Yes! Even if it's not fully cavendish, but just stoved for 4 hours, they burley is way sweeter and smoother.I’ve found that making unsweetened cavendish with burley brings out a lot of the natural sweetness, more so if you can press it afterwards.
How do you make this?Yes! Even if it's not fully cavendish, but just stoved for 4 hours, they burley is way sweeter and smoother.
There’s a variety of ways to do this. I use a slow cooker. I seal the burley in a jar with half its weight in water and then cook on low from 5-12 hours. Once cool I press into a cake.How do you make this?
I just use a tin loaf baking pan and spray the tobacco with water to moisten. Cover tight with tin foil and throw in the oven at 200f. Check on it after 15-30 min and make sure it’s moist enough. You can spray your syrup mix instead of just only water. I prefer this method as there is no risk of glass breaking and ruining your batch. You can also loosen the foil or remove it at then end to dry it out a bit.How do you make this?
Good idea. But maybe try putting it into a mason jar and using a crock pot.I just use a tin loaf baking pan and spray the tobacco with water to moisten. Cover tight with tin foil and throw in the oven at 200f. Check on it after 15-30 min and make sure it’s moist enough. You can spray your syrup mix instead of just only water. I prefer this method as there is no risk of glass breaking and ruining your batch. You can also loosen the foil or remove it at then end to dry it out a bit.
I do this stoving to the whole leaf burleys I get and the difference is night and day. Many commercial burleys use some kind of toasting, steaming or heat treatment.
Age is your friend. We have the luxury of buying tins of tobaccos that have already been aged a bit before they pack and seal them. Fresh tobacco is always a tad harsh. Just jar them up and let them set for a year. They’ll act right.Great info Cosmic!
I've been experimenting with casings and cookings because my availability of whole leaf tobacco is very limited. I only have Burley and Virginia of one kind. And I like their flavor, but they are a bit harsh for me. So that's why I try to improve them a little. But otherwise I really favor the approach of using tobaccos and keeping them natural.
Yes! I agree that they change a lot by pressingHave you tried pressing them? I know I sound like a nag, but I’ve found it is the one process (apart from time) that makes a significant difference
That's exactly my problem: a bit hard on the throat and make me cough. Great to now that it is a matter of age. Although I'm quite impatient as well hahaIt’s especially hard when you grow it, because I’m all excited to start smoking my own, but waiting does make for a better product.
my first year to grow, I was so disappointed that my Virginias ripped my throat out that I packed them in a cooler and tossed them into the barn. About five years later I stumbled upon them having forgotten all about them. I tried them, and I was wowed by how smooth and sweet they had become. Probably one year would have been enough, but they definitely smoked better after five.