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Irish Whiskey

Brand: Peterson
Blender: Kohlhase, Kopp & Co.
Tin Description: A traditional Irish blend. Burley leafs from Africa, Brazil, India and dark fired Kentucky from Italy, lightly flavored with Irish Whiskey for a unique aroma.
Country of Origin: IE
Curing Group: Flue Cured
Contents:
Burley
Kentucky
Flavoring:
Whisky
Cut: Ribbon
Packaging: 50g Tin

Images are temporarily disabled.



Average Ratings
Strength: Medium
Flavoring: Mild to Medium
Taste: Medium
Room Note: Pleasant to Tolerable
Recommendation: Recommended


The Reviews  

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Showing reviews 1 through 20 of 75 reviews of this tobacco
Reviewed By: Date: Strength: Flavoring: Taste: Room Note: Recommendation:
bman64 05/01/2013 Medium to Strong None detected Medium Tolerable not recommended
Loving Irish Whiskey's as I do-Tullamore Dew in a French-pressed coffee is fantastic btw, I thought I'd at least like this aro. It's my third aro from Peterson, and CC was a 3 , SB a 2, but if I could give IW a zero, that's what it would get. I tried drying it out, even heeding the advice here of leaving the tin open x 2 days.

Nothing helps this horribly harsh nasty tasting stuff. I can't tell if its strong or the harshness of it makes me think its strong. Smells lightly of Peterson casings, but no taste, other than crap.

Doesn't turn me off of Peterson's, as UF is a top 5 of mine. I'm going to try Irish Flake to see if its an Irish thing...


Reviewed By: Date: Strength: Flavoring: Taste: Room Note: Recommendation:
o3Ho3 12/04/2012 Mild Medium Very Full Very Pleasant highly recommended
The taste and aroma is full on this one. With a little patience you'll discover burley at his best mix with whatever else (in this case Kentucky). Whiskey is here but... you'll not notice if you already are after one glass of it, so if you wanna discover, try cognac or whatever else alcoholic drink. It burn evenly with no effort and you can let away the pipe for 3-4 min in discussion with no problems


Reviewed By: Date: Strength: Flavoring: Taste: Room Note: Recommendation:
erthbound0 11/05/2012 Mild to Medium Very Mild Mild to Medium Pleasant recommended
The smell out of this tin is delicious. One of the most natural sweet smelling tins I've ever smelled, with an ever so slight hint of whiskey and a lot of creme smell. Awesome

It burned perfectly all the way down the bowl. No moisture build up, easy to get started and stay lit.

The taste is not something that punches you in the face, but it is there and a very good light smoke. Gets even better down the bowl. It is really growing on me and I find myself craving it in the mornings.

Room note is very light for those looking not to reek up a room.

Definitely worth a try.


Reviewed By: Date: Strength: Flavoring: Taste: Room Note: Recommendation:
alfa 09/17/2012 Medium Mild to Medium Medium Pleasant highly recommended


Reviewed By: Date: Strength: Flavoring: Taste: Room Note: Recommendation:
Jallen49 08/18/2012 Mild to Medium Extremely Mild Medium to Full Pleasant to Tolerable recommended
First of all it needs to be said that there is hardly any whiskey flavoring in this blend. Upon smelling the tin I hint of whiskey can be detected. However, smoking it is a different story. I like to think I'm pretty receptive to aromatic blends, but I cannot taste the whiskey at all. What I do taste is top quality Virginia leaf.

If you're someone who likes only a slight hint of flavoring added to your Virginia blends, this blend is certainly for you. However if you're someone who's looking for a whiskey flavored explosion, avoid this blend.

As for the Virginia's themselves it's a lighter Virginia, not dark and toasty, but more earthy and hayish with a slight, very slight touch of citrus.

No tongue bite and no gargle. Very well-behaved.

As a straight Virginia this blend gets four stars in my opinion, but for an aromatic blend I have to give it only three stars due to the lack of flavoring.


Reviewed By: Date: Strength: Flavoring: Taste: Room Note: Recommendation:
mo 08/17/2012 Medium to Strong Mild to Medium Full Tolerable somewhat recommended
A few years ago i bought my first tin of Irish Oak ( with the old label ) and did not think much of that blend to be honest.

