Robert McConnell Original Oriental

(3.30)
The Oriental Mixture has been part of Robert McConnell's range since the beginning of the 19th century, making it one of the company's oldest products. It consists mostly of Cypriot, Turkish and Eastern Mediterranean bright tobaccos, which are blended together with bright leaf from Carolina and Red Old Belt from Virginia over a whole week. Carolina Black Cavendish is then added, resulting in a balanced, medium strength blend that will delight friends of expressive pipe tobacco in particular.

Details

Brand Robert McConnell
Blended By Kohlhase, Kopp und Co. KG
Manufactured By Kohlhase & Kopp
Blend Type Oriental
Contents Black Cavendish, Latakia, Oriental/Turkish, Virginia
Flavoring
Cut Ribbon
Packaging 50 grams tin, 100 grams tin
Country Germany
Production Currently available

Profile

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

Average Rating

3.30 / 4
52

42

11

4

Reviews

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Displaying 31 - 40 of 42 Reviews
Reviewed By Date Rating Strength Flavoring Taste Room Note
Mar 11, 2008 Medium None Detected Medium Tolerable
VERY VERY SPICY! PURE ORIENTAL TASTE! ONLY FOR THE FAITHFUL!
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Reviewed By Date Rating Strength Flavoring Taste Room Note
Nov 21, 2007 Mild to Medium None Detected Medium Pleasant
This tobacco is a nice change as I have been exploring oriental blends. Opening the tin reminds me of sweet and chewy figs. It was sealed a little wet. Lighter on the Latakia with a refined balance. The aroma changes significantly thoughout the bowl with notes of patchouli, leather, cream soda, smoky barbeque and black licorice. Packed lightly, I enjoy this blend in a rusticated Canadian and a Danish Cherrywood.
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Reviewed By Date Rating Strength Flavoring Taste Room Note
Oct 04, 2007 Mild to Medium None Detected Medium Tolerable
Side by Side Comparison of Orcilla Mixture, Campanile and Original Oriental

I usually do not open multiple tins of tobacco at the same time of the exact same genre. But with the advent of Embarcadero, Yenidje Supreme and HH Vintage Virginia, all containing Virginia and Oriental leaf without latakia, I wanted to see how three ?classic? blends compared. Each has at least five years aging in the tin unopened. I do not have a tin of aged Cairo, or I would add it to the present review.

I laid out three mounds of leaf from each tin, equivalent to what would fill a very large pipe bowl and then some. As always for me, this is a test for the eyes, the nose, the fingers, the ears and mouth.

Orcilla Mixture: Color-wise, Orcilla is the overall lightest of the three. Mostly light browns and tans, with a few suspicious specks of dark leaf. Moisture content is just right, but there were more stems here than in the two others. There is a fermented nose in the tin and something very faintly smoky when I cup my hands around the tin and inhale through my nose very deeply. I am suspicious of Latakia, but am not confident.

Campanile: Darkest of the three and the reverse of Orcilla. The specks are the lighter leaf, while the remaining are medium browns to black. There are a few stems. There is something definitely smoky in the tin aroma, as with Original Oriental. This was noticeably moister of the three.

Original Oriental: Bright, black and brown in near equal proportions. The most visually interesting of three, but it is also the hardest to anticipate what it will be like smoking. Only a tiny stem. Moisture content is fine, but I smell something smoky, just like in Campanile. These are not supposed to have latakia, hmmm.

Cut: All three are a medium long ribbon cut, with Orcilla being much finer, followed by Campanile and then Original Oriental. All three are nice blends to handle, but will require care when loading due to the long leaf.

I decided on three of my best Virginia pipes for the test run, then one more whiff of Campanile and Original Oriental made me think better of it. I think they have latakia. I will not put noticeable latakia or aromatized leaf in a pipe reserved for Virginia blends. I switched out two pipes for pipes used with very light English blends that had very little noticeable residual smell in the bowl. Orcilla loaded with ease, followed by Campanile. Original Oriental took more care. I used the Frank Method with each blend.

My notes on each blend as follows:

Orcilla.

