Monday night at a little country grocery store I bought a twist of Cotton Bowl. My grandfather who smoked, dipped, chewed and snorted tobacco for all but his first six of his 92 years on this earth both chewed and smoked Cotton Boll twist, smoked factory and roll your own cigarettes, pipes, cigars, chewed leaf, twist, and plug and dipped and snorted snuff, sometimes all at the same time. He’d even dry out his discarded chaw in coffee cans, and smoke that. He claimed Cotton Boll twist was the same as the homegrown “long green” he started off on about 1886.
To smoke, cut off a half inch or so with a pocket knife and crumble and cut it up, and fill your pipe.
To me it tastes and smokes like Five Brothers, but for adult consumers.
It delivers the nicotine hit of Gaslight minus the catfish bait smell.
This is pure, clean, strong, excellent burley tobacco. It tastes good, like tobacco, and I want more of it.
It doesn’t bite, but it kicks.
Most tobacco companies do not use this strong of burley for blending pipe tobacco, and it’s a pity they don’t.
To smoke, cut off a half inch or so with a pocket knife and crumble and cut it up, and fill your pipe.
To me it tastes and smokes like Five Brothers, but for adult consumers.
It delivers the nicotine hit of Gaslight minus the catfish bait smell.
This is pure, clean, strong, excellent burley tobacco. It tastes good, like tobacco, and I want more of it.
It doesn’t bite, but it kicks.
Most tobacco companies do not use this strong of burley for blending pipe tobacco, and it’s a pity they don’t.