It is only recently that i discovered that it was actually Irish Whiskey i was smoking and Petersons had mixed up the tin lids.

I would never buy an Alcohol flavoured blend, i do not drink and do not know what Whiskey is supposed to taste like, I will therefore rate this tobacco for how it smoked.

I did find the topping to cause nausea, it had an annoying lingering taste that i really did not enjoy at all. As expected with Petersons, leaf quality and presentation was impeccable.

This blend was not something i enjoyed but i am sure pipesmokers who can appreciate the taste of Whiskey could enjoy it.

YMMV


Reviewed By: Date: Strength: Flavoring: Taste: Room Note: Recommendation:
who broke my clay pipe? 07/08/2012 Medium to Strong Mild Medium to Full Tolerable recommended
50g round tin.

Tin aroma:Opening the tin it smells archetypically 'Peterson' in a familier cavendish aromatic sence,but not so potent as their other aromatic offerings - a slight familier sweetened vanilla-esque/maple syrup-ness factor.

A deeper sniff and i get the richness of the base baccy which is quite vineous/winey like a brighter virginia,and an earthy soily peaty burley with a slight burnt/toasty raisin bun factor(kentucky i presume).

An old peterson product brochure has a more elaborate description of this offering: "A traditional Irish ready rubbed blend renowned for its smooth smoking quality.This blend incorporates various selected Virginia leaf to provide roundness of taste.Kentucky fired,Indian cured and aromatic Thailand Burley are then added to the main blend.Finally a light spray of Irish Whiskey essence gives this tobacco its final unique aroma."

Yes it has a mild whisky ghost essence;this is the second time i have purchased this (@7 years later)because i wanted to revisit this baccy because i found it difficult to finish first time round in my earlier piping days.(i didn't actually like whisky that much at the time,but i had a morbid curiosity to face a challenge when i saw this on the tobacconist shelf;i thought what the hell).

Anyway this new tin is considerably milder on the nose regarding the whisky topping than the first tin thats for sure,but the same taste more or less baccy-wise in the pipe while smoking in the pipe.

This my first pipe re-trial 7 years later is in a red pyrolytic linered synthetic bowl material 1970's "the smoke-village shape"venturi pipe,basically because i think it has the right sympathetic draught for a 'Kentucky'mixture and that it doesn't ghost like a briar if this trial becomes a trial.

Tin appearance:Brown-dark brown slim cut ribbons - i distinctly remember the last tin being more of a rubbed flake appearance,so maybe its changed a little bit(7 years);this new tin seems more rubbed out.

I still have my penciled notes on this written on the Peterson brochure which came with my first 'Peterson rustic bent apple 303'(a nice pipe i havent used in ages)with 'P-lip' and moisture trap stem.

I ordererd the whole range of Peterson tobacco online to give me my first taster of baccy beyond supermarket/service station/newsagent OTC UK brands(some of those Petersons i still make a mandatory purchase of btw.

Evidentally i found this one a challenge at the time and is i suppose a bit of a 'crossover' blend in simular league perhaps to other 'stand alone' enigmatics like their own "Irish Oak",Erinmore Mixture,and maybe Condor ready rubbed.

Old notes: "Tin aroma:of the whiskey you find in cheap sickly liquer chocolates and not like the actual drink at all:Between old spice aftershave,vodka, and a sweet syrupy 'Drambui',but more sort of an artificial synthetic perfume immitation whiskey"..

(this put me off trying other whisky blends for a few years and made me weary of whiskey itself)

More:"room note of mild old bakery spices and bells scotch whisky smelt from a distance. The initial tin aroma soon leaves the tin and doesn't intrude in the smoke as much if left to open air for a couple of days.

The taste of the baccy beneath this whiskey topping(?)is of a very cool neutral alegorically "white" flavour - almost like plain white flour,but not tasteless;actually full and strong but monotone - just sort of natural nice akin to a peat bog watery earthness/water biscuits or rye bread/german pumpernickel. Savoury more than sweet.

Different to any others i have so far tasted,nice strong substratum but totally offensive poor topping,couldn't finish this tin off easy"(wasn't keen on whiskey at the time but hoped this would be an easy smoking equivalent). "Very cool tasting drysmoke,no tongue bite and as cool as a cucumber esp compared to other Peterson aromatics like 'Sweet Killarney'.

