Jim's GLP Ellipsis Flake (Zeitgeist Collection) Review.

Log in

SmokingPipes.com Updates

Watch for Updates Twice a Week

PipesMagazine Approved Sponsor

PipesMagazine Approved Sponsor

PipesMagazine Approved Sponsor

PipesMagazine Approved Sponsor

PipesMagazine Approved Sponsor

JimInks

Sultan of Smoke
Aug 31, 2012
70,145
801,963
This goes on sale Tuesday, April 29 at 6 p.m. EST.

The 31 Farms St. James perique provides an abundance of mildly sweet and very sour dried plums, spice, dried figs, floralness, bread, earth, wood, light dried raisins, and some smoked mesquite. It takes a modest lead. The aged Izmirs offer plenty of floralness, incense, herbs, earth, wood, vegetation, spice, some sharp, bitter sourness, and mild buttery sweetness. The Canadian bright Virginia produces a lot of tart fermented citrus, sour lemon, floralness, grass, bread, vegetation, spice, mild sugar and light acidity. The Izmirs and bright Virginia are virtually equal in their effect as their most potent aspects (sourness and citrus respectively) propel them to important supporting player positions. The aged red Virginia contributes a moderate amount of tart and tangy citrus, grass, bread, mild sugar, earth, wood, floralness, and light darker fruit, cream and spice. It’s a couple of notches below the bright Virginia and Izmirs. The aged white burley supplies a moderate amount of earth, wood, nuts, floralness, sour sharpness, mild spice, vegetation, and cocoa. Due to its nut and sour qualities, the white burley nearly equals the red Virginia. The unsweetened Dominican black cavendish imparts very mild tart and tangy citrus, vegetative grass, earth, wood, peat, sugar, leather, cream, and light smoky cigar as a condiment.

The strength and taste levels are a rung past the center of medium to strong. The nic-hit is a step below that center. No chance of bite or harshness, although it does sport a few rough edges. The mildly moist broken flakes are easily manipulated for your personal preference, and need no dry time. Well balanced with deeply rich complexity, it burns cool, clean, and slow with a consistent fruity, sweet and sour, spicy, mesquite-like, floral, sugary, mildly nutty, creamy, slightly smoky, rather savory, zesty flavor that extends to the pleasantly long lasting after taste. The room note is pungent. Leaves little dampness in the bowl, and requires a couple more than an average number of relights. Not an all day smoke, but it is repeatable. I suggest a round, and no more than medium size bowl for this mixture. Four stars out of four.
©Jim Amash 2025.
 

JimInks

Sultan of Smoke
Aug 31, 2012
70,145
801,963
May be a nice step into orientals for me…there’s a lot of the other things I like in there.
Thanks for the great breakdown!
You're very welcome. This was not the easiest blend to review, which is why it's longer than my usual ones. Well balanced, complex blend reviewing can be challenging, and figuring out the interplay of the Izmirs and Canadian bright Va., and how they fit into the overall experience took a lot of note taking and thinking. The perique is not quite as prominent as one might expect due the aspects of those two varietals and the red Va. Decoding what the red Va. brings to the experience (mainly sweetness) wasn't easy either. But, I feel confident that I got it right.
 
Last edited:

JimInks

Sultan of Smoke
Aug 31, 2012
70,145
801,963
I didn't notice cigar leaf on Greg's blend breakdown, where did you find that Jim? Thanks
From C&D. It's barely noticeable and was used to add a little soft creaminess to the blend. The light cigar note is something I have tasted in non-cigar Dominican leaf so I wouldn't necessarily assume that the BC was made from that. Since I didn't know one way or another, I went with the description in the photo that you see.
zPO_K53V.jpg


Also here: Ellipsis Flake By GL Pease - https://www.chesapeakepipeandcigar.com/ellipsis-flake-by-gl-pease/
 
Last edited: