The Virginia Cream, 2015 Year End Hit Or Miss?

Close up Vir Crm“The long wait, for me at least, is over. The Virginia Cream begins shipping today!”

And with the reading of those words on the Greg Pease website, I began my eager anticipation to smoke a new pipe tobacco, an anticipation I’d not felt in years. G.L. Pease and his blend manufacturer released The Virginia Cream (TVC) generally in late October (2015), I believe, but I jumped at the opportunity to make my purchase some couple weeks earlier during the early bird exclusive at Smoking Pipes.

G.L. Pease is unarguably leaving a legacy of remarkable blends for pipe smokers… Union Square, Abingdon, Haddo’s Delight, Sixpence, these happen to be some of my favorites. So when I read about his soon to be released The Virginia Cream, I, along with countless other fans of his, could not wait to get my hands on this mixture.

The Virginia Cream is the latest in G.L. Pease’s “Heirloom Series – Tobaccos of Exemplary Character.” According to Mr. Pease, the Heirloom Series is a collection of singular blends…“full of unique personalities…. Each has all the characteristics that can ultimately make a blend a classic.”

The story of getting to The Virgina Cream goes like this… In Greg’s words, “When I sent the final formula off to the factory for a prototype batch, Ted [of Cornell and Diehl] said, ‘It smells like a really good cream soda.’ After muttering some incomprehensible syllables that might find their way into the name, I blurted out, ‘Vanilla Cream!’ It stuck. In designing the label, I put ‘The’ in the name because I loved the way it worked typographically, and it seemed to enhance the old-time style I was working with, while also indicating that I really do think this one is a little special.”

He certainly targeted the yearnings of a significant market segment of the pipe smoking community with his ‘old-timey’ label and tobacco flavor profile. I count myself among that segment: a smoker who harkens back to the memories of grandpa and his pipe (maybe great-grandpa), but who appreciates the highest quality leaf and sophisticated use of toppings in his mixtures. And I admit, I’m a sucker for anything that’s basically a bourbon topped VaBur. What TVC promised seemed centered within my wheelhouse…

From the label: “Distinctively delicious! We season fine red and golden flue-cured Virginia tobaccos with rare condimental leaf, enhancing the result with a subtle vanilla/bourbon topping that is never overbearing. Rare for a blend of its genre, The Virginia Cream delivers on its aromatic promise from the first puff to the bottom of the bowl, while leaving the pipe clean and free of phantom flavors. An all-American blend ideal for Virginia fanciers craving something a little sweeter.”

Some six or seven long days after ordering, finally, the knock of the UPS driver at my door and the arrival of a most treasured package.

If I’m getting into a tin right away, usually, I’ll still let it get a couple weeks airtime within a sealed jar before lighting a bowl. I feel this gives the blend a way to more honestly reveal itself; but the popping open of TVC became one of those rare occasions when my immediately digging in was the only action I had in mind.

Indeed, TVC begins with promise of a classic…

Delicious vanilla-esque bourbon and fig scents greeted me unreservedly as I peeled back the aluminum lid from the two ounce container. I was surprised by how perfectly ready-to-smoke the in-the-tin moisture level appeared to be, which served to support my decision to enjoy a bowl then and there.

Grabbing a medium-sized corn cob for a carefree smoke, I loaded it with the nice mostly ribbon cut tobaccos, settled back in my garden chair and put flame to leaf.

Hmmm…

My first impression was of a brighter Sixpence with a dirty edge to it. No vanilla present on the palate but nicely aromatic in the sidestream. Only at about a quarter down the bowl did I pick up what could be described as a sweet, maybe even a cream soda-ish flavor. Something about the tobaccos seemed out of balance to me. Too much dark fired? Young Virginias? I couldn’t put my finger on it, but while one intake of smoke tasted smooth and creamy with just the right touch of spice, the next assaulted my senses with a harsh, cigarette-like profile that kicked up the “Hock-O-Loogie” meter substantially.

No problem. Though extremely disappointed, I left it for the following morning when I’d fire some up in a Stanwell #118 I reserve for aromatics.

Better. The fruity, grassy, bready notes of the Virginias came through more distinctly and as a whole was much more palatable. But the Kentucky still posed problems. One of my indicators if I’m enjoying a particular blend or not is where the needle rests on my Hock-O-Loogie meter mentioned above. Lat bombs and significant amounts of dark fired Kentucky, for instance, push the needle into the red zone, an unpleasant experience, and a blend I will stay away from. This blend pushed the needle ever closer to the line as I neared its smoky end. Furthermore, I’ll be danged if I noted any sweetness about it. I’m thinking something like Dunhill Flake when I think Virginia sweetness. I can’t say I noticed sweetness in TVC. I ‘decanted’ into a mason jar and let the tobacco rest a few days.

