Not always.And I know cavs are burleys..
Not always.And I know cavs are burleys..
I really like Boswell's Christmas Cookie too. A Corn Cob Pipe and a Button Nose by C&D is pretty good. I get a chocolate note from that one. Golden Days of Yore is a bit different from anything else that I smoke, but that's good for a change of pace from the sugary aromatic genre.I just had some Boswell's Christmas Cookie for the first time the other day and was pretty impressed. Prior to that, the only other holiday-themed blend I had tried was Sutliff Christmas Spice which is also quite good.
See a number of Cornell normal blends full of cocoa and chocolate and dark rumGenerally they are aromatics that feature scents/flavors associated with the holiday season/Christmas traditions. Baking Spices, Chocolate & Marshmallow, etc.
Holiday Spirit, for example, was a mix of Burley, Black Cav, and McClelland's famous Virginias with exquisite flavoring of Dark Rum, (Hot)Cocoa, and Pecan... some of my favorite things in the world.
Yes, there are those who wax nostalgic about McClelland and place it to unreacheable levels of perfection in their mind's eye now that it is long gone... but trust me when I say that this was indeed one of the smoothest, complex, yet truest flavored aromatics I still have ever experienced. Even as a noob on my first bowl of it I was like "WOW this is no SWR Aromatic"
If only my younger self had put back more than a couple few tins... but money was much tighter then and I thought "One of the oldest and most well loved and high-end tobacco brands in the country.. surely they'll stick around" :/
care to elaborate on this?Drucquer & Sons Merry Monk always seems very Christmas-y to me.
True but I'd hazard a guess to say the healthy majority... either way just trying to illustrate (at least in my experience) the process seems to make the "controllability" of the lead night vs day...Not always.
Generally they will use those as descriptions of flavor or even toppings, yes. But with this it was specifically how they supported the Pecan (which was the primarily noticeable flavor and is something you don't see in almost any blends today) to make an absurdly rich and smooth special flavor.See a number of Cornell normal blends full of cocoa and chocolate and dark rum
I guess it’s a name association thing, Saint Nicholas seems a Merry Monk (Jolly old elf), but more importantly, I suppose, is the room note that has a slight baking roast and sweet potato pie vibe. The heavy smoke feels like walking into an oven warmed kitchen after being out in the cold. Likely, I fist smoked it around the holidays and that scent is now linked to those memories.care to elaborate on this?
Some of the lane and sutliff blenders survive but I wasn't a lane or sutliff man.Generally they will use those as descriptions of flavor or even toppings, yes. But with this it was specifically how they supported the Pecan (which is something you don't see in almost any blends) to make an absurdly rich and smooth special flavor.
I (again unfortunately) never knew til the Sutliff-pocalypse, but they actually made a bulk Pecan cavendish I was lucky enough to snag at least a single pound of in the last days of Rome burning lmao
Hopefully as the holidays approach this year if I actually get some free time as I jar the remainder of my bulk stash I'll get to open it up and play around with it/compare it to the miserly stash of Spirit I'm also lucky enough to have left and see if I can possibly recreate my own clone. I think/hope that if I'm able to combine it with the correct ratios of some bulk Rum & Maple(?) and Hot Cocoa Sutliff cav's along with an appropriate backbone of RR bright and broken flake red VA's I may just get close... and poss. be able to end up with a couple few pounds worth.
Whenever I get around to it I'm going to be sure to document and post here. Even though I know it may not help anyone *directly* (As most of those component tobaccos are now also discontinued)... but if my blind attempt can teach anyone anything about personal blending or (even more importantly) give them hope and an idea of what to look for in recreating versions of their lost favorites from mix-matching other current production blends... well.. then I'd be even doubly content with the venture.![]()
Another vote for McClelland Xmas Cheers.
