Cornell & Diehl Espresso

(2.75)
The same tobaccos as Apricots & Cream with a heavy coffee flavor.

Details

Brand Cornell & Diehl
Blended By  
Manufactured By Cornell & Diehl
Blend Type Aromatic
Contents Black Cavendish, Burley
Flavoring Coffee
Cut Coarse Cut
Packaging Bulk
Country United States
Production Currently available

Profile

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

Average Rating

2.75 / 4
6

6

5

3

Reviews

Please login to post a review.
Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 Reviews
Reviewed By Date Rating Strength Flavoring Taste Room Note
Apr 22, 2014 Mild to Medium Medium Medium Very Pleasant
This one's not over the top sweet, with caramel and a slight vanilla note bolstering the espresso topping. They dominate the tobaccos to a fair extent. The toasted, nutty, earthy, woody burley is in the background, and the unsweetened black cavendish has a little brown sugar. The strength is at the center of mild to medium. The taste is medium. Has little nicotine. Won't bite or get harsh. Burned fairly dry and slightly fast with a very consistent flavor. Leaves little moisture in the bowl, and requires few relights. Has a pleasant after taste and room note. Not really an all day smoke as it has a little punch. Deserves two and half stars, but three stars when compared to other coffee blends, so I rate it at three for that reason.

-JimInks
12 people found this review helpful.
Please login to upvote this review.
Reviewed By Date Rating Strength Flavoring Taste Room Note
May 24, 2010 Mild Medium Mild to Medium Very Pleasant
NICE aromatic! I was so disappointed with C&D's Coffee tobacco that I didn't have high hopes for this one. I was pleasantly surprised! This uses black cavendish as a base and it's wetter than Coffee but not too moist. A slight drying period (about 10 mins) was all that was required.

Along with the coffee flavor was strong hints of toffee and caramel - really a delightful combination! The room note was fairly subdued as aromatics go, but it was extremely pleasant. But the best part of this blend was the taste. Really excellent, with bursts of dark roast coffee at the forefront but enough tobacco to let you know you're smoking our favorite plant. This did not leave a wet heel. I may not appreciate all of C&D's aromatics but there is no question that they know how best to blend them so they please those around us but not at the expense of our taste buds.

If you like coffee, pass over C&D's #909 Coffee and go straight here! This is a treat! Certainly one of the best aromatics I've ever smoked.
12 people found this review helpful.
Please login to upvote this review.
Reviewed By Date Rating Strength Flavoring Taste Room Note
Mar 13, 2015 Mild to Medium Medium Medium Pleasant
This is pretty good tobacco. Dark roasted coffee. A hint of vanilla and a little sweetness. Goes very well with a cup of Kona. Not much else to say really. Just a simple great tasting smoke.