First Bowl Impressions: Not a light-weight by any means, and deep, earthy, spicy flavors betray the lighter appearance of the unburned leaf. I do detect brighter leaf at times. There?s a definite tingle in mouth and nose, but no Latakia, which is a good thing in this case. The burn is exceptionally even, white and rapid. My experience says, ?Respect this or your tongue will get slapped.? That said, it was easy keeping this cool. There is flavor aplenty. ?Sipping? this carefully avoids the need for aggressive puffing. Since this develops somewhat down the bowl, I?ll give my impressions on the middle and last third of the bowl.

The second third of the bowl is when the flavor intensifies. It does not vary from one flavor to the other, except when a little ?something? arrives. This ?something? might be Perique. If you do not generally like blends with Orientals or Turkish leaf because they are harsh, sour or oppressively acrid, Orcilla will change your mind. The Turkish in Orcilla are as good as any I have smoked in any blend and better than most others.

Last half is about the same as the middle third, but a bit more intense. I also sense more Perique. Overall, a solid blend with no arias, but Orcilla is surprisingly fuller than I anticipated without being overwhelming in flavor or strength.

Ongoing Impressions with Orcilla: I keep reaching for this of the three being reviewed here. It gets better each time I smoke it. The balance is perfect, highlighting the Virginias by off-setting them with the mild Turkish. The blender has a palate for subtle, rich flavors that anyone could enjoy who likes flue-cured leaf or Oriental leaf. This is World-class blending indeed.

Campanile: First Bowl Impressions: Subtle, but definite Latakia at the match and throughout, with a surprise taste of non-descript topping. Campanile is a nice, refined mild-medium English, but not an Oriental blend or a ?spiced? Virginia. It really does not develop much down the bowl, but does burn beautifully, cleanly, coolly, and to a dry, slightly mottled white ash. If J.J. Fox were a tobacconist in my neighborhood, I would feel quite blessed with access to such quality (and to think of the blending houses the residents of Edinburgh, Dublin and London had access to, without forgetting Kendal or Jersey, is to sigh that a great era has passed). With the price per tin and solid competition readily available, I am not likely to purchase more. I can still recommend it because it is well crafted, just not a niche that needed filling in my rotation.

Ongoing Impressions: Truly a clean pipe, clean palate blend. The Virginia leaf is top-notch and just gets creamier the more I smoked it in the same pipe on repeated occasions. This is far more refined than my staple lighter English, EMP. If I could get this more reasonably priced, I would enjoy a tin now and then.

Original Oriental:

Initial Impressions: This is more in the genre of Orcilla, but darker still, with that acrid taste for which Turkish leaf is renowned. Thankfully, it is not sour, bitter or bitey. Compared to Orcilla, this starts off strong, like an amusement park ride launched by catapult. Orcilla starts more like the walk before the jog before the run. Despite the instant ?pow,? Original Oriental is smooth enough. The thought occurs to me that Original Oriental borders balkanic. There might be a smidge of Latakia here, but much in the way it appears ghostly in Pease?s Fillmore. If there is perique, it is quite enigmatic. I think Original Oriental is more like McClelland?s Yenidje Supreme, just fuller-flavored, but not as refined.

Ongoing Impressions: This has merit by itself, and I really do enjoy its complexity and richness. If I smoke it back to back with Orcilla and Campanile, it is ?odd man out.? I think that this is because Original Oriental demands my attention, and I do not always want to think too much about the ?act of smoking.?
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Reviewed By Date Rating Strength Flavoring Taste Room Note
Aug 05, 2007 Medium Mild Mild to Medium Pleasant
This is a nice, easy Oriental smoke. Not too strong, not too moist, and not too overwhelming tastewise.

If you like a strong latakia kick then this may disappoint, but for those of us who enjoy a subtle and slightly reserved blend, then this is worth purchasing. It smokes dry, has just enough of the bonfire smell to fill the room, and is easy on the nicotine.

Unnlike some latakia blends I could mention, this doesn't kick like a mule...

I am enjoying my tin, and would happily recommend it.
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Reviewed By Date Rating Strength Flavoring Taste Room Note
Aug 14, 2006 Medium None Detected Medium to Full Tolerable
The nice yellow tin portrays (once you peel of the Governmental warning sticker) an undecidely Asian Landscape with a tobacco(?) factory in front of two Alps, with what appears to be a "classic" Chinaman in a pointed hat with stringlike moustaches. Cool.

