Jim's STG Versions of Mac Baren Blends Reviews.

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JimInks

Sultan of Smoke
Aug 31, 2012
70,137
801,792
I rewrote my original reviews of the five Mac Baren blends that are now made by STG. Below each one is a review of the current STG versions in this post and the one below it.

Mac Baren Capstan Original Navy Cut:
The bright and more obvious dark Virginias provide plenty of tart and more tangy citrus, earth, wood, grass, sugar, floralness, some darker fruit, earth, wood, mild vegetation, and light spice. Has a very mild sugary citrus casing. The strength is a step below the medium mark, and the taste level is medium. The nic-hit is a step past the center of mild to medium. Won't bite or get harsh, and has light rough edges. The mildly moist flakes easily break apart to suit your preference. A rather uncomplicated blend that burns cool, clean and smooth with a very consistent flavor at a slow pace. Requires a few relights. Leaves very little dampness in the bowl. Has a very pleasant short lived after taste and room note. Can be an all day smoke. Four stars out of four.
@Jim Amash 2025.

STG Capstan Original Navy Cut:
The Mac Baren Capstan flakes had a few yellow Va. streaks, but this version has a little more of them mixed with the brown Va. The Virginias provide a lot of exceptionally tart citrus, floralness, bitter sour lemon, bread, vegetative grass/hay, acidity, a little sugar, very mild earth and wood, light darker fruit, and spice. The brown Va. tastes more like darkened orange Va. to me now. It offers secondary support to the youthful brighter Va. The citrus is more like one would expect from brighter Virginias than darker Virginias, and has more acrid acidity. The darker fruit notes are only slightly present here as opposed to before. The sugary citrus casing is similar, but not quite the same. It’s a touch less obvious, but that may due the different Virginias instead of less being added. It’s a bit rougher and puffing beyond a moderate pace may result in light harshness due to the bright Virginia. It’s a tad closer to Capstan Gold than it is to the original Blue Navy Cut due to the change in Virginias. I do sense mild echoes of the original flavor at times. The strength is now a slot past medium.. Even though the taste level is a couple of notches stronger, it lacks a little of the depth of the original. The nic-hit is now a rung below medium. Has a very sharp, bitterly sour and sweet, floral, acidic, mildly spicy flavor that extends to the moderately lasting after taste. The sharp, floral room notes are strong. Not an all day smoke. I don’t recommend a big bowl for this blend. The other aspects are the same as the previous version. It should benefit with some age. Two and half stars out of four for this production.
©Jim Amash 2025.

Mac Baren Mixture Scottish Blend:
Sometimes, the spicy, woody, earthy, nutty, floral, barbecue-like Kentucky in the blend is more evident than other times, but no matter how present it is or isn't, it relays that spice note that contrasts nicely with creamy flavors. The bready burley is a little nutty with a mild earthy, woody, sugar, and creamy molasses as a supporting player. The lighter Virginias are mildly tart and tangy citrusy, grassy, bready, sugary, floral, spicy, lightly earthy and woodsy as they create a solid base for the other flavors. In the background is the matured Virginia, which adds a little fermented lightly sugary, tangy dark fruit, bread, sugar, wood, earth, floralness and a pinch of spice. The honey-ish gold cavendish supplies mild tart and tangy citrus, bread, sugar, grass, floralness, and spice. It’s a slot above the condiment line. The sugary, creamy black cavendish helps tame a few of rough edges in a small way. The strength is a couple of steps past the center of mild to medium. The nic-hit just passes that center. The taste level barely touches the medium threshold. Won’t get harsh. Has a few rough notes. Some people experience a little bite, and others don’t. I recommend a moderate smoking cadence. Burns fairly cool and very clean at a reasonable pace with an inconsistent sweet, fruity, nutty, earthy, grassy, spicy, mildly floral, creamy flavor that extends to the pleasant after taste. The room note is pleasant. Requires few relights, and leaves very little dampness in the bowl. Can be an all day smoke. Four stars out of four.
@Jim Amash 2025.

