Details
Brand | Levin Pipes International |
Blended By | McClelland Tobacco Company |
Manufactured By | McClelland Tobacco Company |
Blend Type | English |
Contents | Latakia, Oriental/Turkish, Virginia |
Flavoring | |
Cut | Ribbon |
Packaging | 50 grams tin |
Country | United States |
Production | No longer in production |
Profile
Strength
Medium
Extremely Mild -> Overwhelming
Flavoring
None Detected
None Detected -> Extra Strong
Room Note
Pleasant
Unnoticeable -> Overwhelming
Taste
Full
Extremely Mild (Flat) -> Overwhelming
Reviews
Please login to post a review.
Displaying 1 - 1 of 1 Reviews
Reviewed By | Date | Rating | Strength | Flavoring | Taste | Room Note |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| May 09, 2016 | Very Mild | None Detected | Very Mild | Pleasant |
This review is based on a 1990s tin freshly opened in May 2016. The Virginias are mildly fermented stewed fruit sweet with a touch of earth and grass. They have a very minor tanginess. The Orientals have a mild smoky woodiness with a hint of spice and sour. The Syrian latakia is dry with almost no sweetness, and offers a slight smoke and wood to the blend. Has a mild nic-hit. Won’t bite. Burns well with few relights, and leaves very little evidence of moisture in the bowl. Has a consistent flavor, though fairly innocuous in nearly every way. Probably deserves two stars, but as I wouldn’t recommend it, I have to give it one.
This is essentially the same review I gave the McClelland version as I saw few differences between the two, and McClelland did make both of them. This version may have had more going for it when fresh, but aged, it suffers the same lack of character as the McClelland does, except that the Orientals seem just a little more obvious, and the Virginias have no grassiness, and a little more earth. They are less fruity, too.
-JimInks
This is essentially the same review I gave the McClelland version as I saw few differences between the two, and McClelland did make both of them. This version may have had more going for it when fresh, but aged, it suffers the same lack of character as the McClelland does, except that the Orientals seem just a little more obvious, and the Virginias have no grassiness, and a little more earth. They are less fruity, too.
-JimInks