I know this is a very broad question, but what does burley taste like? I got a few things that have it and I'm not sure the notes I should be looking for...
Virginia Tobacco: Brightleaf tobacco is commonly known as "Virginia tobacco", regardless of where in the world it is harvested.
Virginia tobaccos that are bright colored have a sharp, piquant flavor, and should be smoked slower, or enjoyed in a “flake” form, slowing combustion temperatures
Darker Virginia tobaccos will have more “body”, smoke slower and are sweeter.
Virginia tobaccos have acidic qualities, affecting how human taste buds on the tongue sense taste and how the olfactory sensors in the nasal sinuses sense smell.
Burley Tobacco: is a light air-cured tobacco used primarily for cigarette production.
Burley tobaccos have no natural sugars; they have an alkaline quality, and have a lot of “body” (mellower and softer sense of taste). White Burley is the mildest, with a transparent flavor. Burley tobacco is like a sponge for casing sauces and top dressings. Natural Burley that has been aged and compressed has a nutty, pleasant flavor, naturally, without added casing sauces or dressings. Fire cured dark Burley has a nicotine punch and strong flavor, that would be wisely used in moderation, or as a condiment to a blend.
Oriental Tobacco (Turkish tobacco): is a sun-cured, highly aromatic, small-leafed variety (Nicotiana tabacum) that is grown in Turkey, Greece, Bulgaria, Lebanon, and the Republic of Macedonia. Oriental tobacco is frequently referred to as "Turkish tobacco". Many of the early brands of cigarettes were made mostly or entirely of Oriental tobacco; today, its main use is in blends of pipe and especially cigarette tobacco (a typical American cigarette is a blend of bright Virginia, burley and Oriental).
Perique tobacco is used as a condiment to a blend, mixture or flake. Perique has the quality of pepper, a unique taste and aroma that many people enjoy. Other condimental tobaccos include Latakia, and some strong Oriental tobaccos. Sometimes a mild Oriental tobacco is used as a base in a blend or mixture.
Some of the smoothest tobaccos can be a Cavendish, which are usually compressed, steamed, cased and aged for further fermentation, the process effectively turning any remaining ammonias within the leaf converting to starch and sugars. Blends or mixtures that have not been aged are “green”; sometimes have an alcohol smell, due to hasty application of a cheap top dressing disguising inferior tobacco. Beware of and avoid cheap tobaccos with a cheap perfume—spend the extra money for a natural, quality aged mixture.
