newbroom writes:
You, on the other hand, may be a different type of smoker and you may not have an all-day blend. You're driven intensely by variety which contradicts the idea of an all-day blend in itself. The term reached prominence when the copywriters at P&C started using it as shorthand for low-nicotine, mellow flavor blends.
My take: "all-day blend" means any tobacco that you can smoke for hours with minimal fuss. The archetype of these is OTCs like Carter Hall and Prince Albert, but it varies with what type of pipe smoker you are. I need a higher nicotine and flavor profile, so for me all day smokes are blends like OJY, RY and IF.All Day Blend?
How do you define this term? What is your criteria? Should I start a whole new 'topic'?
We've got a lot of members who don't smoke enough to use this term, but I think they do still use it.
I've seen it used when a tobacco is rich and tasty but unusually strong "this is rich and tasty but not an all day blend."
Or, "this one is full of perique and latakia and stoved virginias, but it's so perfectly blended, pressed and cut that it is easily an all day blend."
I smoke all day. I seldom smoke the same tobacco twice in a row. I wonder if I'm doing it wrong?
You, on the other hand, may be a different type of smoker and you may not have an all-day blend. You're driven intensely by variety which contradicts the idea of an all-day blend in itself. The term reached prominence when the copywriters at P&C started using it as shorthand for low-nicotine, mellow flavor blends.