Missouri Meerschaum Great Dane

(2.93)
The Missouri Meerschaum Great Dane pipes are their take on Danish designs, so when we wanted to make a tobacco with the same name, we thought that a Danish inspired aromatic would be the best choice. This blend consists of a good portion of gently steamed black cavendish, select Virginias and some white burley, which have been topped with a smooth and rich combination of a deep, dark cherry, without the sharpness of the typical "maraschino" flavor, and warm notes of vanilla and caramel, for an easy smoking blend with a lightly sweet flavor and an amazing aroma.

Details

Brand Missouri Meerschaum
Blended By Russ Ouellette
Manufactured By Lane Limited
Blend Type Aromatic
Contents Black Cavendish, Burley, Virginia
Flavoring Caramel, Cherry, Vanilla
Cut Mixture
Packaging 1.5 ounce pouch
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

2.93 / 4
10

7

10

1

Reviews

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Displaying 21 - 28 of 28 Reviews
Reviewed By Date Rating Strength Flavoring Taste Room Note
Jan 10, 2016 Very Mild Medium to Strong Mild to Medium Very Pleasant
Ok, I'm going to put this out there that's obvious to the veteran pipe smokers out there familiar with his work. Russ Ouellette has created something special with this Missouri Meerschaum tobacco line. Each one provides a great and distinct smoke. They make for great starter tobaccos or those just graduating from starter and also for those who don't want something heavy in nicotine.

First off, Great Dane, is the best smelling aromatic out of the bag. Full stop. It smells like sweet candy - caramel, cherries, and vanilla. Now, at this point people are going to say, "Ok, what about the tongue bite?". I did not experience any. Now, any aromatic doesn't always taste like it smells. THIS blend, however, delivers a sweet smoke that doesn't bit and produces nice, thick, white smoke.

Absolutely great blend. If you like aros, try this one.
Pipe Used: Corn cob
PurchasedFrom: P&G
Age When Smoked: fresh
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Reviewed By Date Rating Strength Flavoring Taste Room Note
Aug 03, 2015 Mild to Medium Mild to Medium Medium to Full Pleasant
This is without a doubt the best Tobacco I can find for an everyday all around smoke. I've tried everything from Stanwell to W.O. Larsen and I have yet to find one that smokes like this one. You can smoke it hot, cool, slow, or burn it like a smoke stack and it never makes you feel like you had Kerosene poured in your mouth- No "bite", not overpowering, just the right "tang", taste, and burns to the bottom of the bowl. I know I'm not the only one that likes this one due to the fact that everyone I've bought it from is out and has been out for weeks! ( If you know where I can buy some let me know PLEASE!! ) Every pipe style and type I've smoked this one in is the same-Just an all around great Tobacco.
Pipe Used: MM Mark Twain, Vanetti, Baracinni Churchwarden
PurchasedFrom: Pipes and Cigars, Smoking pipes.com
Age When Smoked: From the pouch
2 people found this review helpful.
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Reviewed By Date Rating Strength Flavoring Taste Room Note
Sep 01, 2023 Mild Mild to Medium Mild Pleasant
And now to the immediate task at hand. Honestly speaking, it feels like I just discussed the subject blend a couple of weeks ago; well, kind of. The similarity to Russ O’s pure Cavendish creation of Nation’s Capital rebounded to my mind to be exact. The primary difference being that the celebrated cob masters’ offering of Great Dane comes tastefully bolstered by the addition of White Burley and mixed Virginian leaves, while still supporting a third of its mass as common Black Cavendish. However, the selection of chosen top dressings are of identical character, those being caramel, dark cherry, and vanilla. And given the fact that it was Russ himself who designed this particular MM blend I have to wonder if the coatings spawned from the same vintage.

With that insight I hold a high degree of confidence in suggesting that the profiled difference between these two mentioned products is a minor tweak in the applied ratios of these very coatings. The Great Dane alternative encounters with more of a polished and cultured registration overall. Chiefly, the ensuing texture of said coatings is significantly creamier and developed, that is fair. It is obvious that this recipe’s reliance on a wider leaf base makes for a fuller and smoother flavor registration on the whole.

As a pouched varietal, Great Dane was inspired to complement the renown cob pipe of the same moniker. This tobacco clusters a jetty accumulation of a mixed parceling duly made up of coarse morsels, jagged twists, and heavy, lengthy extended ribbons. A Danish favored concoction, Great Dane’s well-seasoned display shines an impressive palette of festered tints of russet, sepia, chocolate, and dirty, lucid dark orange-brown thongs of the base components swirled within pitch ebon Cavendish chunks.

In sampling the pouch nose, I was greeted with notable confectioned excess. What is more, the overall tone felt decidedly tart and buttery. A succulent sugary fragrance that emitted freely embodied the masterful thrusts of the inclusive additives. Largely a dainty sourish cherry enfolded itself with the delectable streams of inviting caramel and modest innuendos of rich cocoa. Still, there were inklings of dormant earthy spice coming from the Burley and passive tart contributed by the contained Virginia. With that, there was little contradictory evidence that the tobacco would present itself as anything other than a toppings-privileged aromatic indulgence.

Overall Great Dane fostered a tasteful mellowing presentation formed by the subject coatings and the guarded commenting of the listed native strains. For the most part the dark tarty sweetness of the fruity cherry element held leading dominance as the warm meld of sugary vanilla-caramel supported in accompaniment. The intensity of this cherry cheerfulness was gracious and not overly flamboyant. For the caramel, the stream was of secondary emphasis with a savory buttered undertone, striped with karo-like sweetness. Effectively the vanilla additive imparted a lower key, offering just a curtailing creamed softening end note that rounded out the composite meld of flavor.

