Pipe Tobacco You Don’t Initially Like?

Log in

SmokingPipes.com Updates

Watch for Updates Twice a Week

PipesMagazine Approved Sponsor

Drucquers Banner

PipesMagazine Approved Sponsor

PipesMagazine Approved Sponsor

PipesMagazine Approved Sponsor

PipesMagazine Approved Sponsor

Drucquers Banner

Etipton

Starting to Get Obsessed
Feb 24, 2021
180
308
Tennessee
I bought a tin of Peterson my mixture 965 back in the spring of this year after hearing rave reviews about this blend. I am a fan of English blends so I assumed this one would be better than your average English, upon opening the tin the smell was great smoky, leathery and a creamy...needless to say I was excited to try it out. Almost instantly the blend was bitter and harsh and it seemed for absolutely no reason. I was so disappointed I can’t even articulate the feeling but hearing from others to jar a blend up and let it rest for some time if it didn’t appeal right away. Well tonight after sitting jarred for some seven months it is like night and day. Today this blend smoked and tasted just like the first tin note smelled delicious Smokey and smooth. So I can attest first hand if you don’t initially like a blend for some reason jar it up and let it think about what it has done to your pallet and in my case with this particular blend it can and did here return a smooth well behaved smoke that I will be acquiring more of in the future.
 

ashdigger

Lifer
Jul 30, 2016
11,392
70,233
61
Vegas Baby!!!
I’ve lost track of how many tobacco blends I didn’t like at first try. Then I put them aside for a couple months and liked them.

The only pipe tobacco I hated more is Haddos Delight. It tasted like smoking a decomposed and barbecued hippie that was marinated in Hawaiian Tropic
 

Grangerous

Lifer
Dec 8, 2020
3,459
14,300
East Coast USA
There are tobaccos I’ve really liked and over the course of time, lost interest.

Carter Hall, for example, is a fantastic blend, but I seldom reach for it. Tastes do change.

I’ve grown fond of very mild, lightly topped burley blends. More than slightly topped I don’t care for.

The closest I can come to the OP’s query would be Pegasus. I bought two ounces a year ago. I never disliked Pegasus but it wasn’t an instant favorite. —- I like it enough now that I purchased a pound.

On edit. MM965 was the first wow factor blend for me and I still appreciate it. But Latakia isn’t something I crave.
 
Last edited:

sablebrush52

The Bard Of Barlings
Jun 15, 2013
20,705
48,981
Southern Oregon
jrs457.wixsite.com
Different strokes for different folks. I love Haddo's. It's nectar for the Gods.

On the other hand, my impression of Germain's version of Balkan Sobranie is that it smells and tastes like gasoline infused puppy farts. I've tried to like it, but I can't smoke more than a few puffs without longing for death. Yet, people are shelling out $40 to $50 bucks for a tin of this poo, which demonstrates the power of a famous name and badly reproduced tin art.

I also haven't warmed to Penznace. Oh well...
 

didimauw

Moderator
Staff member
Jul 28, 2013
10,665
37,352
SE WI
Sounds just like me. — Pegasus and Granger. I find myself craving either.

I have no shortage of choices. Close to 60 blends. — It’s just rare for me to want anything else.
The simple life is the best. Last night I threw all the blends I don't smoke in a tote and down to the basent it went. Taking up too much space. I get overwhelmed by too many options.
 

mingc

Lifer
Jun 20, 2019
4,235
12,559
The Big Rock Candy Mountains
I did not like Virginia No. 1 and John Aylesbury Latakia Blend when I first tried them. They both bit me like crazy so I set them aside. I waited over 10 years and now they don't bite. I have no idea if it's because of changes to the leaf or to my tongue.

I also dislike Prince Albert because it reminds me too much of cigarettes. I've no interest in revisiting it.
 

peregrinus

Lifer
Aug 4, 2019
1,205
3,794
Pacific Northwest
McClelland Christmas Cheer.
When I first tried CC twenty-five years ago it was a fresh off the line tin. I popped the lid, marveled at the “ketchup” smell and filled a Comoy billiard. It was difficult to keep lit and once I got going l wasn’t impressed, it burned hot and with little flavor.
I set the tin aside for a nearly year.
After some advice and encouragement from another pipe smoker I tried it again only this time I rubbed it out completely and let it dry 24hrs. then loaded a pipe.
With the tin having sat opened for quite awhile, and then completely drying it to crispy before smoking it slowly, it was sublime. I bought more, lots more.
 
Jun 9, 2018
4,396
14,128
England
I bought a tin of Peterson my mixture 965 back in the spring of this year after hearing rave reviews about this blend. I am a fan of English blends so I assumed this one would be better than your average English, upon opening the tin the smell was great smoky, leathery and a creamy...needless to say I was excited to try it out. Almost instantly the blend was bitter and harsh and it seemed for absolutely no reason. I was so disappointed I can’t even articulate the feeling but hearing from others to jar a blend up and let it rest for some time if it didn’t appeal right away. Well tonight after sitting jarred for some seven months it is like night and day. Today this blend smoked and tasted just like the first tin note smelled delicious Smokey and smooth. So I can attest first hand if you don’t initially like a blend for some reason jar it up and let it think about what it has done to your pallet and in my case with this particular blend it can and did here return a smooth well behaved smoke that I will be acquiring more of in the future.
Jarring and then waiting 6 months or so can make a hell of a difference to a tobacco in my opinion. It being exposed to the air must change it in some way.
 

makhorkasmoker

Part of the Furniture Now
Aug 17, 2021
756
1,968
Central Florida
For me, a tobacco that makes me think "Wow! That's something!" when i first try it will often begin to bore me after a few bowls. Billy Budd, for example, was this way for me. Many blends that rely on a lot of bold flavored latakia, cigar leaf, perique, or for that matter aromatic elements, can be that way for me.

On the other hand, if a tobacco seems plain, boring, or one dimensional when I first try it, it's often because it is a tobacco I need to spend some time getting to know. I have learned to give tobaccos like these a chance. I may have to smoke many bowls before I begin to appreciate them, but the rewards are very much worth it. Dark birds eye, for me, is a tobacco like this. I'm now smoking C&D Dark Burley mainly--a tobacco I thought at first was dull but which I now find many-faceted and nuanced.

This is not always true though. I smoked almost an entire tin of Royal Yacht before I concluded I just didn't care for it. It was dull from beginning to end for me.
 
  • Like
Reactions: stogie37 and JOHN72

briarbuck

Lifer
Nov 24, 2015
2,293
5,581
Heinrich Cru series #4. Never a fan of anything aero, but I really have grown to like it on occasion. A little orange and vanilla. Nice stuff.
 
  • Like
Reactions: JOHN72