I first tried Winchester only about a year ago, and it's become an almost daily smoke for me. I've yet to have a disappointing bowl. I'd love to try it with some perique added.
That is so weird that you mentioned how it has almost cigar notes to it. I thought the very same thing. I can't stop sniffing the jar! It is such a great blend. I've been cellaring Winchester and Pegasus, deep cellaring it. I don't ever want to be without it. I can't say this enough, you were so right about me adding the CB Dark to the Pegasus and jarring it that way. I'm glad I didn't go overboard with it. I have some friends who really enjoy it that way, but I'm finding I'm not reaching for it anymore my friend. I can't get enough of regular Pegasus. I wouldn't dream of adding anything to Winchester, I'm smoking a bowl right now as I type this.I liked it instantly myself. I’ve jarred cellared 6 pounds several years ago.
It’s great fresh. It’ll likely be better after the red Virginia ages.
Almost cigar-like at times yet quite naturally sweet. Like wine.
A real sleeper blend from C&D that I’m glad is finally getting some love.
You know, Pegasus was once such a blend. Jeremy Reeves thought so and look how it’s taken off in popularity.
I suppose it’s true that cream floats to the top.
I'm thinking the same thing. I am REALLY digging Winchester. But I believe the red Virginia has a molasses casing and the unsweetened black Cavendish has a liquor flavoring or something it's steamed with. This blend is too smooth like you said to be pure.I like Winchester too, but I dispute that it is a "pure" tobacco. It has a casing that adds a touch of honey (maybe molasses) and maybe a splash of some sort of liquor to it. It is very subtle, but for a Virginia Burley blend it is a very smooth smoke. Reminds me of a high quality codger blend.
It is not extraordinary, it is just perfectly ordinary. Put it in an ordinary pipe, and smoke it back to back on an ordinary day, repeat in an ongoing ordinary kind of way.OK, I'm in for a pound.
If it's anything short of extraordinary I'll be back here to bitch.
Sounds extraordinary to me, as I’ve yet to find my “back to back, all day” blend.It is not extraordinary, it is just perfectly ordinary. Put it in an ordinary pipe, and smoke it back to back on an ordinary day, repeat in an ongoing ordinary kind of way.
Neither did I Grangerous. Virginia tends to destroy my tongue and the roof of my mouth if I don't smoke it with either a 9mm or 6mm charcoal filter. Winchester on the other hand is smooth as butter on raisin and cinnamon toast. My youngest really likes the smell of it when I smoke it. When he's hanging with me in the living room at night we will watch MASH and The Andy Griffith Show. If I light up my pipe with Winchester he gets really comfortable and falls asleep.Burley Flake #2 is a favorite.
Winchester and Pegasus are apples and oranges. Totally different animals.
I didn’t expect to enjoy Red Virginia.
It has a very likable room note. I didn’t know that until a friend was smoking some Winchester. It’s a whole different experience being exposed to someone else smoking vs yourself. Amazing how the perception differs when perspective shifts from smoker to bystander.Neither did I Grangerous. Virginia tends to destroy my tongue and the roof of my mouth if I don't smoke it with either a 9mm or 6mm charcoal filter. Winchester on the other hand is smooth as butter on raisin and cinnamon toast. My youngest really likes the smell of it when I smoke it. When he's hanging with me in the living room at night we will watch MASH and The Andy Griffith Show. If I light up my pipe with Winchester he gets really comfortable and falls asleep.
This one has a casing that offsets the acidity to make the Virginia smoke smoother. But, for someone who is passionate about reds, it might be disappointing. For some the sweet acidity is the appeal of reds.Virginia tends to destroy my tongue and the roof of my mouth
The casing is very subtle and the creamy sweetness of the cavendish makes the casing hard to pick out. I'm almost getting a gentle kiss of vanilla. I'm smoking it now and it is just fantastic. I've almost bought some a few times and now I'm glad I did. It also has a surprisingly substantial amount of nicotine.Been slowly smoking through a bowl of the fresh stuff I got as opposed to a 2oz sample bag. Even better than before. I've tasted everything from coconut to coffee. Still haven't drawn a conclusion about the top flavor, if present.
I have a pound aging. I need to order another pound to smoke. I'm a burley smoker through and through, Prince Albert was my everyday for years and Sir Walter Raleigh regular before that. Red Virginia used to give me the spins, but I started smoking Samuel Gawith Full Virginia Flake so I think I gained a tolerance to nicotine over the years. Anyway, I think Winchester is a masterpiece of a what a Codger blend is. Even though it's not that old, it does have an aroma that reminds me of being a kid in the late 1970s over my grandparents house.Picked up a pound of Winchester on sale at SP. Jarred it up tonight so I now have some for ageing experiments. Some will be smoked in the near term, of course.
Yep. I'll be ordering 4 lbs minimum here soon to seal up in mylar.Thanks, Grangerous and others, for turning me on to this excellent blend. Another flat of Mason jars is clearly needed.
I suffer from this same affliction and through a lot of experimenting I've decided it's not actually the acidity, it's the opposite. Everybody's mouth chemistry is a little different and I think a lot of "tongue bite" and overall mouth discomfort is caused by tipping your mouths acidity too far in one direction.Virginia tends to destroy my tongue and the roof of my mouth if I don't smoke it with either a 9mm or 6mm charcoal filter.