Don
Where are you drawing the subject from ("Re-released Balkan Sasieni")? Is it from a line of postings here or somewhere else?
As a guess to what you are alluding to the release of any old formulation of tobacco is always limited by a number of factors:
1) is it based on the original formula, or is it a recreation trying to match the taste? Most blenders guard their exact recipes closely, in that is the keystone to their success.
2) Are the exact ingredients available to follow the formula? A combination of events has led to blending problems for any blend that contained Syrian Latakia, since Syria moved to restrict the processing of the tobacco, it was using far too many of their trees and causing forestation problems, and there was a major fire some years ago that destroyed a large quantity of the Syrian Latakia in warehouse.
The effects of the the first question, using the original formula, show up with the Dunhill tobaccos, where the Alfred Dunhill tobacco products taste differently from those made by Murrays, although made to their formulas, and the Murrays taste differently again from those manufactured by Orliks, although again from the same recipes.
The availability factor shows up with many tobaccos, because the taste of a particular tobacco will vary from year to year with the differences in the growing conditions. You will find some tobaccos that are even sold with vintage marked, this seems to happen a fair bit with Virginias, and like wines certain years are noticibly more popular (better?) than others. Larger companies may buy and hold tobacco so that they can have a consistancy in their blends, which the smaller blenders may not have the opportunity to do.
The issue is further confused by trying to compare current production with vintage stocks of tobacco. As a newer member of the fraternity you may have not had the opportunity to taste "vintage" tobaccos, but those blends which depend upon the tobacco for their taste (not those which depend on heavy dosings of flavour additives) tend to improve with age. The tastes of the individual tobaccos "marry" into a smoother overall taste, where as a "fresh" blend may have one bowl that is heavier on one taste, like Perique or Latakia, than the next, or even the start of the bowl but not the end. So your new production Balkan Sasieni won't taste exactly like a vintage sample even if everything else is the same.
Hope this is what you were asking about.
Al (in Canada)
Cambridge Blend In A DH Cumberland