STG Mixture Scottish Blend:
The various Virginias provide some tart and tangy citrus, vegetative grass, bread, honey, sugar, floralness, spice, light spice, earth and wood. The blend is fragrantly floral with a little more honey, sugar, and is mildly fruitier. I believe those aspects come from the Virginias. The earthy, woody, floral, vegetative, spicy, nutty, herbal, lightly sour barbecue-like dark fired Kentucky is a tad more noticeable this time. The burleys supply a modest amount of nuts, earth, wood, and sugary molasses as supporting players. The sugary, creamy black cavendish plays around the same level as before. The fruity, sugary toppings are a little stronger with a light astringency and mild syrup. The tobaccos are a little more toned down in this production as a result of that. This version is more aromatic whereas the older Scottish Blend was close to being a semi-aromatic. There are some flavor aspects of the original present despite the different sourcing of tobaccos and toppings. The strength is a step past the medium threshold. The taste is a couple of notches past that mark. The nic-hit is a slot below medium. It’s sharper, a little more rough, and may tingle the tongue if you puff fast. I did not experience any bite. The mixture is moister this time. It burns cool and slow with an inconsistent sweet, fruity, floral, nutty, spicy, creamy, mildly syrupy, slightly sour, acidic flavor that extends to the lingering after taste. The room note is sharp, sweet and floral, and a little pungent. Leaves little moisture in the bowl, and requires a couple more than an average number of relights. May be an all day smoke for some smokers. I don’t recommend more than a medium bowl at best for this one. Will ghost a briar, and possibly a meer in time. Two stars out of four.
©Jim Amash 2025.

Mac Baren Navy Flake:
The burleys offer plenty of nuts, bread, earth, wood, sugar, light molasses and oats as the lead components. The grassy, tart and tangy citrusy. lightly tangy dark fruit, earthy, woody, bready, floral, sugary, stewed fruity, mildly honeyish Va.s are supporting players. The fruity, sugary, earthy, woody black Virginia cavendish is a couple of notches above the condiment line. Mac Baren claimed that only a tiny amount of rum is present, but I think it’s a little stronger than that. They also said that no honey has been added, so that essence apparently comes from the Virginias. I sense a pinch of cinnamon for some reason. The toppings moderately tone down the varietals. The strength and taste levels are medium. The nic-hit is a couple of steps past the center of mild to medium. Won't bite or get harsh. Has a few light rough notes. The flakes are mildly moist, and are easy to manipulate to suit your preference. Well balanced, it burns cool, clean, and a tad slow with a mostly consistent sweet, fruity, nutty, lightly floral, spicy flavor that extends to the pleasantly lasting after taste and room notes. Leaves little moisture in the bowl. Requires a couple more than an average number of relights. Can be an all day smoke. Four stars out of four.
©Jim Amash 2025

STG Navy Flake:
The rough, youthful, astringent bright Virginias in the Virginia mix are highly floral, very sour, and acidic with more tarter citrus. They are the lead components now as a result of the change of the brights. The burleys seem the same though they are supporting players now. The black Virginia cavendish seems to have the same effect, too, and is in the same position as before. The rum topping is a little stronger and not the same one used by Mac Baren. It has light alcohol notes. Unless honey is a topping or casing (which Mac Baren claimed it wasn’t), I assume the honey notes come from the bright Va.s and are lightly more obvious now. The varietals are more toned down as a result of the rum. The version is a little heftier. There are some echoes of the original here despite the changes in sourcing of the tobaccos and toppings. The strength is a step shy of the center of medium to strong. The taste is a notch past that mark. The nic-hit is medium. It’s much harsher and rougher than before. The flakes are mildly moist, and the burn rate is the same as before. The overall flavor is more bitterly sour than fruity sweet, very fragrantly (almost perfume-like) floral, nutty, spicy, and acridly acidic. The after taste and room notes are strong and unpleasant. Leaves little moisture in the bowl. Requires a couple more than an average number of relights. Not an all day smoke. I don’t recommend a big bowl for this one. One star out of four.
©Jim Amash 2025.
 
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JimInks

Sultan of Smoke
Aug 31, 2012
70,137
801,792
Mac Baren Vanilla Cream Loose Cut:
The bright and gold Virginias provide some tart and tangy citrus, grass, sugar, bread, honey, earth, wood, floralness, vegetation, and spice as the lead components. The nutty, earthy, woody, bready burleys are secondary players. The brown sugary black cavendish is a little more than a condiment. It mostly acts as a flavor holder for the topping. The effect of the creamy sweet vanilla cream is moderate. The strength and nic-hit are a step past the mild mark. The taste level is in the center of mild to medium. No chance of bite or harshness. Barely has a hint of a rough note. Burns cool, clean and slightly slow with a very consistent sweet, mildly fruity, nutty flavor that extends to lightly lingering, pleasant after taste. The sweet room notes are pleasant. Leaves little dampness in the bowl. Requires a couple more than an average number of relights. Can be an all day smoke. Three stars out of four.
©Jim Amash 2025.

