WLT Dark Air Cured

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makhorkasmoker

Part of the Furniture Now
Aug 17, 2021
750
1,943
Central Florida
Dark Air Cured is, as the name implies, an air cured tobacco that is dark, both in color and in tones of flavor. The one I tried, from Whole Leaf Tobacco, has a deep, bold, spicy flavor reminiscent of unsweetened espresso or only barely sweetened strong dark chocolate. It also has a very strong nicotine hit--stronger than 5 Brothers or Dark Bird's Eye or any of the C&D power burleys I have tried.

To be clear, dark air cured is not burley, nor is it "dark burley." It's air cured like a burley, but it comes from a different type of tobacco plant.

If you read up on Dark Air Cured on-line, you'll find it often described--or dismissed--as chew tobacco, and this is, nowadays, somewhat true. . I for one cannot find a commercial pipe blend for sale here in the U.S. that includes dark air cured. But you can buy it whole leaf from various places.


1724959258334.png

You will also read about it as a sort of perique substitute. Some smokers claim it has dried fruit flavors in the way perique sometimes does. This was not my experience. It might help deliver a perique-like nic hit, maybe a hint of pepper, but there the similarities end. I'm not saying these perique comparisons are untrue. There are many different varieties of dark air cured and I would suspect each of them has different qualities. the flavors of the one I tried are definitely savory.

My understanding is that dark air cured is one of the tobaccos used in old school continental blends--the stuff of Gauloise and Ducados cigarettes I used to smoke a long time ago, and also pipe blends like Scaferlati Caporal. In other words, this is the stuff that helped Maigret solve so many murders and Jean Paul Sartre to popularize existentialism.

It is also a form of the tobaccos smoked by country folk in areas of Latin America. If you read Born To Run--the account of how Tarahumara Indian runners kicked ass at the Leadville 100--you'll find them puffing dark air cured rollies before running a hundred miles of rough terrain at high elevations.

Some things to note: the leaves are thick, and this is not the easiest tobacco in the world to keep lit. On the bright side, because whole leaf products have no PG, it will dry out really fast, and you can rehydrate it equally fast to your liking. You can also adjust the cut to improve the burn.

some people to a lot of trouble making plugs and flakes. Maybe one day I will too.

Basically I removed the central rib
1724970210291.png

rolled it up fairly tight

1724970244656.png

, and sliced it into coins.

1724970312237.png

Then I cut the coins across a few times.

1724970369691.png

I describe the process because I was a bit intimidated by the prospect of dealing with whole leaves. Turned out to be pretty easy--with a sharp knife.

I'm enjoying dark air cured straight (in small bowls) and also in various blends. Well worth a try if you enjoy bold, strong tobacco.
 

kcghost

Lifer
May 6, 2011
15,141
25,665
77
Olathe, Kansas
If it is stronger than the blends you mention it might be interesting to try. I am a little concerned about why any of the larger tobacco companies haven't tried to make something from this tobacco. Is it because it is too difficult to grow or is the air curing too expensive??
 

makhorkasmoker

Part of the Furniture Now
Aug 17, 2021
750
1,943
Central Florida
If it is stronger than the blends you mention it might be interesting to try. I am a little concerned about why any of the larger tobacco companies haven't tried to make something from this tobacco. Is it because it is too difficult to grow or is the air curing too expensive??
I don’t know why they don’t use it, but my guess is that it is out of fashion. I can’t imagine it’s the cost of air curing. This stuff was $18 a pound or something like that. Even when you subtract the stem weight (not much) it’s cheaper than any bulk blender I’ve ever bought.

My theory is that there’s a whole world of air cured tobacco out there that used to be used in pipes and rarely is anymore. I’m also experimenting with Paraguay—another air cured rarely found in today’s blends
 
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brooklynpiper

Part of the Furniture Now
May 8, 2018
658
1,425
I think more obvious examples are GH dark flake and the like. GH Balkan contains a type of dark air cured, and I believe a lot of Balkans generally use it, particularly ones not using other alkaline ingredients like Kentucky etc. I think it probably makes it into most other things in very small amounts.

