Cornell & Diehl Bow-Legged Bear

(3.13)
Bow-Legged Bear is a full English blend with Virginias, Turkish, Latakia, Burleys, and Perique. It's stoved, pressed and sliced into an old-fashioned crumble cake.

Details

Brand Cornell & Diehl
Blended By Craig Tarler
Manufactured By Cornell & Diehl
Blend Type English
Contents Burley, Latakia, Oriental/Turkish, Perique, Virginia
Flavoring
Cut Krumble Kake
Packaging 2oz Tin, 8oz Tin
Country United States
Production Currently available

Profile

Strength
Strong
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Extremely Mild -> Overwhelming
Flavoring
None Detected
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
None Detected -> Extra Strong
Room Note
Tolerable
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Unnoticeable -> Overwhelming
Taste
Full
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Extremely Mild (Flat) -> Overwhelming

Average Rating

3.13 / 4
33

29

7

8

Reviews

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Displaying 11 - 20 of 29 Reviews
Reviewed By Date Rating Strength Flavoring Taste Room Note
Jul 01, 2005 Strong None Detected Very Full Pleasant to Tolerable
The description on the tin is somewhat scary! All those tobaccos mixed together! How can such a mish-mash taste good?? Actually, it does...And this to me means that Craig Tarler is a great blender. The balance is perfect, the mix is "symphonyc", all the tobaccos play their role without overwhelming each other. In the beginning of the bowl the Perique comes out a bit stronger than the others, but it's just a couple of puffs. The latakia is a little in the back but it comes out stronger towards the last third of the bowl. This isn't an everyday smoke for me, due both to its complexity and to its strenght.
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Reviewed By Date Rating Strength Flavoring Taste Room Note
Mar 04, 2022 Very Strong None Detected Mild to Medium Tolerable
Opening a tin from 2015. The pull-tab fairly bursts open. Tin note is immediately apparent: soy sauce, sour lemons and a very faint undertone of nutty burley. A new-to-me Stephen and Roswitha poker is my tool of choice and I have a snifter of Bearded Iris’s Last Laugh Imperial Stout. The poker is quite capacious, and I’m wary of the tobacco’s much-vaunted strength, so I feel a half-bowl should suffice. The cube rubs out into a nicely-workable rough cut, and the pre-light draw gives me the same flavors as the smell: lemons, some dark chocolate, some soy sauce. I don’t smell much of the latakia, but it’s one of the first flavors to come through on the charring light.

The settling in mutes the flavors quite a bit. A little cream creeps in, complementing the chocolate and the nutty taste from the burley.

The latakia plays a very interesting role here, tying the sweeter and more understated flavors together. There is a little of its characteristic incense going on, but it’s definitely not the star of the show. A little sweetness is present, somewhere in the vein of brown sugar. Also always present is the hint of soy sauce. I find that note a little harder to like, but it’s not a major player.

No one flavor stands out, as other smokers have noted. This is definitely a tobacco *blend*, which I appreciate. Someone who knows what they’re doing blends this. A little wheat, a little earth make themselves known: very pleasant.

Also making itself known is the nicotine. Not as strong as some of the Gawith ropes I’ve sampled, but certainly stronger than Nightcap. I made sure to eat something before sitting down to review this, but even so, I’m feeling it. (That imperial stout is no doubt contributing to that as well, at 10% abv.) I would pair this on subsequent smokes with a nonalcoholic beverage, tea or coffee with cream and sugar. Certainly not a black coffee; the sourness would be too much.

Funny, I always think of burleys as a yard work blend. Something you can cram in your pipe and puff away at. This is not that. You’re not going to want to puff away on this. I’m liking this better as a sipping tobacco, as I’m getting that creamy chocolate and nuts profile with gently sipping and snorking. And the strength is just about all I can handle.

Burns very cleanly, leaving only the smallest bit of dottle. And I am sleepyish and content. This is burley and latakia done right. Too rich for an all-day or even everyday smoke, but a wonderful dessert smoke. I’m looking forward to my next bowl and a pairing of coffee with almondmilk.
Pipe Used: Steven and Roswitha poker
Age When Smoked: 6 years
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Reviewed By Date Rating Strength Flavoring Taste Room Note
Aug 22, 2021 Medium None Detected Mild to Medium Pleasant to Tolerable
"The bow-legged bear walks through the woods..." - Perhaps every man in Russia remembers these lines from childhood. Of course, the Cornell & Diehl blend with this name could not escape my attention. Seeing a large tin of aged tobacco on sale, I couldn't resist - I bought and immediately opened it to try it. However, I wasn't able to write a sensible review of the blend until ten days later. After reading it, you'll understand why.

Given the date of manufacture, January 23, 2016, one would expect the blend to be aged. The tobacco in the tin was packaged in 4 packs, 2 ounces each. This is very convenient - you can take one such pack and put it in a smaller tin, and close the rest tightly again. The composition of the mixture confused me somewhat: it's a kind of vinaigrette, "let's take everything and mix it up together". For a complete set there is only cavendish missing, and apparently, its absence gave reason to put this mixture in the category of "English".

