Tuesday, November 08, 2022

ENTIRELY AN INTELLECTUAL CONCEIT

Grampa, wearing his bib overalls and his Hechtenstein Machine Parts baseball hat, is on his tractor doing the back forty, and smoking, which Mawmaw doesn't let him do in the house. He's got a corncob, and a full load of 'Old Wonkers' Burley Blend going. Do not disturb. Unmentioned are the rodents in his crotch or the scabs on his dermis, those aren't part of the narrative. Old Wonkers would be a drugstore tobacco formerly much loved because it was advertised be Dale Dronk And His Merry Moonshiners on the weekly Barn Dog Family Hour back in the fifties, sponsored by Amalgamated Tobacco & Asbestos Co. in Milwaukee, Larsen's PotAsh Soap, and The Almighty Joy in Jesus Church of Tennessee.

[Three products were advertised: a pipe tobacco, a farmstead soap, and a gentle aftershave for Sundays.]



The narrative is what kind of man still smokes burley blends. Which, largely, is the neo-senile demographic. Two old codgers in the hinterland beyond Placerville. Who own stationwagons which they drive in to town two or three times a year to buy a new bar of soap.
Along with Hav-a-Tampa cigars and pipe tobacco.

There used to be many blends like Old Wonkers, all of them based on burley and some flue-cured leaf, most of them lightly flavoured with a shpritz of aftershave or Bourbon whiskey to disguise the smell of the firecured used lightly to add interest. They were smoked by hip junior advertising execs, and college professors at schools with football teams.

[Both types of men wore houndstooth sportscoats. It was their unique style.]


They're not much huffed in this day and age.

Which is sad.
One of my favourite pipes is a Dutch item made for Amphora. A straight bulldog, very English looking. I have no idea what the erstwhile owner was like, but he smoked fairly decent burley blends, and kept his gear reasonably clean; it did not require much work when I restored it.

Possibly he had a can of Coopvaert or Voortrekker on a shelf in the potting shed, which he bought long ago when those were still available, but he preferred burley over Maryland.
Coopvaert and Voortrekker, both thin ribbons made of leaf exported from the Chesapeake (hence the Dutch term 'Baai tabak'), were simple unflavoured tobaccos much smoked in the Netherlands, with which I was very familiar by the time I returned to the United States. The people who owned farmsteads out in the Brabant countryside (like the one in the illustration above) had grown up on them. They were cheap. They were decent. They tasted all right.

Honest tobacco, paired with black coffee from Douwe Egberts or Erven De Weduwe Van Nelle, a black and white television showing something with crappy production values from VARA, and, perhaps, a slice of buttered Ontbijt Koek with Succade on the top.

The equivalent, if you will, of old style burleys.


Many old codgers, including myself (I am not old, dammit), have an intellectual liking for such products. That is to say we love the concept, but the reality, even if it is a very fine blend, is something we seldom smoke. I have a tin of a burley mix I've been working on for a decade now which smells delicious, but it wallops me every time, and may take another decade to finish. There are several tins of it and its cousins sitting on a shelf, puffed with age.

It's good stuff. Perhaps I need a back forty.

I'd smoke Coopvaert and Voortrekker if they were available here. Not often, because I've grown away from such products, but I remember them rather fondly. They pair well with strong coffee and pastries.


Now, if you'll excuse me, I have to drive the stationwagon into town to vote. Perhaps I'll buy some soap while I'm there. And I'll put on some nice aftershave so I don't scare anyone.



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2 comments:

Alcyon said...

After all that you've written, odd that it's mention of Baai tobak that finally motivates me to wriggle my pudgy thumb over the too-small "keyboard" of my phone.

It was just a week or so ago that I was looking at the possibility of getting tobacco sent from the Netherlands. It's rather expensive, all made in Denmark, and really quite impossible. Yet another reason to wish a pox upon the twenty-first century: tobacco from around the world, i.e., Europe, the UK, and Ireland, just a short walk from wherever I was living.

Which reminds of an art teacher of mine asking the sweetest little old lady, a fellow student of mine, what part of England she came from to have such a lovely accent. "Kenya!" she said, brightly. I just stared. Somethings are perhaps better left in the twentieth century.

Speaking of Amphora... Although on the whole I am not overly impressed, I wonder if you've tried their Virginia? I've had worse. And it offers the advantage of being readily available up here in Canada. And at fifty dollars the pouch, it does ensure that my smoking stays under some kind of control. Ha! I jest. It ensures that the bulk of my money goes to that outfit in North Carolina and the one outfit in the UK that will still send me Revor Plug and snuff.

Carry on, sir. I think of you when I peruse the greasy offerings in the Chinese bakeries here in Toronto. I wonder why the situation is so dismal up here?

The back of the hill said...

No, I haven't tried their Virginia, haven't had a chance yet. A while back they came out with an English, which is quite decent, and considering the brand, extraordinairy.

Canadian prices are insane, but in Australia and New Zealand it's really gotten out of hand. If pipesmokers were a larger percentage of the population they would riot (a riot of just one person in front of a remote police station in New Ooloofankanallawoohah is hardly a riot).
Unfortunately, screwing the last few smokers is the wave of the future world wide. It's all for the children. Who might otherwise experiment with things we don't want them to know about.

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