Tobacco texture like cool moist compost soil(Irish peat). Aroma sociable enough but sickly whiskey factor spins me out. Quite slow burning,but would be nicer without the whiskey essence which intrudes over a quality tobacco."

(present time)I wanted to like this tobacco at the time because the baccy seemed quite serious and the nicotine seemed quite strong as well.I was smoking this in two extreme pipes at the time:a bavarian briar like a swiss looking mountain folk pipe,and a clay Wilsons churchwarden,the first with quite an open inner draught and the clay with a tight draught smoke tube.

Irish whiskey seemed quite consistant in both obove pipes in taste but milder in the long clay which i eventaully over a year later used to finish the tin off.

I will note that i definately ghosted both pipes,i eventually gave the bavarian pipe away and the long clay toook over a year to let go of the whiskey ghost(everytime i went to use it i would get the vile fake whiskey at certain moments).

2ND Tin review: This second tin is tasting like the first tin after i had really let the first tin air out and age a year - i am currently smoking this strait out of the fresh new tin ok. The chances are that if this new tin was like the first example that i might even like it now because i have more tobacco and whiskey experience,and can accept more robust and tricky smokes and aromas.(funny how things change)

In a way i am dissapointed that this 2nd tin has not got the original aromatic potency of the first one,but its working alright in this intermediate gauge @4mm smoke tube draught pyrolytic pipe.

I get an earthy Burley - mature aged virginia - slight oriental - very Kentucky - and slight sweet Cavendish(the brochure doesn't actually mention Cavendish or Oriental BTW)

A robust full whole wheat factor like a digestive biscuit,toasty sweet bread and a malty brown sugar base,witha a very mild whiskey topping,earthy as Irish peat.

I suppose it tastes a cross between Peterson 'University Flake','Erinmore Flake' and possibly 'Condor Ready Rubbed' if you don't include their applied aromatic properties.

Contains nicotine on par with 'University Flake'.TBH and realistic,i think it was sensible of Peterson to ditch their earlier applied Whiskey essence,because as far as whiskey goes, it was like a confection liqueur blended with vodka mixed with 'old spice' aftershave and pavement vomit..This new incarnation is basically what i would of liked to have smoked first time round and is now a definate repurchaseable candidate for rotation..

Any whiskey drinker with an imagination now has a perfect white canvas from which they can apply their own 'real' whiskey to augment it if they wish.(i got some 'Bells Scotch Blended','Jack Daniels' in the cuboard,,maybe some 'Lambs Navy Rum'). But;even as it is,its fine and i have re-christened this in my mind's tongue as "Petersons Sweet Irish Peat Bog",for an instant memorisation of its overall earthy impression.(I haver about 50 baccies on the go at the moment,so this won't go too quickly).

Knowing this is safe in my ghost repellant pyrolytic venturi pipe,i expect this new incarnation of Irish Whiskey would perform safe and well in my cooler 'falcon' pipes.

This is definately now a 3-star*** baccy and i'm glad i revisited it.It has definately improved although i think the original rubbed flake presentation gave a cooler smoke.


Reviewed By: Date: Strength: Flavoring: Taste: Room Note: Recommendation:
machinebacon 04/14/2012 Medium Mild to Medium Medium Tolerable highly recommended
A naturally sweet, rich and warm smoke. There are comparably dark tobaccos in the tin, which pack easily and smoke dry to a white, fine ash without gurgling and getting too hot. Clearly a Burley mixture, with a medium to high dose of nicotine. A tad lighter than 3P or Irish Flake, but richer and more interesting than Sherlock Holmes. Light "whiskey" topping tastes and smells great, slightly floral, spicy and very consistent over the whole bowl. Zero tongue-bite. Great cigarillo-like taste if retrohaled, slightly tingly on the tongue and in the nose. I find the room note to be pleasant, a bit like fresh sawdust. If you like dark, full tastes (like Royal Yacht, Irish Flake, Best Brown Flake), you should try this one. Have to agree with a review below who wrote that IW makes you hungry. I find Burley blends generally be good appetizers. For what it's worth: Peterson's Irish Whiskey is a staple in my rotation.


