balkan blends that I have tried,but most of the fellows on here reserve that term for a specific "soap" flavor that is known as lakeland essence. The sweet and sour descriptor leads me down a similar pathway, where the actual flavors that are present are often used as the components of popular perfumes, but describing them as perfumy is inaccurate for a specific but subtle reason: While your tastebuds are in the right category, the terminology that you chose can be misleading to those who already have "agreed" (not formally, just a group psychology thing) on some flavor profile terminology.</p><p></p><p>This is part of my growing theory about the "ketchup dicussion" as well.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="jefe1037, post: 274174, member: 2290"] Rev, I find that the perfuminess of some tobaccos comes from the oriental leaf in thr blends. This is fairly typical in several samples of english or balkan blends that I have tried,but most of the fellows on here reserve that term for a specific "soap" flavor that is known as lakeland essence. The sweet and sour descriptor leads me down a similar pathway, where the actual flavors that are present are often used as the components of popular perfumes, but describing them as perfumy is inaccurate for a specific but subtle reason: While your tastebuds are in the right category, the terminology that you chose can be misleading to those who already have "agreed" (not formally, just a group psychology thing) on some flavor profile terminology. This is part of my growing theory about the "ketchup dicussion" as well. [/QUOTE]
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