Strange Lingering Taste. Bad Tobacco?

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harry_fisher

Lurker
Nov 4, 2024
2
13
Ohio
Hi all!

I'm experienced enough to know what the problem isn't, but still beginner enough not to know what it is, and more importantly how to fix it. It started when I picked up a briar pipe I hadn't smoked for about 6 months. The last time I had smoked it I must have left in a rush and forgotten about it, because there was nearly a full bowl of Peterson's Univerity Flake sitting in it, from 6 months ago. Of course, the tobacco was dry and brittle as could be, so I emptied it, did a basic alcohol-soaked-pipe-cleaner cleaning, gave the bowl a quick sniff, which rendered no unusual odors, and proceeded to fill it with more Uni Flake from the same tin as the one I had smoked 6 months ago (more on this later). A strange ashy feeling and taste struck my tongue immediately.

I am familiar with tongue bite, with ashy tastes associated with burning too hot, and with normal over-gunked icky flavors. This was not any of those. This is also not stem oxidation because the stem is acrylic. The sensation was of tiny particles of ash and/or dust hitting my tongue. It had a slight ashy taste, but more noticeable was the feeling of thousands of presumably microscopic particles landing on and sticking to my tongue. I removed the tobacco from the pipe, did a slightly more vigorous cleaning. After that, I found that even without any tobacco in the bowl these little mystery particles still seemed to be landing on my tongue if I drew through the empty pipe. I then reamed the cake out of the bowl and performed the salt and alcohol treatment for about 36 hours. All to no avail. Granted, I used 80 proof whiskey as the alcohol, so perhaps a stronger alcohol and more time would do the trick. I assumed this was just stubborn, nearly microscopic residue from the tobacco that had been left to dry for such a long time.

It does not end here, however. Yesterday, I received a brand-new block meerschaum pipe. The first blend I tried in it was from that same tin of Uni Flake. Big mistake. Immediately, the same feel/taste. I will note that in my excitement over my new pipe, I did puff too hard and experienced some tongue bite, but this feeling was markedly separate from the feeling I am concerned about here. I had taken some preliminary empty-bowl puff of my new meer, so I can be sure that this taste was not present from the start.

Now about this particular tin of University Flake. I purchased this tin about the same time I initially stopped smoking the briar pipe. I opened it at this time, smoked a couple of flakes worth, accidentally left some in the bowl of said briar, and didn't touch it for 6 months. The tobacco remained inside its original tin, the lid was tight, but not airtight, because when I opened again recently it was drier than when new, in fact it seemed to have dried just a bit to what I expected would be an optimal moisture level.

The conclusion that I have drawn so far is that the tin of tobacco went bad, and that is what caused the pipes to have this stubborn feeling and taste. There are no visible signs of mold that I can see, but perhaps there is some growing. The tobacco in the tin smells as it should. For a second I thought I picked up a slight musty smell, but it was so faint that it may have been my nose playing tricks on me.

So here are my questions from least important to most important:

1. Has anyone experienced something like this from a batch of tobacco that wasn't sealed properly for a while?
2. How can I remove this from the briar pipe? Should I continue to salt and alcohol clean, perhaps for a longer time and with stronger alcohol? I saw some old articles about using a retort for deep cleaning; a valid possibility, or too far?
3. How do I remove this from the meer? I have heard it's not a good idea to salt and alcohol meer. Here and there on the internet, I'll see something about placing it in an oven, but there is so much variability in both the recommended temperature and the duration that I wouldn't know where to start. Further, there is a plastic insert in the mortise for the stem to stick into and I'm not sure if that would melt in the heat. I could probably remove it, but only want to do so as a last resort.