Reviewed By: Date: Strength: Flavoring: Taste: Room Note: Recommendation:
Grandad 04/12/2012 Medium Medium Medium Pleasant highly recommended
Being new to pipe smoking and having a love of Irish whiskey, this was my first choice of tobacco and I'm glad it was too! Both the taste and the smell was very pleasant and with only one light, I found this very easy to sit, relax and read a book with. The taste of tobacco I didn't find too overpowering but if you're not used to strong tasting tobacco's, like the taste you get with a good cigar, I'd try something a little more mild first.


Reviewed By: Date: Strength: Flavoring: Taste: Room Note: Recommendation:
meerkat 03/05/2012 Medium Very Mild Medium to Full Pleasant recommended
Since the latest change to St. Bruno Ready Rubbed(about a year ago now, I think) I have not enjoyed it nearly as much. However, I do not fear, as Peterson's Irish Whiskey makes a fine replacement.

It's not the same as St. Bruno but it is certainly playing in the same ball park. A Virginia and Kentucky blend with a pleasing, yet subtle, sweetness. It has less of the sweet herbal notes which I enjoyed in St. Bruno but brings an added breath of sweet alcohol to the mix. It's not overwhelming, though. At least I didn't find it so. The main player here is definately the mix of Virginia and Kentucky leaf. If you are familiar with the Va/Ky blends from Gawith Hoggarth, G.L.Pease's Cumberland or Peterson's own Irish Flake you'll be recognise some of the charicteristics of this tobacco. It's not floral like the lakeland blends can be, it is sweeter and has less black coffee notes than GLP's Cumberland and it's not nearly as strong in nicotine as Irish Flake but there is some noticable common genetic ground between all of these blends.

The fine, mahogany brown, strands make for easy packing and few relights. This blend is trouble free and genuinely satisfying in both flavour and nicotine.

Recommended.


Reviewed By: Date: Strength: Flavoring: Taste: Room Note: Recommendation:
stricklandj 03/04/2012 Medium Mild to Medium Mild to Medium Pleasant highly recommended
After waiting several years for my local shop to get Peterson tobaccos in stock, I was pleasantly surprised today to see several. I was stuck between choosing Irish Whiskey and Sherlock Holmes, so I had my wife choose. Since I love Irish whiskey, she chose this blend. I am very glad she did. I was very pleasantly surprised after smoking a bowl immediately upon opening. I had absolutely no problems with this tobacco going out, right out of the can. I expected to have to relight due to dampness many others mentioned. Once I lit the bowl, I did not have to relight once.

Admittedly, the first few puffs were rather strong, and induced some mild coughing fits. However, those fits quickly died off, and Irish Whiskey proved to be a very smooth and pleasant smoke. I really didn't taste any Irish Whiskey flavor, but am looking forward to it as this tobacco ages. I think this should be called Irish Whiskey for another reason. I love to drink a glass of Jameson while smoking a bowl of tobacco. This particular tobacco enhanced the smoothness and taste of the Jameson to the point it was almost heaven. I enjoy Jameson, but I don't think I've enjoyed it this much. I can tell this is going to prove to be a treasured Sunday afternoon combination.


Reviewed By: Date: Strength: Flavoring: Taste: Room Note: Recommendation:
bearsy87 02/25/2012 Medium Mild to Medium Mild to Medium Pleasant to Tolerable recommended
the second peterson tobacco i have tried, much better than sherlock holmes. there is much more flavour and it is deeper and more complex than some of the other irish blends i have tried. overall a great smoke but may not be for the novice.


Reviewed By: Date: Strength: Flavoring: Taste: Room Note: Recommendation:
Michael 02/10/2012 Medium to Strong Mild to Medium Medium to Full Pleasant to Tolerable recommended
Whoa -- this is tasty stuff! I've been on a Vrigina/Burley/sometimes Kentucky journey lately, looking to break things up from all the Balkans. I tried Irish Whiskey at the recommendation of a good tobacconist, who said, "Don't let the name fool you." He was right; this is no goopy aero, folks. This is serious tobacco, with sweet, rich flavor and a very satisfying dose of nicotine. (My tin contained ribbons, not ready-rubbed, so maybe the recipe has changed.) It contains many of the same ingredients as Peterson's flakes, just unpressed, which provides subtle but interesting differences.