For my third go, I selected a 7/8ths inch wide Dublin meerschaum bowl. And something magical happened. Everything balanced. The dark fired and Perique gave just the right amount of depth and spiciness to be satisfying, while neither overwhelming the Virginia notes nor pushing the needle to uncomfortable levels. The finish proved pleasant with what I can only describe as an old fashioned honest Virginia-Burley tobacco flavor with a hint of vanilla sweetness. But because of my initial high expectations, the questions raised by TVC were daunting. Maybe it just needs age, after all, as Greg Pease likes to point out about his blends.

I’ve stayed with meerschaum as I’ve leisurely smoked through the majority of the tin – as of this writing I’ve a couple or three bowls remaining. My experience as described in my third go remains consistent; however, my assessment is such that I do not anticipate purchasing another tin. The dirty base likes to kick in a bit much here and there throughout for my liking. Because of that, I don’t know that I can recommend TVC, certainly not whole heartedly anyway, perhaps especially because of the danged near disdain it earned from me at the start. And because there are tobaccos I do like upon first smoke and smoke to this day, while others have left me unimpressed and without reason to return to them. Overall, The Virginia Cream leans for me more toward the latter than it does the former.

As every pipe smoker knows, given time and a second chance, a previously un-liked tobacco blend can become a new found favorite. Maybe that’ll happen here. But in the meantime, as much as I looked forward to the G.L. Pease’s The Virginia Cream, I’m looking forward to going back to other old standbys. That makes, for me, anyway, The Virginia Cream a big 2015 year-end miss. The appellation of ‘classic’ will have to wait.

Peterson 2014 Christmas Pipe plus Cornell and Diehl We Three Kings

Christmas 2014 PetersonChristmas in August…

Review of Peterson Christmas Pipe 2014 and Cornell and Diehl, We Three Kings, 2014 Christmas tobacco blend.

 

Okay, we are halfway through September but I’ve been debating whether or not to post here this video I recorded for YouTube in August reviewing the already released 2014 Christmas Peterson pipe and C&D’s 2014 Christmas blend. Admittedly, I don’t have this video thing down quite yet, but I came to the decision, ah, why not. Here it is…

Christmas in August… 2014 Peterson Christmas Pipe, Cornell and Diehl “We Three Kings”

Over the Moon Contest, and the Winner Is…

Earth-from-moonWell, it wasn’t me…

My First Ever Entry In a YouTube Community Video Contest

So, I started with a couple of videos over on Vimeo because there seemed to be a burgeoning pipe community there. Unfortunately, not much is happening. The great migration of YouTubers to Vimeo due to a number of issues with the whole Google thing that was much talked about in pipester videos has apparently gone nowhere. To quote one presenter, Tin Man, in reference to the Vimeo pipe community, “it’s a ghost town.”

Indeed, it is.

Because no one wants to make a video just to watch themselves, at least, I don’t think most people do — well I don’t, anyway — I began to consider if I should just stick to the territory as well. Then I saw one of the YouTube presenters was throwing a video contest called, ‘Over the Moon’. It was to honor the 45th anniversary of the first moon landing, and I thought, what the heck. The point was to address where you were at the time of the landing (if you were even born then), if you think it was faked, and what tobacco you would sneak aboard as a trip-to-the-Moon memento.

Now, most of these videos just have the presenter doing a talking head thing in front of the camera. I had the urge to do something different: I wanted to tell a story through which my answers were given. Admittedly, I got a little off track as the logic of my tale took me into a bit of a turn, but I rather liked it. Needless to say, I did not win (the winners were talking heads). But that’s entirely O.K. It compelled me to make my first YouTube pipe community video.

In the making of this vid, I hadn’t much time so I skipped necessary credits as well as the editing of flubs, etc. (I think it’s only right that I fix the missing credits. I’ll leave the flubs.) May I present to you, my first YouTube pipe community video, ‘Journey to the Moon, and the Tobacco I’d Carry’…

 

Dark Tale of a Special Pipe Acquisition

Peterson Dracula pipe and Dunhill London MixtureThe Spooky Blood-Drenched Story of How I Came to Own Another Pipe

My latest episode of “Pipe Acquisition Disorder” began with the innocent reading of an article in Science. The video below tells the tale…

 

Earthquake Weather, Stoker, Blood, and Peterson… from SoCal Pipester on Vimeo.

Shopping for that perfect example of a particular pipe you’re looking for can be daunting. When it came to this Peterson, I saw immediately I wanted it in their style #69. That was easy; finding one with an acceptable random black swirl in the red stem, that took a bit more browsing.

There are — to this nerdy guy’s eye — some really cool smoky swirls in a lot of these Dracula pipes. But then, there are as well quite a few that just don’t do it for me. If I couldn’t find a swirl pattern suitable to me then I’d rather have no swirl at all.

“If there were one with just a touch of a swirl, I’d dig it.”

And there was…

I snagged it!

Now, admittedly, these are not the best quality pipes in fit and finish that Peterson makes. Heck, they’re only a bill+, but I found it to be a fun purchase, and I enjoy smoking it. I’m dedicating it to Balkans (which to me means a Latakia blend with a significant amount of Oriental leaf).

As always, I’ll keep some ‘baccy by the door for ya.