Astley's No.99 Royal Tudor Full Latakia Mixture

(2.81)
A traditional English mixture of Virginia and Turkish, combined with a substantial proportion of latakia.
Notes: Originally blended in England.

Details

Brand Astley's
Blended By  
Manufactured By Kohlhase & Kopp
Blend Type English
Contents Latakia, Oriental/Turkish, Virginia
Flavoring
Cut Ribbon
Packaging 50 grams tin
Country Germany
Production Currently available

Profile

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

Average Rating

2.81 / 4
10

9

8

4

Reviews

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Displaying 1 - 9 of 9 Reviews
Reviewed By Date Rating Strength Flavoring Taste Room Note
Jan 12, 2014 Medium None Detected Medium to Full Pleasant to Tolerable
A very good English. Latakia and Orientals fairly well balanced atop a base of nice Virginias. I could smoke this every day, all day, if I had to, but I don't have to. I found nothing that makes it stand out in the crowded field of English blends available. I also found nothing wrong with it. This is well worth trying. You may be able to find something special here for you.
Pipe Used: MM General, MM Country Gentleman
PurchasedFrom: smokingpipes.com
Age When Smoked: fresh
9 people found this review helpful.
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Reviewed By Date Rating Strength Flavoring Taste Room Note
Sep 01, 2015 Medium None Detected Medium to Full Pleasant to Tolerable
Predominately black in color and kind of a choppy ribbon cut, with a very enticing latakia aroma in the tin. It loaded better when I rubbed it out a little and it tasted best on the drier side but not close to crispy (although crispy was much better than at tin moisture!).

I've had this in my cellar for a couple of years and was put off my the poor reviews here. Once again, the danger of relying on reviews rears its head, as I was concerned over nothing. This blend starts out as a typical heavy latakia blend for about the first dozen puffs or so. Then the Orientals chime in with a kind of sour tang and lightly spicy essence. Then come the Virginias. Nice Virginias! They add a pleasant buttery sweetness that, while well underneath, add the perfect counterpoint to the overall spicy and zesty blend - just enough to keep this one from going overboard into dustiness and murk. I don't know that I'd call this a Full mixture, at least if the latakia dosage is the determining factor. This is heavily flavorful and bold, but I'd put it more at Medium-Full. Certainly there are other blends out there if all you want to taste is latakia. This one is a nice marriage of latakia, oriental and Virginia, with each component doing its part, and the latakia front and center. This is a mixture! At the high end of 3 stars for me, but not quite 4. I will likely pick up a few more tins and smoke this occasionally going forward, even while it doesn't supplant the heavy hitters in my latakia rotation (mostly GL Pease blends). If you're interested in this sort of thing, don't let the reviews deter you. Give it a try! I was more than pleasantly surprised.
Age When Smoked: 2 years
8 people found this review helpful.
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Reviewed By Date Rating Strength Flavoring Taste Room Note
May 21, 2003 Medium None Detected Mild to Medium Tolerable
Strong flavor - very rich. A palate pleasing wad of stout tobacco that lets you know you've had a smoke. I like this a lot. Latakia heavy? Perhaps, but in a way that soothes rather than irritates. The Virginia pushes the Latakia and Oriental components right up into heaven!
7 people found this review helpful.
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Reviewed By Date Rating Strength Flavoring Taste Room Note
Nov 19, 2011 Medium None Detected Medium Pleasant to Tolerable
AStley's No. 99 is advertised as a "Full Latakia Mixture." I'm not sure "full" really fits but a decent amount of Latakia is evidence from the wonderful tin aroma and from observation. The ribbon cut is somewhat chunky but still burns well, without many relights. The Orientals are there and the toasted Virgina is in the background. In all, a nicely balanced English blend that does not overwhelm with Latakia. I've only smoked the K&K version; I imagine this blend was really something in the Jermyn Street days. In any event, while not a regular in my rotation, No. 99 is a fine English worthy of consideration.
2 people found this review helpful.
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Reviewed By Date Rating Strength Flavoring Taste Room Note
Dec 16, 2003 Medium None Detected Medium Pleasant to Tolerable
This is another stop in the "English" lanscape for me and just as if one was really travelling, you find stops that you DO want to spend more time in. In this blend, you are greeted by a medium ribbon-cut that has a delicious tin aroma, with the fragrance of the virginia in the forefront. Moisture is perfect, packing is easy. Lighting is quick with two relights max. Initial flavor is of sweet virginia with the condimental leaves giving an excellent backbone. This is what a medium "English" blend should be. It is not as full or complex as "Margate" but it has the advantage of not blasting you with nicotine like the medium Dunhill blends(London Mixture, Medium Mixture, 965, Durbar, etc). You can smoke this all day without tiring and your tongue is not the worse for it. About mid-bowl a nice interplay comes in with the "Latakia" and "Turkish" raising their tasty heads. Bottom of the bowl builds to a quick crescendo of flavor and then your done, with a fine,dry, and grey mottled ash left. This is a very good blend just shy of excellent. I definitely recommend it to all you "English" fanciers and I will definitely keep this around. Rating 4 out of 5 Points. Enjoy
2 people found this review helpful.
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Reviewed By Date Rating Strength Flavoring Taste Room Note
Jan 21, 2004 Extremely Mild Mild Mild Tolerable
This is probably my favorite medium to full English. As someone who is partial straight Virginias and Virginia/Perique blends, I tend to find blend overly heavy in Latakia rather distasteful-- I can appreciate them as good blends, but they just don't really excite me. Particularly heavy use of Latakia seems to just wash out other flavors too much for my liking. That pungent smokey flavor that I often enjoy in small quantities mutes other flavors in large quantities. I'm definitely of the school that believes Latakia to be a condiment or spice tobacco rather than a group in its own right.



