Title edited for capitals. Please see Rule 9.
I am a very recent pipe smoking enthusiast and am looking for sense of direction concerning tobacco. I also thought this would be pleasant conversation. Please feel free to join.
cheers,
-N
Part of my problem with answering your question is that I stopped actively buying tobacco a few years ago, and there's been an accellerating amount of substitutions being made for the past 6 or so years and I don't know what's currently in the tin that bears the famous label. I only know whtat's not in it, the famous blend.
The actual classics aren't made anymore. Some, like Escudo, live on as name brands on tins, but with contents that don't resemble the original blends in the least. Most of what is offered is a label on a tin filled with "whatsis".
But, there are a few blends worth smoking, based on last purchase. One I like is from C&D and it's called Yorktown. It's a ribbon cut of stoved Bright and Red Virginias. The result is an easy to smoke pleasant tasting blend that could be an all day smoke.
Yorktown, Caroline Red Flake, and Bijou are the only C&D that I've cellared.
I'll second Peter Stokkebye Luxury Bullseye Flake, but only after it's had at least 4 years of aging. The tobacco is released when it's green and screaming from the cradle and tastes like cardboard. Give it the aging PS should have done and it really blossoms into something quite enjoyable.
GL Pease offers a wide range of interesting blends, some of them a bit challenging. Of his Va/Pers I like Haddo's Delight, Stratford, Telegraph Hill, and Fillmore, in that order.
I would also recommend that you check out KBV, an independent producing micro batches, blends made from top quality aged ingredients that exist in amounts too small for other blenders. Where a manufacturer will put out a 5,000 unit "small" batch, KBV batches seem to run into several hundred units and smaller. And generaly, once they're gone, they're gone.
Another worthwhile place to investigate is Watch City Cigars and Pipes. It's a retail tobacconist that puts out some classic blends, like Rougaroux, SImply Red, SImply Orange, Glass Slipper, etc. Ernie really knows how to blend, and as such has built a national following. Here's something else that differentiates Ernie from other producers. If he can't get the correct ingredients, he discontinues the blend. He doesn't substitute and pretend it's the same stuff.
If you feel adventurous you could try Esterval's in Germany and order some of Hans Biederman's HU blends. They are made by K, formerly K&K, in Germany. K&K used to be a top quality blender, but in today's world, they do what they can, sorta. Still, even with the current state of affairs, Hans is perhaps the most gifted and inventive blender working today. It might still be worth picking up some Director's Cut, Morrocan Bazaar (aromatic but don't think you know what type) and maybe some of the newer blends that are formulated with what's currently available?
Otherwise, GH&Co are still fighting the good fight to deliver a quality product, even in difficult times.
Sutliff match blends, like Match Victoria, a match to the Murray's version of Dunhill Elizabethan blend, are worth exploring. Many of their matches were very close to the originals. But in today's world, that is less certain. But, Sutliff has supplies of leaf that others don't, so these Sutliff bulks may still be quite good, and inexpensive. Their Cringle Flake is pretty good.
I haven't tried any recent batches of any of the Esoterica blends, but the stuff I smoked from a few years ago tasted like garbage. They had substituted some of the Virginias and the result was not pleasant. The toppings were also skimpy. This was very disappointing. As other blends were sliding over the last several years, Germain's seemed solid. Not any more.
The Dunhill clones are now labeled as Peterson. They were Dunhill in name only. Dunhill stopped making their blends, with their complex aging stages and other quality control measures, back in 1980.
If you're looking for the old classics, they are gone, gone, gone. You're better off looking for new classics.