Dunhill Light Flake

(3.10)
Medium strength flake of selected grades of lemon and bronze Virginias. One of Dunhill's most expert blends of highest quality.
Notes: Currently sold as "Dunhill Flake" due to new laws banning the word "light" in connection with tobacco.

Details

Brand Dunhill
Blended By Dunhill
Manufactured By  
Blend Type Straight Virginia
Contents Virginia
Flavoring
Cut Flake
Packaging 50 grams tin
Country United Kingdom
Production No longer in production

Profile

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

Average Rating

3.10 / 4
44

45

15

9

Reviews

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Displaying 61 - 70 of 113 Reviews
Reviewed By Date Rating Strength Flavoring Taste Room Note
May 11, 2006 Medium None Detected Mild to Medium Pleasant to Tolerable
I would like to preface this review with a few words.

First, that this is my first review...something I have been wanting to do for some time now, having become an enthusiast after some time at my office smoking pipes with my boss. (Nothing makes for a better afternoon break.)

Its pretty easy for me to become an enthusiast...us Deadheads are good at it.

Ive been smoking for 3 months now. 1 month ago I quit smoking ciggarettes--the best thing Ive ever done for myself after 14 years of heavy smoking (Im 25 now.) The pipe and cigar hobby has kept me happy and out of jail since quitting the cigs.

First tin ever was John Aylesbury English Mixture...a bright VA mix. I seared my tounge many a time, but enjoyed it. After that, I became hooked on Latakia blends, chiefly 965 and Nightcap which a friend allowed me to sample from his bulk collection.

After spending the last couple months smoking English blends, I began to crave that bright piquiant Virginia flavor again. Living near Saint Louis, I decided to make an excursion out to Jon's Pipe Shop. I bought a new G&D Dublin to compliment my G&D bent billiard, cheap-o bent meerschaum carved sultan, and Peterson St. Pat's '00. More pipes!

I popped open the can on the way back from StL to get a whiff of the new stuff as I smoked a very nice Punch Corojo. Grassy and something sharp. Definately different from the JA English Mixture, but I expected it would be since LF is a straight VA.

I am sitting here at home with my new pipe and my little tin of Dunhill LF, which was recommended to me by the friendly tobacconist (these guys must be the happiest people in the world.)

Opened the tin again and lifted out a couple slices. This is something I have been wanting to try. Broke them up, rubbed them into a ball, which when deposited into the tin's lid was clearly ready to load. The tobacco is pleasing to the eye, and seemed to be the consistency of 'ready rubbed' varieties Ive tried from my boss's collection. The wad of tobacco looked like it wanted to jump into my new pipe instead of being properly loaded, so I stuffed it in. Men, women, childern...everyone for themselves this time.

'Perfect' moisture content out of the tin (I prefer my English bone dry, but a bit of moisture seems right for this stuff.)

Char, tamp. Hmm...still going. Puff...mmm...sweet, bright. Not too hot. Puff puff...hotter...tamp...ahh better tamped down a bit more.

1/3 through with a bit more tamping (due to my loading technique) and Ive been enjoying an even, reasonably cool, flavorful smoke for what seems like 15 minutes. Just a teeny bit less bright citrusy hints and an even-keeled pleasant 'hay' note.

Halfway down, same. Even cooler than the top of the bowl was. Very consistant smoke. No relights despite setting it down a couple times to cool off (former cig smoker.)

Now to do something else while I smoke the rest...lucky me, I have Firefox. Ack...let her go out. I need a bit of a rest anyway, a bit smoked out feeling. Id rate niccotine content at medium. Time for a bit of water...coffee would go great with this stuff though. Going to go out to the front porch and stand around feeling happy...70 degrees, partly cloudy, 2-4 mph breeze. Mmm.

Tick...tock...tick...tock...

Good finish. I still get the sooty flavor I always get toward the bottom of the pipe...I assume this is normal, but maybe Im doing something wrong. Therefore, I always toss the last 1/4...well not quite, but the last bit.

A good way to break in my new pipe. Ill be smoking this on a somewhat regular basis, as something to break up the monotony of Englishes.

Can't wait to try more flakes and 'not ready to pack' varieties.

At least Im remembering to maintain my humidor...it is full--the cigars are...aging. Yeah. Aging.

