I’ve grown and flue cured some bright leaf with a lemony tastes, cherry red varietals that flue cure with hints of cherry, Japan8 has a natural licorice spice flavor, and various burleys with nutty tastes to earthy chocolate notes.
In wine tasting, teas, coffees, cigars, pipe tobaccos the only ways we have to convey differences in subtle flavors is to dissect the flavors and relate them in way a layman can understand. I mean if we said things like, tastes like arabica but more of a malic acid taste, most people wouldn’t know what that means. So we say citrusy with hints of apple.
Now, it took me a few years of patiently smoking slow, keeping a journal of tasting notes, and comparing one tobacco to another, same tobaccos in different pipes, different ages and different levels of humidity to really get the hang of tasting.
Also, how frequently you smoke matters to your ability to taste. If you only smoke once a week and have moderate to poor taste and olfactory memories, it might take you decades. In that case, I’d recommend smoking two pipes with different tobaccos together. Compare one to the other. Make mental notes. That might help one learn to at least differentiate flavors.
But, it depends also on how much you want to learn to taste. How passionate are you to learn.
But, there’s also some value in not. I mean, if you can’t taste the tea flavors in a stoved yellow Virginia, why not just smoke the cheapest tobaccos you can find?
But, we are all in this for different reason. So, YMMV