Astley's No. 99 is about as heavy in latakia as I care to go. However, in light of my proclivities, that hardly puts it into a category that is at the upper limits of most smokers of English blends. If I had to guess on proportions, it would have to be: 25% Latakia, 15% Oriental/Turkish leaf and about 60% light and orange Virginias.



I'm sitting here smoking from probably my 10th tin of the blend in the last six months and I'm trying to determine what it is that keeps drawing me back. The first sniff from the tin suggest the obvious Latakia, but the other aromas of the Virginias are not muted (maybe it's just me, but I can rarely pick out orientals in tin aroma, not that they have a particularly distinctive aroma on their own...). They have a subtle sweetness as well as an interesting nuttiness, which is almost suprising. The nuttiness (which is more pronounced in Astley's #1 where there is less Latakia) seems almost out of place given the nature of the blend, but not in a bad way. The nutty aroma fits with the rest of the tin aromas and seems to tie the blend together during the smoking (see below). The tobacco in the tin is attractive, but no different from any other English blend where the alternating light browns and blacks play off each other in visual cacophany (am I the only one out there that finds tobacco blends intrinsically visually beautiful?)



The most immediate note upon first light is the Latakia. I find that the Latakia works most harmoniously with the Virginias and Orientals when smoked particularly slowly. If I smoke it too quickly, I seem to lose the balance that makes this blend superior to many Englishes in my mind. The hints of nuttiness (sort of an amorphous nuttiness, I can't peg it with a specific nut for a closer description) carries over to the smoking nicely. I'm not particularly sure where the nutty flavor comes from, but there may be some Carolina ribbon that in combination with the Virginias gives this slight note. There aren't any burleys here, which is what I usually associate with nutty tomes. Besides, it is a different, perhaps more subtle nuttiness than that that is associated with good burley blends. There is some sweetness from the Virginias, but the sweetness is just enough to complement the Latakia rather than conflict with it. The flavors seem to change little throughout the bowl, though perhaps the latakia becomes less pronounced in relation to the other flavors as the bottom nears.



All in all, it is a particularly good example of its genre. The tobacco is of very good quality, as I tend to find with blends currently produced by C&K. I've often thought of it as a version of the medium to heavy Dunhills, but one I actually like. I've never been a fan of Dunhill tobaccos and I don't know why. Something about them irritates me a little. The Astley's english blends seem to offer me similar emphasis on well-proportioned blending without whatever it is that bothers me about the Dunhills. (I really can't easily articulate it; I've only ever noticed it with Dunhill tobacco. Perhaps it is a body chemistry thing-- who knows.)



I don't give 'highly recommended' to many blends and this isn't one of them, perhaps because I tend to prefer Virginia blends. However, to my tastes, this is among the best, if not the best, medium to full English that I've ever tried.
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Reviewed By Date Rating Strength Flavoring Taste Room Note
Feb 08, 2023 Medium None Detected Medium Pleasant to Tolerable
Tin note of sour wine, mildly sweet and smoky. Tobacco is a ready rub with ribbon cut that black and dark brown with a little tan mixed in. Moisture content is great. Burns slow with few relights. The strength is medium and nic is mild to medium. No flavoring detected. Taste is medium and somewhat consistent, with notes of floral, spices, tart and sour fermented tangy fruit, smoky, leather, wood, spicy, musty earth, mildly acidic, dry herbal vegetation, orange peel/zest, incense, a citrusy background note, and a peppery retro. Latakia is leading with Virginia and Oriental/Turkish supporting. Room note is pleasant to tolerable, and aftertaste is great.
Pipe Used: 1991 Ashton Old Chruch XX Prince
PurchasedFrom: smokingpipes.com
Age When Smoked: 4 months
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Reviewed By Date Rating Strength Flavoring Taste Room Note
Mar 02, 2005 Mild to Medium None Detected Medium Tolerable
This is a superb blend! Although,I must say it is not a full English.This is J.F.Germain's King Charles taken up a couple of notches.The dominant flavor is virginia with the turkish providing a nice background.The Latakia is present but never overwhelming.It provides a sweet, dry,and rich smoke. A very good all day blend. This is what Dunhill aspires to be. Definitely worth a try. 3 of 4 stars.
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Reviewed By Date Rating Strength Flavoring Taste Room Note
Jan 19, 2005 Medium None Detected Medium to Full Pleasant
Opening the tin, I found that huge chunks of partially-rubbed-out Virginia flakes dominated the mixture. I was a very pretty mixture, but I worried that this didn?t bode well for a Latakia lover like myself. Upon lightup, it only took one puff to realize I?d have to be careful with this one to avoid tongue bite. The tin aroma is nice. Not the musty/leathery smell one expects when opening a Latakia mixture, but rather a nice, natural, Virginia sweetness.

The claim on the labels is that this is a ?full Latakia mixture.? To quote the hyperbole of attorney Lionel Hutz on the Simpsons: ?This is the most blatant case of false advertising since the film, ?The Never-Ending Story.?? Don?t be misled, this is a mixture primarily for those who like quality Virginias with a splash of Latakia. If that describes your tastes, then this seems like a natural choice. All the components, especially the rubbed-out flakes, are beautiful and high-quality leaf. I would definitely recommend this if EMP or Piccadilly is a regular in your rotation, and would probably rank it above those two in that genre.
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