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Balkan Blend

Tobaccofieldsforever

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What exactly defines a Balkan blend? Can anyone offer some blend recipes for one using entirely or mostly leaf from WLT? I'm actually asking because I have some Peter Stokkebye's Turkish Export No. 84 that I have had laying around (properly stored) for a while. I read somewhere that it is a "perfect base for a traditional Balkan blend" Any advice or information would be appreciated. Here is the tobacco I am talking about: https://www.tobaccoreviews.com/blend/2078/peter-stokkebye-turkish-export-no84 (in the review of the tobacco it says it is uncased. Later in the description it calls it "lightly aromatic". How can an uncased tobacco be considered aromatic at all??)
 

deluxestogie

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What exactly defines a Balkan blend?
I am unaware of an exact definition. In general, it consists of a blend of:
  • flue-cured
  • (maybe) burley
  • Latakia
  • Oriental
  • (maybe) Perique or dark air-cured
I have no advice to offer regarding the cased and flavored commercial tobaccos. For a range of "Balkan" style recipes, see the blending matrix on page 3 of the "Pure Tobacco Pipe Blends" thread.
and a matrix of similar blends using Perique on page 11:

Bob
 

Knucklehead

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www.wholeleaftobacco.com carries a Balkan Blend. ”Six distinctly different types of tobacco and two different casing mixtures.” (On the label). Playing with it could be fun. (2) reviews.

 

Tobaccofieldsforever

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www.wholeleaftobacco.com carries a Balkan Blend. ”Six distinctly different types of tobacco and two different casing mixtures.” (On the label). Playing with it could be fun. (2) reviews.

Yes, I have seen it. I most likely already own everything in that blend anyway.
 

Tobaccofieldsforever

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I am unaware of an exact definition. In general, it consists of a blend of:
  • flue-cured
  • (maybe) burley
  • Latakia
  • Oriental
  • (maybe) Perique or dark air-cured
So, it seems like "Latakia" is what makes balkan a balkan rather than an english? I'm just trying to figure out the lingo, I'm relatively new to the pipe world.
 

deluxestogie

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"English"-style tobaccos are a mythical group of tobacco blends that followed the law that forbade "adulterants" in commercial tobacco blends. No flavorants or humectants or non-tobacco ingredients. That's no longer applicable. But that law did encourage pipe blenders to look for new and different flavors/aromas in actual tobacco--like Latakia, Perique, Cavendish, "stoved" and toasted tobacco, and the wide array of Turkish tobaccos.

Bob
 

Tobaccofieldsforever

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"English"-style tobaccos are a mythical group of tobacco blends that followed the law that forbade "adulterants" in commercial tobacco blends. No flavorants or humectants or non-tobacco ingredients. That's no longer applicable. But that law did encourage pipe blenders to look for new and different flavors/aromas in actual tobacco--like Latakia, Perique, Cavendish, "stoved" and toasted tobacco, and the wide array of Turkish tobaccos.

Bob
Yes, it was against the law because it added "non-tobacco weight" to the product being sold and was considered a rip off correct? I personally still agree with that line of thinking today but like you said, they don't really exist commercially anymore.
 

Tobaccofieldsforever

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"English"-style tobaccos are a mythical group of tobacco blends that followed the law that forbade "adulterants" in commercial tobacco blends. No flavorants or humectants or non-tobacco ingredients. That's no longer applicable. But that law did encourage pipe blenders to look for new and different flavors/aromas in actual tobacco--like Latakia, Perique, Cavendish, "stoved" and toasted tobacco, and the wide array of Turkish tobaccos.

Bob
Unfortunately, with commercial pipe blends, the marketeering quest for prolonging shelf life, together with the irresistible urge to tamper with a successful blend, has resulted in the deterioration of quality in English pipe blends. So, even though they are now crappy, they safely stay that way for longer.
Haha, just wanted to quote you on the topic of english blends because this made me laugh!
 

Old Cob

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Recently purchased WLT's Balkan Tradition blend. It was easy to process, and even after stemming, I recovered a full pound. I initially thought it would have a bit too much
cigar leaf for my taste, but I am impressed with the resulting blend. I would certainly recommend it. I elected not to use the enclosed casing solutions. Satisfying cool smoke.
 
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