Don't worry about drying it out much. Just watch your cadence and don't use too large a bowl. It can bite at the bottom, which is the only drawback, and I am docking it a star becuase of this. But it's damn good while it lasts.

Worth a try for a change of pace.


Reviewed By: Date: Strength: Flavoring: Taste: Room Note: Recommendation:
SteelCowboy 12/26/2011 Medium Mild Medium Pleasant to Tolerable recommended
Taking the advice of some of the other reviewers, I opted to open the tin and let it air out for a few days. I must agree with that approach as it worked well for me. Some may say that it is a “cross-over” blend and not a full on aro and that may be the case as it is on the border, but for me I would classify it as a light aromatic that is pleasantly sweet. I didn’t taste a lot of whiskey flavor in the blend although there seems to be a light tin note of whiskey. It doesn’t leave my pipe wet and burns cleanly. This is an aro with some kick as Lady N makes herself known, although not in an overpowering way. Considering that Peterson also makes Irish Flake and University Flake, I would gage the nicotine as less than those two blends. Having finished my tin of Irish Whiskey, it was worth the cost of the tin, however I am not sure if it will be making another appearance in the cellar as it was good, but not memorable. Recommended.


Reviewed By: Date: Strength: Flavoring: Taste: Room Note: Recommendation:
Alec 08/11/2011 Medium to Strong Medium to Strong Medium to Full Pleasant to Tolerable recommended
Everyone who dislikes this blend has the same problem, "no whiskey flavor, too strong, smoke casuses coughing, intolerable room note". Literally every one of these problems can be solved by one thing; let the tobacco age for about a month!


Reviewed By: Date: Strength: Flavoring: Taste: Room Note: Recommendation:
Davie Jones 07/25/2011 Medium to Strong Mild Medium Pleasant highly recommended
Funny, this mixture has changed since last time I smoked it. It was a ready rubbed flake when I smoked in 08, with a stronger aroma.

Now the cut is like Sherlock Holmes and the smell very similar. The taste is different as well, deeper, more persistant in a good way.

I love it. Packs some good Vitamine N, smokes well and satisfies me.

I am wondering if I don't like this new format better. I think i do.


Reviewed By: Date: Strength: Flavoring: Taste: Room Note: Recommendation:
Trippwire 06/11/2011 Strong Medium Medium Tolerable recommended
My first pipe tobacco... Took a few bowls to get used to, but by the end of the tin, I was loving it. Gets a bit on the strong side at the end of the bowl, but overall very nice. Buy more.


Reviewed By: Date: Strength: Flavoring: Taste: Room Note: Recommendation:
Taste Buds 06/09/2011 Medium Mild Medium Pleasant to Tolerable recommended
I was surprised by the luke-warm reviews of this blend. I would classify it as a semi-aromatic, as the tobacco flavor comes through loud and clear. After a little drying out of the tin it is good to go. A very tasty burley-virginia that burns cooly from start to finish. The nicotene is very tolerable, especially compared to other Peterson blends. The whiskey adds a light sweetness and the taste is consistant throughout the bowl. I like this a lot!

Update: I am raising my rating to 4 stars, as additional drying has improved this blend even further. The taste is now more rounded and cohesive. Reviewer Claudius Stratavarius was right.


Reviewed By: Date: Strength: Flavoring: Taste: Room Note: Recommendation:
HokieGeek 04/20/2011 Mild to Medium Very Mild Mild to Medium Pleasant to Tolerable somewhat recommended
Well, this was a bowl full of meh. It smelled ok, but the taste was pretty boring. I want my latakia or va flakes back!


Reviewed By: Date: Strength: Flavoring: Taste: Room Note: Recommendation:
nitekrawlr 04/18/2011 Mild to Medium Extremely Mild Mild to Medium Pleasant recommended
Hmmmm...I fail to detect the Irish Whiskey. That being said, I discovered if you open the tin, and let the tobacco breath for a day or two, you'll find a quite tasty smoke.


 
Showing reviews 1 through 20 of 75 reviews of this tobacco

 


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