Do all tins of the Smyrna No 1 come with the uncut samples of the "so small, so fragrant" Smyrna Leaf?
Also, the blend is an enjoyable smoke,but I find the Virginia to overpower / hide the delicate oriental leaf.
Mary McNiel describes Smyrna as -
"...the most aromatic of all the Orientals," which "grow dense and extremely fragrant in this dry country moistened by Mediterranean Sea breezes."
The company's Smyrna No. 1 features a whole tobacco leaf at the top of the tin to exhibit firsthand its delicate size and the labor-intensive air-curing process. Each petite leaf is strung carefully by hand and hung up to air cure, a process revealed by a tiny hole that is visible in the leaf at the top of the tin. The fact that an entire tobacco leaf fits easily in the tin is illuminating. These tiny leaves typically reach less than 2 inches long when ripe for the picking - minute by comparison to its counterparts in the Western world. As McNiel points out, "An American leaf grown in rich soil can reach a yard long," when harvested.
From John: Orientals are generally lumped together as a group. The few individual tobaccos I hear about are Latakia and Smyrna, both of which I enjoy in blends. Are there any other varietals that have a distinct taste that we should look out for as having a unique taste?
A: That’s quite a tin of worms you’ve opened, and it would take pages to address the subject fully, but I’ll do my best to provide some sort of meaningful synopsis. Different types of oriental tobaccos are grown in a variety of regions, and their unique characteristics will be determined both by the tobacco’s genotypic nature and the conditions under which its grown. Just as virginia tobacco grown in Africa will result in a product that will be very different from the same strain grown in Virginia, an izmir leaf grown in Bulgaria will be different from the same seed grown in Izmir, Turkey, known as Smyrna in Latin, from which it gets its name. And, the fact that some use the Latin names, and others the Greek or Turkish names for the same tobaccos adds to the overall confusion.
The sad fact is that it’s very difficult to get single strains of oriental leaf in the quantities we need for the tiny pipe tobacco market. Most of the farmers will contract with the big cigarette tobacco brokers, and their varietal leaf ends up in a sort of homogenous product simply known as “oriental” tobacco, or sometimes “Turkish,” despite the fact that much of the leaf is grown in Greece, Bulgaria, Macedonia, and so on. It’s easy enough to get this in steady supply, and it’s relatively consistent, so we try to be happy with what we have, whilst simultaneously dreaming of a day when all the myriad varietals will rain down upon us like a relentless shower of Tetris pieces. It ain’t gonna happen.
Once in a while, though, a few bales of something really interesting fall off a camel drawn wagon, and finds its way into the pipe tobacco market, a flea on the back of vast cigarette empire. We all jump for joy, make blends with it, and then immediately start wondering what we’ll do when it runs out, hoping that something equally exciting will come along to replace it. Despite the promises of leaf suppliers, it’s a constant search and rescue mission to keep oriental tobaccos in stock in the grades we want. So, yes, there are many wonderful oriental tobaccos. Most of them we will never see, other than blended into cigarettes, which makes me cranky...
Once in a while, though, a few bales of something really interesting fall off a camel drawn wagon, and finds its way into the pipe tobacco market, a flea on the back of vast cigarette empire. We all jump for joy, make blends with it, and then immediately start wondering what we’ll do when it runs out, hoping that something equally exciting will come along to replace it. Despite the promises of leaf suppliers, it’s a constant search and rescue mission to keep oriental tobaccos in stock in the grades we want...
Thank you for finding this MLC. It clearly explains the reasoning in placing the leaves in the tin.Each petite leaf is strung carefully by hand and hung up to air cure, a process revealed by a tiny hole that is visible in the leaf at the top of the tin. The fact that an entire tobacco leaf fits easily in the tin is illuminating.
But how does it taste?????I opened the tin of Smyrna No. 1 tonight to see if it's true, and...it is true.