Mild to medium in body. Medium in flavor. It's a bit chunky and needs rubbing. Fairly dry and ready to smoke. Very smooth and cool.
Pipe Used: MM Diplomat 5th Ave
PurchasedFrom: smokingpipes.com
Age When Smoked: fresh bulk
5 people found this review helpful.
Please login to upvote this review.
Reviewed By Date Rating Strength Flavoring Taste Room Note
Aug 11, 2023 Mild Medium Mild to Medium Pleasant to Tolerable
By coincidence, this week’s entry just so happens to be one from an abundant cast of coffee-flavored pipe tobaccos available for your tempting smoking indulgence. Ah-ha. Seeing that coffee is one of my base functional inputs in life, and further compounded by the fact that I am genuinely an incurably curious pipe smoker at that, I thought I would teem myself with a hearty cup or rather bowlful on this fine August day. And with that intent, pouring forth for your caffeine-loving consideration is Cornell & Diehl’s very own complement of Espresso.
This mild to medium flavored Cornell & Diehl tobacco features a mixture of unsweetened Black Cavendish and a portion of their Green River Vanilla blend which contributes the significance of fire cured Burley. To solidify this stodgy recipe’s premier flavor, a distinctive top-note of brazenfaced coffee has been generously infused, and then modishly joined by the augmentation of quieting soothful cream. Designed for those discreet pipers who selectively fancy the unique experience of a coffee-centric aromatic, Espresso is served up to render a concentrated shot of brewed smoking delight.
At a glance, you will discover the immense shadowy image cast by this profusely coarse-cut mixture. Sold both as a bulk and tinned offering, Espresso projects a staunch visage of exceedingly brown/black strands and irregular pieces piled shamelessly in a thickened nesting. In showing every part of what would appear to be the murk and umbra of wet coffee grounds, the tobacco comes fairly dense and jaggedly pillowed. What is more, this concoction carries a significant degree of moisture and fastening tackiness, which is duly noted upon the simple touch of one’s finger. As such, it is advisable to expose the subject bowl pickings to an extended set up time for optimum burning. Yet even with executing that preparatory measure, you still might find Espresso to be a bit logged with respect to exaggerated dampness.
Sampling the air of the bulked pouch, immediately a detectable commenting of compact roasted coffee greets with uninhibited introduction. Presumably, it is as if your face has been fully immersed into a fresh bag of Starbuck’s Pike Place savory dried grounds. Well, maybe not exactly but you get the gist of my enthusiasm.
Surrounding this spicy dark notation, you can easily register a strapping buttery essence that, when combined with the applied sweet cream and delicate vanilla, borders upon the decorative appeal of sugary butterscotch. With extended probing, witness of a residing flash of relaxing cocoa comes to record as a further tinge of suggestive succor. At the bottom of this pleasant top essence, the nose reveals a bit of weaker nuttiness, faded wood, some common sourness, and a hidden acrid funk that totally permeates the nasal sense once properly uncovered. On the latter element, this classifiable scent is the very same malodorous pong that I encountered with C&D’s Apples & Cream, which stands to reason given the common base recipe.
Upon striking the initial flame, the palate is immediately greeted with a forceful wave of, you guess it, energetic dark espresso. This forward affluence brings the delicious sharpness of a fully concentrated roasting that is standardly robust, gourmet-like, and exceptionally chocolatey in undertone. Classic in its flavorsomeness, Espresso secures further development by an evocation of standing bitterness and what I perceived to be a minor twist of a stone-fruit ambience much like the character of a basic plum. Riding the peripheral edging is the softening influence of the vanilla creaminess that comfortably frames the profile with a cheerful gentling effect. Not too shabby in terms of impact, as the tobacco’s leading flavor re-fueled my lethargic and woefully craggy spirit if the truth were to be known.
Although the blend is unquestionably dominated by the mentioned flavorings, which by the way exhibit fine performance in lasting presence, with the smoking, you will experience evidence of a modest sugary walnut base tone gathered with seasoned wood and a shied tangy sourness. Additionally, there is an abiding buttery quality the comes into play for the entire course of the bowl and some degree of earthen funk, but nothing as pretentiously tainted as I found within the extreme depth of the pouched aroma. Finally, the profile discloses an occasional glimmer of herbaceous spice that materialized with a wispy mint-like complexion.
With its expenditure, Espresso endows cultured plumes of dense grayed smoke that project a real magnitude that is especially heavier and brooding. Standardly the ensuing fragrance ideally models this simple recipe’s base constituents. Foremost, the circulating aroma is colorized by the prevailing goodness of toasty, unambiguous coffee that is tactfully sweetened by tapering droplets of creamed vanilla.
Still, you can undeniably register the heavy representation of the cloying native nut-woodiness of the essential Burley. And with that base essence, there is stoked smokiness and a minor tint of classic sourness that resonate freely. This bundling is further painted with a general earthen zest which practically demonstrates the inclusive contribution of the naked Cavendish. Perceivably, I could assign a tolerable to pleasant room presence rating depending upon the subject onlooker’s stomach-able permissiveness.
Coming to the final assessment criterion of mechanical performance, Espresso does in fact demonstrate smoothness in texture and a proper balancing in the flow of assorted taste streams. Subsequently the whole smoking exercise charts as pleasantly enjoyable and truly mellow in its course. By default, the series of sampling pipes that were used supports the choice of a simple hardwood cob as the best relatable experience. Even so, I should state that the tobacco itself seemed to burn with an accelerated pace yet maintained coolness in experienced temperatures. Also, one physical detraction worth mentioning, when all is said and done, this blend does indeed deposit an earnest amount of goopy tar-like dottle in the cavity of the bowl, so be advised on that one.
Given the actual varietals contained within the mixture, there are mild to medium residual effects that surface in regard to felt nicotine impressions. And of course there is that delicate seedy funk resident to its raw state that one must contend with during the pre-smoking activities. Short of that, Espresso’s potential for an all-day smoker is genuinely feasible based upon my measured study.
0 people found this review helpful.
Please login to upvote this review.
Reviewed By Date Rating Strength Flavoring Taste Room Note
Jun 03, 2023 Mild Medium Mild to Medium Very Pleasant
A nice aromatic blend. I like Apricots and Cream more than this, but solid blend nonetheless.

I get black coffee, some chocolate, vanilla, maybe some caramel sweetness and hints of cream. Really tasty.

Burns great, no bite. Just a few relights.
Pipe Used: Cayuga
PurchasedFrom: pipesandcigars.com
Age When Smoked: 1 year old
0 people found this review helpful.
Please login to upvote this review.
Reviewed By Date Rating Strength Flavoring Taste Room Note
Apr 19, 2022 Medium Mild to Medium Mild to Medium Pleasant
Not a sweet smoke, but a solid coffee aro. Tobacco was a little wet, but still smokes well. The taste was spot on for a coffee blend, Burned well, with few relights. No bite. A good morning smoke!
Pipe Used: MM Twain
PurchasedFrom: Pipes and Cigars
Age When Smoked: New
0 people found this review helpful.
Please login to upvote this review.

target="_blank"