STG Vanilla Cream Loose Cut:
The various tobaccos seem to be in the same proportions as before. The flavor differences between them and the Mac Baren version I mostly attribute to the youthful bright Virginias and the use of different tobacco sourcing. They are very harsh, rough, floral, tartly and bitterly sour, mildly more vegetative, spicier, and acidic, and wreck the balance that the original had. The creamy sweet vanilla tastes similar, but a tad weaker due to the effect of the Virginias. The Virginias also change the strength and taste levels. The strength is a step short of the center of medium to strong. The taste is a step past that center. The nic-hit is a couple of notches past the medium mark. Due to the tingly and rough, harsh aspects of the Virginias, I recommend a slow puffing cadence. Burns warm and slightly slow, too. The basic sweet and lightly sour, floral flavors as well as the after taste are marred by the sharp, acrid quality of the Virginias. The room notes are strongly sharp, floral and mildly sweet. Not an all day smoke. I recommend no more than a medium size bowl for this one. One star out of four.
©Jim Amash 2025.

Mac Baren Virginia Flake Cut:
The bright and darker Virginias provide a wealth of tart and tangy citrus, bread, floralness, vegetative grass/hay, sugar, some sour lemon, spice, and mild acidity. The honey casing is a just a little more obvious than the sugary fruit as they add a fairly mild presence to the proceedings. The strength is almost medium. The taste is medium. The nic-hit is step below the overall strength level. Won’t bite, but fast puffing will result in a little tongue tingle. I recommend a moderate puffing cadence to avoid a harsh note. Has a few small rough edges. Burns a tad warm, clean and a little slow with a very consistent flavor that extends to the short lived, pleasant after taste. The sweet, floral room note is fairly pleasant. Leaves little dampness in the bowl, and requires a few relights. Can be an all day smoke. Three stars out of four.
©Jim Amash 2025.

STG Virginia Flake Cut:
The darker portions of the flakes are a little darker than the Mac Baren production. They look a bit like the new Capstan Original Navy Cut flakes although the flavor is different. The Virginias have a little more matured citrus, floralness, and sugar now. The spice, vegetation, sour lemon, and acidity are more prominent here due the youthful bright Virginias that were used in the mix. There’s a few very slight dark fruit, earth, and wood notes along with a hint of smoke that were not present in the earlier version. The darker Va.s are one of the reasons for the differences, too. The honey and sweet fruit casings are just a touch more obvious, but the honey tastes a tad different. The strength, nic-hit and taste levels are more potent. The strength and taste are a notch short of the center of medium to strong. The nic-hit is medium. I recommend a sipping smoking pace for this blend due to the harshness and bite potential. Burns a tad warmer than before, and just as slow with a very consistent rugged, sharp, sweet and sour, floral, spicy, acidic flavor. The after taste and room notes are very sharp and floral. Not quite an all day smoke. I recommend no more than a medium size bowl for this blend. The other aspects remain the same. It should age well. Two stars.
©Jim Amash 2025.
 

Brad H

Lifer
Dec 17, 2024
2,005
10,775
Any thoughts on St. Bruno yet?
Ooooo would be interested in that! St Bruno is my most liked one they kept.
Really a drag on the Mac B Virgina

Just finished off a ready rub pack of mac B Bruno today. Next tin I’m going open is a tin of St Bruno that doesn’t have Mac Baren in the name. (Not sure where it was made)
 
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Brad H

Lifer
Dec 17, 2024
2,005
10,775
The one (I bought many) I got is from 4noggins when they were on sort of super sale at 16$ a tin…. How could I pass that up. The timelines of when I purchased it, probably puts it made by Mac B but just but just a new updated sticker on it.
I may open it Wednesday or Thursday.
 

NookersTheCat

Part of the Furniture Now
Sep 10, 2020
746
3,686
NEPA
The one (I bought many) I got is from 4noggins when they were on sort of super sale at 16$ a tin…. How could I pass that up. The timelines of when I purchased it, probably puts it made by Mac B but just but just a new updated sticker on it.
I may open it Wednesday or Thursday.
Be good to hear back what your opinions are on the differences, if any 👍
 
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K.E. Powell

Part of the Furniture Now
Aug 20, 2022
658
2,439
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West Virginia
I wasn't a big Mac Baren fan, but I did love their Navy flake. Heartbreaking to see such a drop in quality. Saves me money, I guess.

Thank goodness for the HU blends coming stateside. I love C&D, and there are some stellar Peterson blends, but I am finding some HU blends that are filling gaps from so many other legacy blends dying out or dropping in quality. Thanks for taking the time to try the STG mixes, Jim.