When you buy a brand new briar pipe, take it out of the box, and fire it up, nine times out of ten by the bottom of the bowl, the pipe has got hot, it may snap or crackle, it sweats, and it tastes like -briar sap-.
Sometimes they don’t seem to need break in, but most pipes do.
And the worst, nastiest, most painful part of break in consists of the last quarter inch and the vast majority of my used pipes are not smoked even once allllll the way down, to where ashes come through the draft hole.
Which of course, I invariably do finish the chore of break in.
Maybe five per cent (?) of pipes not made of Algerian briar are dynamite smokers on the first bowl and get better at the bottom. The last one I got in that did that was a 5 point Two Star Lee Poker I filled with Half and Half at Gardner Cemetery in Wheatland and was still savoring at Humansville where I bought them out of $3.50 pouches of Half and Half.
Then I looked at the bottom of the pipe and it had colored a dark reddish brown. I thought I’d toasted the briar, but it was just coloring. There’s sort of a black line above the bottom and the flat bottom of the Poker has colored all the way back to the stem.
I keep that Lee Poker in my car. It still tastes good, although there’s no -briar sap- taste and it no longer gets so hot I’m worried I’ll toast it.
All Lees have a sugary sweet taste in break in and that’s gone too.
What is that -briar- taste we experience during break in unless it’s from -sap-? It’s not from the tobacco, because keep smoking and that -briar- taste leaves. It’s not the sweet oils used for oil curing because that taste fades away, too.
What Marx, and Dunhill (for Shell Briar) and Mincer did in order to sell high dollar pipes was select ancient Algerian briar, as hard as it was to work into pipes, and use it.
Marx turned the gnarly appearance of Algerian briar into a selling point to women who wanted their escorts or their sons or brothers to be rugged outdoor men of action.
These were the Isotoner gloves, Egyptian cotton shirts, and pure silk ties of their day, an accessory she had him buy or she bought for him, when they were in style.
1946
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1947
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But all Marx ads also refer to the well seasoned old briar used, that made a Marx last for years,,,,no mentioning the Algerian briar would color, not even stamping Algerian on the pipe, at all.
They all have first smoke break in and they don’t get hot on that one, just a whiff of -briar- at the bottom, that tastes good.
After that a Marx gets better and better with use, likely to a point somewhere when the tars totally saturate the briar.
There is some organic material inside Algerian briar, that I call sap, that the heat of the ember releases, and subtly flavors the smoke a little.
It also produces beautiful coloring on the outside if beeswax is applied, faster, but eventually they all look like this.
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If you bought that A sized bent pipe the cake will just fall off when scraped. It would clean up to new. The stem could be heated and rebent.
It is a dynamite smoker, too. Look at the lines across it.
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There’s something inside that makes it that way, whatever name you give it.