Cheers -JW Belleville, IL, US



EDIT: I tried a new packing method suggested on the McBaren website. Essentially, it involves folding the flake(s) in half 'with the grain,' folding again 'across the grain,' which loosens the slivers of tobacco on the folded end...then pushing/massaging a bit to get that 'looser' consistency, then cramming the bundle (which is the exact size of the bowl) into the pipe. The result is aa bit tricky to properly light, but after a bit of charring and gentle tamping, one has a nice, slow-burning pipe of tobacco with a bit different character than a rubbed out flake. Interesting. I have noticed a LOT of condensation forming though...apparently it is necessary to adjust the density of the 'wad' to get things sorted out. Seems like a good 'outdoors' method too...slow burn and no embers flying out of the bowl. Ahoy...Navy Flake!
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Reviewed By Date Rating Strength Flavoring Taste Room Note
Apr 29, 2006 Medium None Detected Medium Pleasant
I first tried this in my early days of pipe smoking, when I had just discovered Latakia and believed that there was nothing more left to be discovered in the tobacco world. A decade later a more educated palate encountered Light Flake again, and it became a regular companion. Of the bright flakes this is amongst the very best.

I have smoked fifteen year old tins and new tins recently(where it is just called Flake), and do not detect any great differance. All tins were purchased in the UK.
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Reviewed By Date Rating Strength Flavoring Taste Room Note
Apr 27, 2006 Mild Very Mild Mild Pleasant to Tolerable
Very basic Tobacco. Pure Virginia, unsweetened. Thats is it. Will not buy anymore.
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Reviewed By Date Rating Strength Flavoring Taste Room Note
Apr 17, 2006 Medium None Detected Medium Pleasant to Tolerable
A really good quality virginia flake. Excellent golden color, thick, and with perfect moisture content. A slightly sweet taste that doesn't bite, and is satisfying all day long. The price is reasonable, the flavor and burn outstanding. A solid three star tobacco.
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Reviewed By Date Rating Strength Flavoring Taste Room Note
Apr 14, 2006 Medium Extremely Mild Medium Pleasant
A straight up virginia with a bit of lemon tang to it. A very nice blend with a definite nip to it that keeps you awake.
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Reviewed By Date Rating Strength Flavoring Taste Room Note
Apr 06, 2006 Mild to Medium None Detected Medium Tolerable
When I first smoked this, it had an almost soapy note that oddly enough, I did not mind.

After the tin had been open a while, the soapiness has gone. This flake is less sweet than the other virginias that I usually like, but I still enjoy it. It has a hay like note, and an aftertaste that reminds me of oats.

I fold up a whole flake and shove it in my pipe.
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Reviewed By Date Rating Strength Flavoring Taste Room Note
Feb 20, 2006 Medium Very Mild Medium Pleasant to Tolerable
After smoking a tin of Light Flake, I think this blend is a little light tasting for me, my experience was whether different from most of the reviews from here. It smokes hot and wet and overall not a very good smoking experience. Somewhat Recommended.
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Reviewed By Date Rating Strength Flavoring Taste Room Note
Feb 07, 2006 Medium None Detected Medium Tolerable
Update: It's gotten even more unremarkable, but I do still like it. Less of the Dunhill harshness experienced in the past, but also somewhat bland, no surprises here. Wessex's Golden VA is supposed to be a punchier version of LF, and there may well be more analogs of this blend that do it better.

10/16/05: [Review based on tins manufactured in 2004]

Somehow unremarkable and yet unique, Dunhill's Light Flake is clearly an untopped flake to sight, smell and touch, yet it presents some odd flavors that "are not casing but more than tobacco" which must result from the combination of these various select VAs.

Though it is supposed to be "light," I think this refers mostly to the actual color and distant citrus taste of this blend. DLF is not exactly patient with beginners or frequent puffers. It is, however, comprised of quality leaf, and consistently demonstrates the sharpness and sweetness expected of VA flakes, though of a certain 'citrus-blonde' shade of these.
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Reviewed By Date Rating Strength Flavoring Taste Room Note
Feb 05, 2006 Mild Mild Mild Very Pleasant
New Version: Like smoking the old formula through a filter. People wanted a true "lite" to match the name and now we have it. I absolutely craved the old stuff. Now, I puff and puff trying to get the old taste back. Rats.

