Cutting Crumble Cakes

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Effortlessdepths

Part of the Furniture Now
Feb 7, 2020
507
1,067
Micanopy, FL
I have a freshly popped tin of C&D Oak Alley (forgot how much I love this blend) and I wanted to smoke it so badly I didn't even look at it close enough to see that it was a crumble cake and not a plug. So I pawed at it, grabbed a knife and cut slivers as if it was a plug. I noticed what I was doing after the fact, but I certainly loaded up my pipe anyway of course. I have to say, it's smoking great, very flavorful. I'll have to pinch off a bowl another time and see which way seems better to my tastes. Anyone have some perspective on this? Cutting a crumble cake?
 

danimalia

Lifer
Sep 2, 2015
4,502
27,395
42
San Francisco Bay Area, USA
I have a freshly popped tin of C&D Oak Alley (forgot how much I love this blend) and I wanted to smoke it so badly I didn't even look at it close enough to see that it was a crumble cake and not a plug. So I pawed at it, grabbed a knife and cut slivers as if it was a plug. I noticed what I was doing after the fact, but I certainly loaded up my pipe anyway of course. I have to say, it's smoking great, very flavorful. I'll have to pinch off a bowl another time and see which way seems better to my tastes. Anyone have some perspective on this? Cutting a crumble cake?
I've done that before, not realizing I was dealing with a cake instead of a plug. Since I rub out my flakes and plugs in the end anyway, I don't recall any real differences with how it smoked.

As for Oak Alley smoking so well, that is because Oak Alley is good as hell! :LOL: Oak Alley just delivers on all fronts: flavor, body and strength. It is a masterpiece blend, IMO.
 

F4RM3R

Part of the Furniture Now
Nov 28, 2019
567
2,517
39
Canada
When it's a coarse cut dense crumble cake I like to make a wide cut strip, like a bit bigger than 1/8". I find that if i dont cut it sometimes the bigger flat pieces can restrict airflow in smaller pipes.