The type of the blend is a pressed briquette of different types of tobacco, which is called a "crumble cake". But this particular crumble cake is pressed well enough, and therefore does not crumble - you have to break off as much as necessary and then knead it to get the blend. The color of the tobaccos ranges from yellowish brown to almost black, and the different types of tobacco are clearly visible. The briquette is a little dry, but I didn't moisten it further (probably should).

The scent bouquet is tar, mild pepper, a little vinegar, a little dried grass, some turmeric and coriander, and a faint note of blackberry. None of the notes dominate, and it took me almost a week just to determine this bouquet completely. During that time I tried five different pipes - straight, curved, large, small - but I never quite figured out which one smoked the best. It was equally easy to light and tasted almost the same in all of them.

Taste - a little bit of sweetness from latakia and Virginia, a little bit of pepper from perique, a little bit of spice from Turkish tobaccos, an earthy note, and on top of it all a strange flavor, as if you were eating bread with maasdam cheese and drinking a simple dry white wine. I read in one of the reviews that if you could compare it to Deep Purple saying "everything is louder than everything else," this one is "everything is quieter than everything else." Perhaps that's the most apt definition of the blend - it's hard to catch individual notable notes, but it's also not a faceless blend.

It smokes warm, but not hot. As you smoke, the taste becomes easier, leaving the core of latakia, turkish and perique, and the light sourness goes into the aftertaste. The strength is medium, the nicotine kick caught me only once - when I took a large pipe to try, in medium and small pipes you can not be afraid of it. The ash is light gray in color, there is not much of it, there is no moisture at all.

The smell of smoke, of course, is reminiscent of English blends, but with a bit of sourness in it.

As a result, I find it as a kind of "antipode of the Danish blend" - a little of everything, but no expressiveness. To be honest, I still don't know whether I like it or not. I think I'll finish this briquette leisurely and save the rest for winter. Maybe it will sound different when it's cold.

Update: in wet autumn weather it plays different! Latakia feels a little more and sourness is less. I puffed rest of tobacco during my dog-walks with pleasure. 3 stars updated,
Pipe Used: Petersons: 999, D19, Tankard, Sherlock Holmes, 69
PurchasedFrom: Online
Age When Smoked: 2016
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Reviewed By Date Rating Strength Flavoring Taste Room Note
Apr 22, 2021 Medium to Strong None Detected Medium Tolerable
I first felt the pull to pick up this blend while I was experimenting with higher nicotine tobaccos. They all seemed to involve heavy doses of Perique or Dark Fired, so I thought a Latakia mixture would be interesting. I will say that my sample has an age of around 2 years on it.

The tin is fun, quirky and something that could be displayed. When you open up you find a typical C&D Cake, it's speckled dark and light brown. It crumbles really easily and comes at a very nice moisture content. I've never had to dry this before loading my pipe. The tin note is complex. Smokey Latakia, tangy Orientals, vinegary Red Virginias and more. Lighting is easy and consistent.

When lit the first thing I detect is latakia, but not really. Everything in the bowl is vying for attention. The Latakia is smooth and creamy, but behind it is a toasty, nutty Burley. The Orientals make it herbal, and slightly sour, but the Virginias come behind with bread to round it off. The Perique is adding dark fruit, and to my nose a bit of spice. It burns really nice and cool.

For the taste, I give this a medium. Even with everything giving flavor up front it does so in a smooth way. But this was not what I noticed when I first opened the tin. When I opened it a year ago, I called this a kitchen sink blend and would have given it two stars or less. It was rough, and none of the components seemed to agree. With some age, it has really melded together and formed a consistent smoke. For the strength I give this a medium-strong. It will make itself known, but I haven't had breakfast yet and I don't really sense it a whole lot. The room note is a typical English so if your loved ones don't like Latakia then you won't bring them to the dark side with this one. A decent relaxing smoke.
Pipe Used: Peterson Aran 107
PurchasedFrom: Smokingpipes.com
Age When Smoked: 2 years
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Reviewed By Date Rating Strength Flavoring Taste Room Note
Jan 02, 2019 Strong None Detected Full Extra Strong
I purchased a tin of this when I got back into pipesmoking due to the tin-art, I'm a sucker for bears and trains.... back then when I tried it, it was overpowering no matter if I had ate or not. I jarred up the rest and let it set.

I pulled this back out in October 2020 and find to my taste now its a much more enjoyable smoke. It's latakia heavy to me and I have a hard time picking out individual tobaccos much beyond that even though the combination makes a decent background but mostly campfire. The 2nd half of the bowls I get a little bit of peppery note which I'm giving to the perique. Still nothing much from the Orientals sadly. The burley adds some nuttiness', so I really think of this more as an "American" blend than a true English. The strength to me nic wise is still high, its definitely a smoke on a full stomach evening blend and I can't imagine smoking it all day.