Old version comments: True love. Pure tobacco taste, smooth, versatile and the right amount of nicotine for me. It's my base tobacco and the one I'd call my 'desert isle/only-one-if-I-had-to' smoke. Also, my 'fastest thru the tin' winner. The one I crave most often when without. This and London Mixture produce 90% of my household smoke.
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Reviewed By Date Rating Strength Flavoring Taste Room Note
Dec 24, 2005 Mild to Medium Mild Mild Unnoticeable
I first smoked cigars as a way off cigarettes, may I be forgiven. In the cigar shop I saw some pipes and was reminded of earlier youthful bouts with pipe smoking. On a bit of a lark I grabbed a Comoy and some tobacco the clerk pushed off on me. One thing led to another and when I tired of the goopy junk from his jar, I tried and became enamoured of this tobacco. I was already familiar with and trusted Dunhill via their cigars and this tin had the same colours on the handy-dandy pocket-sized tin as my cigars so I picked this one. Simple as that. Well, that was then and this is now, but I have always appreciated this tobacco. Mostly appreciation like you appreciate a first girlfriend; thats the tin I picked and we explored pipes together.

Now lo these severals of years later I have been trying to learn the art of tobacco reviewing. I was quite let down by some of my early reviews after reading quite a few more of the normal ones. My apologies to the readers of those sad efforts. One of the things I had been skipping was to note whether or not the tobacco smoked "to a fine white ash". I have been trying to figure out whether this one does or not. My problem is with the qualifiers I suppose. I have never seen any ash (tobacco or otherwise) that wasn't really really fine. And of course all the tobacco ash I have encountered so far seem to me to be light grey enough as to appear occaisonally close to white. The last thing I would dream of doing is to make someone embarassed, but I just wonder if the mottled dottle is from unsteady elderly hands sort of jiggling the unsmoked into the smoked. I have seen some of these pipesmokers who are, well, unsteady a bit.

Well, on to the tobacco. Oh boy!

Better get a pipe. I wondered at first what kind of pipe to use. One of the things you learn from reading the online content is that one pipe might better enhance a certain tobacco's qualities. I couldn't remember which sort of pipe seemed to be preferred for use with flakes, and I had not gotten my online notes out yet. I did remember that in these notes I made from online content it is suggested I might prefer to use my favourite old Ben Wade Freehand for about anything. I was fiercely impatient to get on with it, then it came to me - I had always meant to get a Ben Wade - but had never quite got around to doing it. So, I started to bust the flakes a bit and then I quit. I wanted to try that new thing where if you fold the flakes and stuff them right in the bowl that way instead of rubbing them out like God intended them be. Oh I almost forgot - I ended up using a big old Stanwell 183 that I got from my wife's brother-in-law. If you squint when you look at it you can just about pretend it is a Ben Wade. It really isn't a bad pipe at all - it just isn't one of my better ones, and some of the reviews go to great effort to mention things like plum and cinnamon and such and I wasn't sure if I wanted all that in one of my good pipes. The broken pieces look really dumb. Looks to me like trying to smoke dead tree leaves. Exactly like White Ash tree leaves, I dumped it out and rubbed the flakes smartly into a semblance of tobacco. Much better.

I don't recall how many char lights it took to get this lit. The way I sort it out is simply if it won't light and catch then that was a char light. When it does catch that is the real light. I know I got it lit and it seems like if lighting were much trouble I'd have surely put the stuff away because I have a lot of other tobacco that will easily catch and burn. Next I was thinking of trying DGT. I made a note to check my notes and see if the T is to D after you smoke some of it or before you smoke any of it. So I didn't D and just started smoking. The ash on the top layer started out mostly very light grey. I wanted to make a note of things like that, and of what I smelled and tasted in the tobacco. I was pretty worried about the plum. Surely to goodness no blender in their right mind would take good smoking tobacco and add some sort of stuff to it to make it taste of plums. I really don't like plums. I was probably only half-worried they really did it though because a lot of the reviews also mention that certain Virginias either have a tin aroma (or actually taste when smoking) of hay. I suppose they mean grass or wheat hay and not green leafy hay like alfalfa. Alfalfa has a really distinct smell when burning and is easy to tell, but I have never tasted anything remotely like hay in any of them and this is one ol boy has smoked some hay (and grape vine) in his day. Now, I have certainly tasted that soapy thing though. And soapy taste is something for which I absolutely have to award demerits. I once asked Peter Stokebye why some tobaccos taste like soap. I guess he thought I intended the query as if in referrence to his own tobacco, as he was the only blender present. He flatly stated he doubted if even one of HIS tobaccos might do it, and I quickly regretted bringing it up. I listened carefully the whole while I smoked and I heard no notes at all - not high or treble clef or anything. I did save my written notes though.

I give this tobacco two stars.
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