HomeHome  CalendarCalendar  FAQFAQ  SearchSearch  RegisterRegister  MemberlistMemberlist  UsergroupsUsergroups  Log in  

Share | 
 

 Home Blending for the Admitted Amateur

View previous topic View next topic Go down 
AuthorMessage
Carlos



Number of posts: 4516
Age: 54
Location: Chestnut, IL
Tobacco: GLP Renaissance
Pipe: Brian Ruthenberg Sandblasts
Registration date: 2007-12-10

PostSubject: Home Blending for the Admitted Amateur   Fri Jan 18, 2008 5:15 pm

I just tonight realized how I am destined to failure as a home blender of tobaccos. I am not depressed about it. It's just that it took me this long to know I am doomed in my attempts.

Oh, I can modify an existing blend. The Great Odyssey Experiment proves this, for me. I can kick-'em-up-a-notch. I could even purchase a fairly wide variety of blending tobaccos and make presentable smoking mixtures.

What I cannot do is replicate (bad choice of word) better blends. Meaning. I cannot get more than the most very basic oriental tobaccos.

So, I get my lemon Virginia, my bronze Virginia, some latakia (which I think there may be many different grades/types/etc.), some Turkish. Even the Turkish available for blending looks like it's often a blend itself. I reach for orientals...I am lost. Where do I get my hands on a variety of orientals? Basma, Izmir, Yenidje, and all the other orientals I have never heard of. Where do I look for toasted Virginias? Just what is toasting, as the term was used by Dunhill?

You see my problem. I cannot get the spice or condiment tobaccos. Nor can I replicate a process at home that I know virtually nothing about. All I can do is pester Craig and try to get him to blend something for me. In the hopes he can understand what I am asking for in my limited knowledge of the subject.

I am so doomed.

_________________


Current pen & ink.

Pelikan 140, green striated, medium nib

Noodler's - Van Gogh Starry Night Blue
Back to top Go down
View user profile
Justpipes
The Duke


Number of posts: 7927
Age: 53
Location: Randolph County, NC If you don't know, you wouldn't understand.
Tobacco: John Middleton Walnut, Prince Albert, GLP Cumberland, C&D Exhausted Rooster , add Carter Hall to the mix, as well as Perfection Plug Burley
Pipe: Brissetts, Kaywoodies
Registration date: 2007-12-17

PostSubject: Re: Home Blending for the Admitted Amateur   Fri Jan 18, 2008 7:21 pm

I wouldn't say you are doomed, just keep trying and remember you can only do as much as your limitations will allow.
Back to top Go down
View user profile http://www.practicegodspresence.com/
earl



Number of posts: 148
Age: 58
Location: Kansas
Tobacco: PS LNF & H & H Marble Kake. Fondly remember when I used to be able to get SG flakes.
Pipe: Peterson deluxe 9s, 11s, Dublin & London chubby Rhodesian, and Sherlock Holmes Deerstalker are the current favorites.
Registration date: 2007-12-22

PostSubject: Re: Home Blending for the Admitted Amateur   Sat Jan 19, 2008 6:56 am

Carlos, I'd thought of asking Craig to blend me up something too but I know so little about the art of it I wouldn't even know enough to know what to request as to constituents. So, I just keep trying various blends he's already come up with. Earl
Back to top Go down
View user profile
Carlos



Number of posts: 4516
Age: 54
Location: Chestnut, IL
Tobacco: GLP Renaissance
Pipe: Brian Ruthenberg Sandblasts
Registration date: 2007-12-10

PostSubject: Re: Home Blending for the Admitted Amateur   Sat Jan 19, 2008 9:59 am

Yeah, I keep buying as much as I can. Very Happy I wonder if the U of I offers a course.

_________________


Current pen & ink.

Pelikan 140, green striated, medium nib

Noodler's - Van Gogh Starry Night Blue
Back to top Go down
View user profile
tweaksource



Number of posts: 67
Age: 39
Location: Southaven, MS
Tobacco: Yes...lots...
Pipe: The wife says, "...enough..."
Registration date: 2011-01-04

PostSubject: Re: Home Blending for the Admitted Amateur   Mon Mar 07, 2011 11:54 am

I know this is an old thread, but it is now relevant for me.

I, too, have been blending at home and have had moderate success. One area that still escapes me is similar to that of the OP - orientals.

I ordered Turkish Ribbon from Pipes and Cigars. I am not dissatisfied with it, but it is not what I was looking for. By itself it is very bland. In a blend it has its place, but very much needs to be sweetened or somehow enhanced.

4Noggins has a nice variety of blending tobaccos as well as good descriptions. They are very helpful over the phone as well.

From 4 Noggins I ordered the Turkish Izmir. It is much closer to the oriental..."whang" that I am looking for. I find also that stoved Virginias (McC 5105) are essential to my English blends and add much of the character that I expected to come from orientals.

I would also like to get my hands on Basma, Yenidje, Dubec, etc. "Oriental" tobacco is such a broad term and is rarely well defined, IMHO.

You may also try the McClelland Blending Orientals. I'm not sure what's in it, but I am currently awaiting a shipment.
Back to top Go down
View user profile
 

Home Blending for the Admitted Amateur

View previous topic View next topic Back to top 
Page 1 of 1

 Similar topics

-
» Home Blending for the Admitted Amateur
» Anthony Home Goes into Foreclosure -- Update: Anthonys to Keep Home
» Jose Baez Home in Foreclosure
» SWIFT CURRENT WELCOME HOME CERTIFICATE
» Home made portable speaker

Permissions in this forum:You cannot reply to topics in this forum
Brothers of Briar :: Pipes & Tobacco :: The Tobacco Jar-