Some blends being muted in a meer is something that’s always puzzled me. Conventional wisdom says the opposite should be true.
I am discovering that while the meerschaum is very consistent in smoking dynamics and flavor of each blend, the flavor variance between meerschaum and briar/cob can be quite large. Certainly more so than the difference just between briar and cob. I have found that Burley forward blends in particular(which I have been favoring) generally do not perform well, and taste flatter than Florida.
The difference seems to be greater than just a specific flavor imparted by the material, as the entire flavor profile can change. Charing Cross has been very interesting in this regard. In briar and cob, I get a very pronounced zesty, almost citrusy tartness - this is entirely absent in meerschaum. The only explanation I can fathom is that the average burn temperature is different, or the moisture level is lower on average during smoking(which could also influence burn temp)?
At this point Gaslight is the only blend that seems to really blow my mind in the meer. The rest have been kind of "meh", and I find when I follow up with the same blend in briar/cob I am usually more satisfied. It has been a fun experiment though, and has given me something to use as a valid excuse to smoke more :D