Predisposing the base line flair, I feebly recorded a lighter tangy impression of the combined Virginian. A projection of Bright lemony citrus bundling a stint of passive grass selectively bonded with the classic sweet wood remarks from the offsetting and more perceivable Red. This combined notation was further embellished with highlights of baked bread and a very bright node of spruce-like floral. Buried deeply by the upper coatings, clear recognition of the Virginia surfaced as somewhat of a daunting task.

Occupying the more concise middle band, the White Burley brought a lively rendering of toasty sweet pecans censored with the influence of minor cocoa and an herbaceous greenish dill spicing. This Burley element further denoted a nice accenting that resembled a thin roasted coffee of all things. And as for the Cavendish, the leaf strengthened the depth of the mid-bottom by injecting eased sour wood and some semblance of musty, smokey sulfur.

Exhibiting an exceptionally pleasant room aroma, Great Dane’s spent persona was of flattering importance and expressly quaint in comforting sweetness. Genuinely a tad lighter, a mocking of tart blissful dark cherry emerged, pulling forward a stream of baked caramelized vanilla garnishment. Underneath this premier aromatic resonance laid a more diminished throng of tangy soured wood and sharply branded Burley-Cavendish spice.

Producing sound volumes of cloudy smoke plumes, the tobacco tended to draw upon worthy mechanical properties. Aptly empowered with a well-regulated burn the blend charted along with appropriately cool temperatures and consistent flaming. I discovered that lower nicotine Great Dane performed nicely in all pipe venues with the trueness of Cavendish eliciting more strongly in a basic Ozark hardwood.

With its thoroughly relaxed mild disposition, Missouri Meerschaum’s Great Dane seems to be a right proper excursion on this very Friday morning my friends. Seeing how my day shall be spent with a devotion to everything but demanding work, I think this tobacco’s simple enjoyability stands as most suitable. It is not as if I opted to smoke a challenging alternative like Black XX., and so you want to talk about an arduous task, holy geez. Nope, Great Dane was purposefully created with the intent of an easeful day of PTO relaxation in mind. On this most splendid point I am happily certain. 3.2 Pipes.
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Reviewed By Date Rating Strength Flavoring Taste Room Note
Apr 14, 2023 Very Mild Very Mild Very Mild Very Pleasant
This is a nice light aromatic. I am finding myself gravitate from english/Balkan blends towards some more tobaccos like this, however there isn't much tobacco taste to fill in the space behind the light cherry/vanilla flavorings. To me it tastes like there is a hole that would be nicely filled with a little more burley or Virginia.

While keeping very mild, the cherry is up front, I normally dislike cherry tobacco, but don't have that reaction with this one. The vanilla is faintly in background behind the mild cherry, just enough for me to taste and it does benefit the flavor well.

As are all the MM pouch tobaccos, this one would be a great introduction to this type of blend, or if you are seeking a more mild flavor than its cousins.
Pipe Used: cobs and MM hardwoods
PurchasedFrom: P&C
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Reviewed By Date Rating Strength Flavoring Taste Room Note
Mar 01, 2023 Mild Medium Mild to Medium Very Pleasant
As someone who often drinks maraschino liquor and uses the cherries in cocktails, I must say that Missouri Meerschaum did a rather good job capturing that flavour. It is not overly sweet and the cherry tastes natural (it's always a risk to end up on the cough syrup spectrum). The vanilla and caramel notes aid in capturing the essence of maraschino. It smokes smoothly straight out of the pouch, and needs little drying. No bite, just delight.

This is a 3 for me, but could be a 4 for others.
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Reviewed By Date Rating Strength Flavoring Taste Room Note
Feb 17, 2023 Mild Strong Mild Very Pleasant
Bag note mainly comes across as cocoa, chocolate to me. Flavor, I get some vanilla, cream, maybe a little cherry. Some sort of chocolate-based baked good. Can't say I get any sort of tobacco character. A very "dirty" tobacco, wet and leaves a lot of residue on the bowl and my fingers. Very good for what it is; I don't want to have dessert for every smoke, but I'm glad to have such a great option.
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Reviewed By Date Rating Strength Flavoring Taste Room Note
Apr 12, 2021 Mild Mild to Medium Mild Very Pleasant
I agree with those that say the pouch note doesn't match with taste or room note, both of which I felt were much better than what I picked up in the pouch. I found the pouch note to be a little off-putting, The moisture level was good and It packed easily. Lights well and was pretty easy to keep going. The taste was reminiscent of Paladin Black Cherry, or at least what PBC should be (no bite, no harshness). A mild blend that would be well suited for an all-day smoke.
Pipe Used: generic briar
PurchasedFrom: Pipes and Cigars
Age When Smoked: New
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Reviewed By Date Rating Strength Flavoring Taste Room Note
Mar 09, 2021 Mild Medium Mild to Medium Pleasant
I received a pouch of Great Dane with my MM IPSD2021 set. It didn't have the outer plastic wrap, so I decided to smoke some and jar the rest. Since I got 4 new cobs with the set I decided to dedicate one of them to this blend.

It's a decent cherry aromatic. Has a good cherry note to it, not cough syrup. The tobacco was moist and can use a little drying before smoking. When loaded, it lit easily and the smoke is similar to other cherry tobaccos (Casey Jones, etc..) It produces a nice roomnote and non-smokers will like it.

Pipe Used: Cobs
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