I love the tin-art still and love the crumble-cake presentation but there are just other blends that I enjoy more. I have plenty left from my 8oz can to enjoy, but I can't see buying more of it at this point.
Pipe Used: various
PurchasedFrom: Smokingpipes.com
Age When Smoked: 2017
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Reviewed By Date Rating Strength Flavoring Taste Room Note
Feb 04, 2011 Medium to Strong None Detected Full Tolerable to Strong
Evergreen pine needles, and a spicy clove taste hit me on the char light. Settles down with sweet nutty smoky and spicy notes. Burley Virginia Latakia Perique Turkish. Lots going on. Very flavorful blend and one that never bites me. This is something I like to smoke in the fall/winter once or twice a month, any more then that I lose those opening notes. Recommended.
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Reviewed By Date Rating Strength Flavoring Taste Room Note
Dec 21, 2008 Very Strong Mild Full Tolerable to Strong
Not an english blend, not an aromatic, not a burley blend, nor an oriental blend, not a VA-PER blend. I don't know what it is, but it's good ! Full taste, full pepperness, extra-full strenght. High complexity, every tobaccos play a role, no one everwelming the others. Aroma: smooth and smoky latakia and spicy orientals ( i think Izmir), a lot of plum and/or apricot cake aroma, pepperness from perique, nuttiness from burley. Burning qualities : wonderfull ! Easy to rub out, easy to burn, just grey ash at the finish. Full and genuine taste. A little overwealming and raw....
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Reviewed By Date Rating Strength Flavoring Taste Room Note
May 19, 2004 Strong Medium to Strong Full Strong
In my opinion, Bow-legged Bear is most suited for a certain class of smoker. Most likely the one that smokes aged Virginias as their regular tobacco. BLB has the potential to appeal to nearly everyone except for the cavendish fancier. Consequently, it has equal potential for putting nearly everyone off too. The smorgassboard of ingredients is the source of such a catch 22, but to those of us that absolutely love this blend, it's popularity among the majority doesn't even figure into the equation.

The appearence in the tin is somewhat reminiscent of the season old mulch one scrapes off the bottom of their lawnmower. But that's not what we smoke for anyway. And the aroma in the tin would have to be described as somewhat unappealing. But once you've filled your bowl, which by the way is as fun as it is easy, and you set this concoction to flame, wham! This is by no means a weak blend. The first thing I notice is the latakia; tangy, smooth, and biteless. But the latakia soon starts taking a bit of a bow to the other tobaccos, and one starts noticing the perique, virginias, and turkish in turn wafting in and out through the first half of the bowl. A nutty, almost warm aroma is preasent throughout, but it's the turkish that dominates through the last half of the bowl. The perique to me seems to be a tad defiscient, and would be the only improvement I would recommend. As for nicotine content, fear not. If you are one of the nicotine dependent among us, then BLB would definitely do the trick for you. Although this is a calm, cool, and well rounded blend with pronounced high and low notes, it is truly not for everyone. But, if it's tobacco you love, and strength is an attribute for you, then I'd say give it a try. This may be on your top five list.
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Reviewed By Date Rating Strength Flavoring Taste Room Note
Sep 19, 2003 Strong None Detected Very Full Tolerable to Strong
Well, compared to C&D Pirate Kake, this one is mild, but then again, that is true about just every English blend. The perique makes the difference here. It is very pronounced in the tin aroma and comes out strongly in the flavor as well. The aroma is even stronger than PK (but not the taste).

I find Bow-Legged Bear a thoroughly enjoyable smoke. My tin was a bit moister than other C&D krumble kakes, which tend to be almost (but not) too dry. This did not seem to be a problem, other than the rubbing out process produced bigger chunks, like the tobacco was less homogenized before pressing.This is actually kind of nice since pipe clogging can be a problem with the seemingly pulverized consistency of the other C&D krumble kakes.

As noted above, component-wise this has a little something for everybody, and this is evident in the relative complexity (for a C&D English anyway) of this blend. The latakia/perique combination tends to dominate if smoked vigorously, but at a more smoldering pace, the virginias and turkish notes come out more. This is a good blend for those occasions where one has the freedom to really concentrate on the range of available flavors. I would not recommend it to anyone that has an aversion/reaction to perique.

Smoke it slow and feel the glow.
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Reviewed By Date Rating Strength Flavoring Taste Room Note
Nov 29, 2017 Medium Medium to Strong Full Tolerable
Bow legged bear is a delightful smoke from start to finish if smoked slowly..Comes in cake form which looks like a brownie.no need to dry out before smoking.A char light and one more after that keeps this burning nicely..
Pipe Used: Savinelli 311 ks .
PurchasedFrom: Smoking pipes
Age When Smoked: 2 months
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