Hello fellow pipers,
As I have gotten into straight virginias and virginia/periques, and as I have listened to the Mike McNiel interviews on the pipesmag radioshow, I have become very interested in searching for blends with high sugar-content virginias, and those which are well-suited for aging. I'm sure many of you have done the same, but I've encountered some difficulties. I guess I should say a few things explicitly before I go any further:
For one, I'm not trying to find a McClelland replica, just trying to follow a thread of something I picked up Mike's numerous interviews with Brian. Mike mentions that the virginias he used in some of his blends were high in sugars, percentages in the low 20s. I think he also mentioned they were Canadian leaf.
For another, I think I understand Mike McNiel's contention that the elimination of leaf auctions and the need to automate leaf harvest, which ended more selective partial harvesting based on ripeness made it harder to find very specific grades, probably including those with highest sugar content.
To round things off, we all probably know that CRF lists the exact leaf grades and sugar content for each. I've smoked the 2023 CRF w/P, and it blew my socks off - but it's sugar content topped out at 18%, just a bit short of what Mike mentioned. So here's what I'm getting at:
Sugar content in the tin is important, right? The higher it is, the sweeter the leaf (I'm not interested in the inverse nicotine relationship to sugar or burning characteristics of higher sugar content for this conversation). But things change in the can, right? Aerobic and anaerobic fermentation causes an increase in sugar content for virginias, which I think is due to the conversion of starches to simpler sugars that our palates can perceive.
I guess what I am is curious about is what we want to look for when we consider what to age based on specifically fermentation - assuming the quality of the leaf is good, assuming correct ripeness and reasonably highest sugar content at time of tinning, is there a measurable out there for starch content? Would that be something worth trying to find out and help us understand the potential of an individual blend, aside from the usual considerations we all mostly know about? Does anybody have any examples of something like this, blends that are currently in production that are maybe even designed with this in mind?
Not all, or probably any, of the current producers of tobacco can afford to hold onto leaf for the mysterious voodoo fermentation (maybe using perique as a kick-starter in the center of the cakes, and removed later?) and (probably) obscenely long aging and repetitive sweating of McClelland, so I get that they have to move their product through the building to pay the bills and I'm just looking for some things that have the potential for fermentation magic, and not just because the manufacturer says so in the copy they wrote for their products.
Cheers from the bottom of the lake!
Lakebottom Piper
As I have gotten into straight virginias and virginia/periques, and as I have listened to the Mike McNiel interviews on the pipesmag radioshow, I have become very interested in searching for blends with high sugar-content virginias, and those which are well-suited for aging. I'm sure many of you have done the same, but I've encountered some difficulties. I guess I should say a few things explicitly before I go any further:
For one, I'm not trying to find a McClelland replica, just trying to follow a thread of something I picked up Mike's numerous interviews with Brian. Mike mentions that the virginias he used in some of his blends were high in sugars, percentages in the low 20s. I think he also mentioned they were Canadian leaf.
For another, I think I understand Mike McNiel's contention that the elimination of leaf auctions and the need to automate leaf harvest, which ended more selective partial harvesting based on ripeness made it harder to find very specific grades, probably including those with highest sugar content.
To round things off, we all probably know that CRF lists the exact leaf grades and sugar content for each. I've smoked the 2023 CRF w/P, and it blew my socks off - but it's sugar content topped out at 18%, just a bit short of what Mike mentioned. So here's what I'm getting at:
Sugar content in the tin is important, right? The higher it is, the sweeter the leaf (I'm not interested in the inverse nicotine relationship to sugar or burning characteristics of higher sugar content for this conversation). But things change in the can, right? Aerobic and anaerobic fermentation causes an increase in sugar content for virginias, which I think is due to the conversion of starches to simpler sugars that our palates can perceive.
I guess what I am is curious about is what we want to look for when we consider what to age based on specifically fermentation - assuming the quality of the leaf is good, assuming correct ripeness and reasonably highest sugar content at time of tinning, is there a measurable out there for starch content? Would that be something worth trying to find out and help us understand the potential of an individual blend, aside from the usual considerations we all mostly know about? Does anybody have any examples of something like this, blends that are currently in production that are maybe even designed with this in mind?
Not all, or probably any, of the current producers of tobacco can afford to hold onto leaf for the mysterious voodoo fermentation (maybe using perique as a kick-starter in the center of the cakes, and removed later?) and (probably) obscenely long aging and repetitive sweating of McClelland, so I get that they have to move their product through the building to pay the bills and I'm just looking for some things that have the potential for fermentation magic, and not just because the manufacturer says so in the copy they wrote for their products.
Cheers from the bottom of the lake!
Lakebottom Piper