Some final notes:

-I did once experience a taste and feel similar to or the same as this in an estate pipe that hadn't been cleaned for perhaps 30 years. That pipe I set aside after one smoke and never touched again.
-It is not only the stummels that are affected, the taste is present in both stems (both acrylic) when drawn on, separated from the stummels. At this point, I have probably run fifty pipe cleaners through each. There is no visible residue coming out anymore. Sometimes it seems as though running the cleaners through the stems makes the taste worse. Both stems have also sat under running warm water for 10 minutes each.
-The bowl of the meer has a distinctly bad smell coming from it. It smells like a pipe that has been smoked many times and never cleaned. It is certainly much worse than the typical smell of a pipe after its first bowl of tobacco. Granted, I have not tried as hard to clean the bowl. All I have done is scrub some water-dampened paper towels inside the bowl, followed by dry ones, and given the walls a light, gentle scraping with a pipe tool.
-I am not worried about getting a little experimental with the briar pipe, I'm not too worried about it getting damaged at this point, because as it is, I can't smoke it anyway. The meer on the other hand, I really would like to save, given that it is brand new.
-I apologize for the length of this post. I just wanted to be as clear as possible. I have scoured the web for the last week and haven't come across anything mentioning this particular issue. Once the problem occured in my new pipe, decided I should reach out and make an inquiry specific to the problems I'm experiencing. Thank you for your patience!

Best Regards,
H.F.
 
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bullet08

Lifer
Nov 26, 2018
10,199
41,434
RTP, NC. USA
6 months off the pipe. How long have you been smoking before that? New smokers usually pick up ashe, staleness of cig tobacco when they start. Also, how long did you dry the pipe before smoking after the cleaning? Wet dogs smell worse than they ought to. Make sure the chamber is empty, dry it for 24 hours and try again. If Univ. Flake still doesn't work, try something with Lat.
 
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Chasing Embers

Captain of the Black Frigate
Nov 12, 2014
44,897
117,066
A strange ashy feeling and taste struck my tongue immediately.
Sounds like you left some gunk in the mortise.


Yesterday, I received a brand-new block meerschaum pipe. The first blend I tried in it was from that same tin of Uni Flake. Big mistake. Immediately, the same feel/taste.
New meerschaums always have meerschaum dust. Blow them out before smoking.


The bowl of the meer has a distinctly bad smell coming from it.
Also normal for some new meerschaum pipes.


I have heard it's not a good idea to salt and alcohol meer.
Lots of pipe myths and BS floating about.

 

sablebrush52

The Bard Of Barlings
Jun 15, 2013
20,704
48,962
Southern Oregon
jrs457.wixsite.com
Try a thorough cleaning of the briar pipe, alcohol and a shank brush for the airway, rinse in alcohol, scrub, rinse, until nothing appears to be coming out. Wadded up bristles for the mortise, which is where a lot of badness hides. Clean the hell out of it. For an acrylic stem, scrub out with warm water and pipe cleaners dipped in unscented dish washing gel, not alcohol. Sand down any cake in the chamber. Rinse the chamber and shank airway with warm water by drizzling the water through the chamber and out the end of the shank for about a minute. Run clean fluffies through the airway and mortise to dry them, and wadded up paper toweling for the chamber. Wait about 20 minutes before reassembling the pipe. Set aside for a few days.
Toss out the tobacco.
Try reloading with different tobacco and see how it smokes. If the problem persists, drive a stake through the pipe and bury it at midnight on a moonless night in unsanctified ground.
BTW, I’ve done the boiling alcohol retort treatment and it does pull all the crap out of a briar pipe, but you have to be very careful not to set fire to the pipe or yourself.
 
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proteus

Lifer
May 20, 2023
1,537
2,565
54
Connecticut (shade leaf tobacco country)
My guess is the tobacco needs to be packed tighter and allow less air. The tobacco is burning too well and completely and you want a smoulder. This creates bigger ash. Complete burning makes a finer ash. Your post was long so at this time of writing this I can't recall if you said your tobacco had the right moisture but perhaps it's too dry. For a relative measure use a wood moisture meter. Compare to other tobaccos you like and you might a relative difference all things being equal with the same meter. Try also with a filter pipe perhaps to keep fine ash from reaching you.
 

proteus

Lifer
May 20, 2023
1,537
2,565
54
Connecticut (shade leaf tobacco country)
Oh and another thing I use 190 proof grain alcohol on my all of my meers without issues. A problem could occur with using a lot of liquid and then using a hard implement because any fluid softens block meer. I believe meers are carved soft using water to make it easier.

To clean with alcohol is good. I'll usually use activated charcoal to remove odors. Fill the bowl with the fine black power and let sit a while with just the bowl opening and the stem opening covered with plastic wrap to keep outside air from getting it. Don't wrap the whole pipe. Maybe let it stay a week.
 
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