Upon opening there is a smokey flavour with organic whiffs that soon dissipate. Sweet. The tobacco consists of somewhat equal thirds of black, bright and olive strands that are a couple of millimeters wide a fairly thin cut. Nice.

The tobacco is on the wet side upon opening so I let a few pinches dry out for half an hour before I stuff them in a small semi-churchwarden Prince that I use for English, Balkan and Orientals.

The smoke is mild at first but enough of Latakia goes in there to make itself noticed although it is more of a spice than an ingredient. the Orientals whirl about in a taste potpourri which is elegant and cool, yet satisfying. The second half intensifys the tastes but they do not change markedly, just get a bit stronger.

I long for another pipe as soon as possible, but my tongue did get a bit of scorching probably due to overzealous puffing. Overall a nice milder alternative to a fullblown English mix with more elegance and less kapow.
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Reviewed By Date Rating Strength Flavoring Taste Room Note
Jul 29, 2005 Mild to Medium None Detected Medium Pleasant to Tolerable
If you like orientals, this is for you. A fine blend, though it lacks in body, but it couldn't have been otherwise, considering the tobaccos used. You can smoke it alone with satisfaction, but you could also use it to spice up a mixture with a good body and a scanty aroma.
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Reviewed By Date Rating Strength Flavoring Taste Room Note
Dec 17, 2023 Mild to Medium None Detected Mild Pleasant to Tolerable
Comes across as almost identical to Peterson's 965, although it apparently predates it by another century according to the tin description, which is fairly impressive. It's so similar that I would even say that if you have one you don't need the other. 965 seems to have a tiny amount more latakia and slightly less oriental, but the difference is minuscule at best.

The tin note was surprisingly fruity with the Latakia clearly noticeable. However the orientals don't come through half as much as I expected given the blend's name and tin note. It is by far a Latakia blend with Oriental support and the Cavendish sweetness. I assume the "Oriental" in the name doesn't mean to insinuate a blend strong on the specific Oriental leaf but generally leaves from the Orient (which includes Latakia).
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Reviewed By Date Rating Strength Flavoring Taste Room Note
Mar 25, 2021 Mild to Medium Extremely Mild Mild to Medium Pleasant to Tolerable
Virginia is the baseline, additional comes oriental, which calls the tune. They complement one another and appear well balanced. Latakia is far in the background, appears with very discreet smoky notes. Perique ist not to dedect, at least for me. Overall i do like this tobacco, it appears not to strong with some very interessting taste variations, but there are some better tobaccos in the market, so i give it a three. For sure this wasn't the last smoke of this attractiv blend.
Pipe Used: Savinelli 606 KS
PurchasedFrom: Local Dealer
Age When Smoked: 50
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Reviewed By Date Rating Strength Flavoring Taste Room Note
Aug 03, 2009 Mild to Medium None Detected Mild to Medium Tolerable
If you are looking for a bland, non tiring and every hour oriental smoke this can be a good choice. If you are looking for a real oriental this is not for you.

At this point of view this tobacco should receive only 2 stars from me. I've accorded the third for its surprising smoke. It has a very pleasant varieties of flavors during smoking. Perique adds an elegance to this surprising smoke. For sure I will smoke again.

Tolerable strength and nice flavors of this tobacco can mislead you. Be careful not to smoke it fast. It tends to overheat, ruining your pleasure.
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Reviewed By Date Rating Strength Flavoring Taste Room Note
Mar 20, 2004 Mild to Medium Medium Medium to Full Tolerable
I usually smoke VA's flakes and I'm not addicted to English blends (I've tryed Dunhill's London Mixture less than a year ago, but nothing more than that), however after smoking it I can say this "Colonian" is nice enough for my pipe. I'm not sure about that, but probably half is Virginia and half oriental, with a small amount of Latakia and some other light tobacco (¿another kind of Virginia?). It smells rich and full without being boring. Packing it is simple explecially if you came from VA flakes. At first is very neutral, but after few minutes it gets interesting and you can smell various flavours (i.e. the nuances of a good virginia added to the classical oriental scent). The smoke is tasty but it never gets too strong and it always stays cool; this tobacco is definitely easy to smoke. The only drawback is that the mixture is quite simple (actually the taste does not change very much while smoking), but I think this is O.K. for an all day tobacco like this one.
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