Gawith Best Brown Flake

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sjfine

Part of the Furniture Now
Mar 4, 2012
653
5
I am disappointed to report that I am currently smoking the last bowl of my first tin of BBF.
Great stuff. Gonna get more today.

 

bluesmoke

Starting to Get Obsessed
Jun 21, 2013
192
8
I've got lots of BBF in reserve. I've said it before, but sometimes it's like sucking on brownies right out of the oven.

 

sjfine

Part of the Furniture Now
Mar 4, 2012
653
5
Can you elaborate, please, on "Great stuff"?
I'm afraid that I can't. I am wholly inarticulate when it comes to describing tobacco. Or food, for that matter. All I can say is that I am now hard-pressed to enjoy some of my aromatics, and may shortly be looking to trade.

 

brdavidson

Lifer
Dec 30, 2012
2,017
6
My #2 favourite tobacco. I just bought 1.5 lbs of the stuff along with the 6 tins I had already in the cellar. I plan on continuing to buy more and cellaring several more pounds of it.

 

brdavidson

Lifer
Dec 30, 2012
2,017
6
I'm not great at it either, however as I've passed my first year as a pipe smoker I'm beginning to pick out the nuances of the tobacco and can describe them a bit better. I think a lot of that comes from better technique allowing the true flavour to come through. Not saying your technique is bad, but mine sure was!

 

judcole

Lifer
Sep 14, 2011
7,470
39,080
Detroit
I smoke a lot of BBF. I have been doing so long enough that, now, I am only smoking 5 year old tins. I just popped one yesterday that I set aside in the fall of 2008. I have a tin in the cellar from 2005 I expect to tap next year.
BBF is a smooth, mellow smoke with a slightly sweet,grassy taste to it. Smooth Virginia sweet - not stoved sweet, or aromatic sweet. Just good, solid Virginia tobacco sweet.

 

sjfine

Part of the Furniture Now
Mar 4, 2012
653
5
I fear, and am likewise confident, that I will never be able to smoke 5-year-old tobacco, except by accident.
Then again, I have some older Cuban cigars. And they are amazing.
By the way, is bulk BBF as good as tinned? I have read that some tins (like Erinore Flake) are much better than their bulked counterparts.

 

rmbittner

Lifer
Dec 12, 2012
2,759
2,024
I've got some tins of BBF in the cellar, but I haven't tried it yet. I am a big fan, though, of SG's Brown Flake. Apparently, it's not the "Best" :) but it's a really enjoyable VA/burley flake, available in both scented and unscented versions. (The "un" will still have a tiny bit of scent in the first puffs, though, since both versions are produced on the same equipment.)
sjfine: My personal take is that tins are always better than bulk. Sometimes the blends are identical, but that's not always the case. And even when they are exactly the same, I think the tinning process really helps pull a blend together better. And, of course, tins are easy to cellar for long-term storage. BUT, I notice from your Profile page that all of your favorite blends are aromatics. Aromatics typically exhibit very little change with age; if you never have the chance to smoke a 5-year-old aromatic, you're really not missing out on any of the flavor that you would get from a fresh tin of the same blend. It's also possible -- and I'm not primarily an aromatic smoker, so YMMV -- that you'd notice very little difference between a bulk aromatic and a tinned version of the same blend. But more experienced aro smokers here would know better than I.
Bob

 

salewis

Can't Leave
Jan 27, 2011
412
0
I love Gawith's BBF. There was a question on another pipe forum about what tobaccos do you always come back to when trying other blends. My response was:
Gawith's BBF

McClelland's Blackwood Flake

Gawith's Squadron Leader

 

sjfine

Part of the Furniture Now
Mar 4, 2012
653
5
BUT, I notice from your Profile page that all of your favorite blends are aromatics. Aromatics typically exhibit very little change with age; if you never have the chance to smoke a 5-year-old aromatic, you're really not missing out on any of the flavor that you would get from a fresh tin of the same blend.
I have read that aromatics do not benefit from cellaring. And, the improbability of my being able to smoke aged tobacco is a result of several factors: lack of money to get the collection started; the lack of space to keep it; and the frequency of my smoking (all day, almost every day - I am addicted to anything that I do twice, and like) - to name a few.
Right now, I have a few pounds of MacBaren London Blend (because it is being discontinued), but I smoke it often, so my supply will not likely last very long. I also am only now expanding my horizons into virginias and burleys, so I'm still experimenting with new blends.
And, I will be changing my profile to reflect my evolving preferences.
The search for my (other and new) favorites continues.
Wheeeeeeee.

 
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