PS
My fav home blend blend is 5 flue - 3 DAC proportion
 

makhorkasmoker

Part of the Furniture Now
Aug 17, 2021
750
1,943
Central Florida
I think more obvious examples are GH dark flake and the like. GH Balkan contains a type of dark air cured, and I believe a lot of Balkans generally use it, particularly ones not using other alkaline ingredients like Kentucky etc. I think it probably makes it into most other things in very small amounts.

PS
My fav home blend blend is 5 flue - 3 DAC proportion
Just mixed roughly that ratio with some WLT ripe flue cured Virginia. Smoking it now. Nice!
 
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Friendly Piper

Might Stick Around
Sep 22, 2023
98
672
Northern Virginia
Very cool.
For the record, perique doesn't taste like dried fruit. It taste very astringent... like acidy. However, it does change the flavors of the tobaccos it is blended with, and some gold to red Virginias can take on a stewed fruit aroma when blended with perique.
^This. I was amazed after smoking a bunch of different blending Periques to find that none of them produced that amazing stewed fruit aroma . . . until I added Virginia of some sort, pressed it, and aged it a bit.
 

pantsBoots

Lifer
Jul 21, 2020
2,335
8,837
Dark Air Cured is, as the name implies, an air cured tobacco that is dark, both in color and in tones of flavor. The one I tried, from Whole Leaf Tobacco, has a deep, bold, spicy flavor reminiscent of unsweetened espresso or only barely sweetened strong dark chocolate. It also has a very strong nicotine hit--stronger than 5 Brothers or Dark Bird's Eye or any of the C&D power burleys I have tried.

To be clear, dark air cured is not burley, nor is it "dark burley." It's air cured like a burley, but it comes from a different type of tobacco plant.

If you read up on Dark Air Cured on-line, you'll find it often described--or dismissed--as chew tobacco, and this is, nowadays, somewhat true. . I for one cannot find a commercial pipe blend for sale here in the U.S. that includes dark air cured. But you can buy it whole leaf from various places.


View attachment 333080

You will also read about it as a sort of perique substitute. Some smokers claim it has dried fruit flavors in the way perique sometimes does. This was not my experience. It might help deliver a perique-like nic hit, maybe a hint of pepper, but there the similarities end. I'm not saying these perique comparisons are untrue. There are many different varieties of dark air cured and I would suspect each of them has different qualities. the flavors of the one I tried are definitely savory.

My understanding is that dark air cured is one of the tobaccos used in old school continental blends--the stuff of Gauloise and Ducados cigarettes I used to smoke a long time ago, and also pipe blends like Scaferlati Caporal. In other words, this is the stuff that helped Maigret solve so many murders and Jean Paul Sartre to popularize existentialism.

It is also a form of the tobaccos smoked by country folk in areas of Latin America. If you read Born To Run--the account of how Tarahumara Indian runners kicked ass at the Leadville 100--you'll find them puffing dark air cured rollies before running a hundred miles of rough terrain at high elevations.

Some things to note: the leaves are thick, and this is not the easiest tobacco in the world to keep lit. On the bright side, because whole leaf products have no PG, it will dry out really fast, and you can rehydrate it equally fast to your liking. You can also adjust the cut to improve the burn.

some people to a lot of trouble making plugs and flakes. Maybe one day I will too.

Basically I removed the central rib
View attachment 333121

rolled it up fairly tight

View attachment 333122

, and sliced it into coins.

View attachment 333124

Then I cut the coins across a few times.

View attachment 333126

I describe the process because I was a bit intimidated by the prospect of dealing with whole leaves. Turned out to be pretty easy--with a sharp knife.

I'm enjoying dark air cured straight (in small bowls) and also in various blends. Well worth a try if you enjoy bold, strong tobacco.

It sounds to me like you are describing One Sucker, which is indeed a Burley, technically, though with different growth habit than more traditional types of Burley, such as TN 86.
 
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Reactions: Friendly Piper