Cased Tobacco Pipe Blend Recipes

AceFour

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Very cool process. Thanks for sharing. Did you get any fermented aroma?
No but if it happens it is usually 3-6 months after pressing. The famous McC smell has happened with Monkel's Best and Red Queen which spurred my the Red Ribbon Experiment post. I have never gotten it in plug form but slicing flakes and jarring with occasional opening 4-6 weeks seems to kick it off.
 

Anders A

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Please shou us some pictures (and measures) when you make next batch of pipe tobacco. I would also like to try.
I mix in alcohol, stir it well, remove any midribs, then I vacuum pack it. What I did today was 300 g of lamina and 20 cl of rum and 20 cl of Tennessee Fire. I divided it into three vacuum bags. Then I put it under some towels on top of our water heater where it is just over 40 degrees Celsius. Then it is left there for a few months, or until my "old" tobacco runs out :) The first three pictures are the tobacco from the last time I made pipe tobacco. Partly what I have left in my humidor, and then a tobacco plug that I pressed for 3-4 months in a paste press.

I also usually bring a tablespoon of honey that I dissolve in the alcohol, but I forgot about it today :)

I'm no expert on this fermentation thing, not really knowledgeable at all, and smoking a pipe isn't a big deal to me, I mostly use snus, but I'm happy with this pipe tobacco, I don't require anything else :sneaky:
 

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FosmicCilth

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Sep 4, 2025
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Casing and kilning blend that came out very good:

1 part Bright Va
1 part Thin leaf Va
1 part Red Va
1 part Perique
1 part Light Dark Fired
0.5 part Krumovgrad

All components were rolled into a cigar and pressed for a day. Half of the pressed tobacco was cut into a shag and cased with a 1:1 of WLT flue cured casing and Brewer's Best Plum flavoring then pressed into a plug. The other half of the initial pressed tobacco was left uncased and both were kiled at 122°F while in high case for 2 weeks until the color changed. The uncased tobacco was then cut to the same thickness as the cased and mixed.

This resulted in a good medium-body blend with some interesting floral flavors from the Krumovgrad and Light Dark Fired. The plum casing and perique really work together to make a solid perique base flavor for the floral notes to layer on top of.
 

Bamabaccy8a

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Latest blend ... pulled from the press yesterday:

Burley Legal:

1 pound Natural Burley, cased in a light molasses / cocoa and toasted
1 pound Red FCV
1 pound Prilep
1/2 pound Light Fire Cured Virginia
1/4 pound Red Tips Burley (added after the press)

All selected leaves were equally divided into 3 piles which were then stacked on each other and placed in the press.
For this application, I did a light pressing with the plan to cube cut upon completion.
After a week in the press, it was removed and cube cut then placed into a large mixing bowl.
To this mixture, I'll add the 1/4 pound of Red Tips that were previously pressed and cubed.

Smoking notes:

Natural Burley and Virginia is well-balanced, nutty and not too sweet.
Prilep is present throughout as a mild spice with occasional floral tones.
Light Fire Cured Virginia adds mostly a smoky bag note and a bit of depth and woodiness to the smoke.

Pics:

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Note: the addition of rainbow spectrum light adds creaminess and extra tang. LOL
Molasses ,cocoa and toasted... please explain this further on recipe and method. Ty
 

Bamabaccy8a

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I mix in alcohol, stir it well, remove any midribs, then I vacuum pack it. What I did today was 300 g of lamina and 20 cl of rum and 20 cl of Tennessee Fire. I divided it into three vacuum bags. Then I put it under some towels on top of our water heater where it is just over 40 degrees Celsius. Then it is left there for a few months, or until my "old" tobacco runs out :) The first three pictures are the tobacco from the last time I made pipe tobacco. Partly what I have left in my humidor, and then a tobacco plug that I pressed for 3-4 months in a paste press.

I also usually bring a tablespoon of honey that I dissolve in the alcohol, but I forgot about it today :)

I'm no expert on this fermentation thing, not really knowledgeable at all, and smoking a pipe isn't a big deal to me, I mostly use snus, but I'm happy with this pipe tobacco, I don't require anything else :sneaky:
Looks delicious. So, are you soaking , dipping, sprinkling this concoction to whole leaf or ribbon cut/shred?
 

Juxtaposer-

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I recall the head blender Per Jenson saying in an interview that if you could taste the casings that it meant that he had failed in his job. I get his point yet I don’t think this is entirely accurate. If you know what the raw leaf tastes like and you know what the casings are you should be able to pick them apart. Certain ingredients make tobacco taste a certain way. I have seen quite a few good guesses in reviews of many commercial mixtures. There are quite a few standard ingredients that blenders use in casing tobacco. Improving texture, burning qualities, preservation, and flavor are some of the things that inspire certain ingredients. Some of these things may not be so important as flavor for the home blender. The idea behind a casing for me is to counter or mask some of the harsh and unpleasant flavors that raw tobaccos can have and to accentuate the enjoyable flavors that it does have. There is also the metabolic aspect of adding ingredients that will stimulate microbes or help break down the tobacco to improve it. Having a casing ingredient that adds a noticeable flavor is perfectly fine in my opinion. Even so, a noticeable flavor normally does not equate to a dominant flavor when derived from casings. A dominant or specific flavor other than ”tobacco” would be entering the territory of toppings.
 
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