Cornell & Diehl – Billy Budd (2015)

cornell_&_diehl_-_billy_budd

This enterprising blend combines a raft load of Latakia with a base of Burley and bright Virginia, then salts it with Maduro cigar leaf. This presents a challenge because the Burley and cigar leaf both present dark, rich flavors, in contrast to the sweet of the Virginia and the spice of Latakia. Like lower sounds, however, these dark flavors are stronger than sweet or spicy, which means that bowls of this burn in three levels: first, a friendly but slightly overwhelming Latakia spice; then, a smouldering Burley sensation with undertones of cigar leaf; finally, a merging of the flavors into a pleasant hum of lower registers, with the Latakia emerging as a slight alkaline flavor.

While Billy Budd has its charms, the Burley flavors dominate this blend after the Latakia boils off, which gives it a different flavor than its smell and breaks the balance established by harmony of its ingredients. Cornell & Diehl’s Burley is second to none, and many of us enjoy its rich and nutty flavor, sort of like a cedar-roasted chestnut. In theory, the higher flavors of Virginia and Latakia would balance this out and hide the cigar leaf so that it retained a “condiment” status, but in actuality, the cigar leaf becomes too present and the Burley dominates everything else. The rough cut of this blend, which has big chunks of moist Latakia in with shredded Burley and semi-ready-rubbed Virginia, means that flavors do not occur in a smooth transition as they do with the thinner ribbon cuts from, say, Dunhill. Further, little marriage of the flavors has occurred as happens with blends from Peterson for example. Those little “maturation” processes can make a huge difference, and here it is definitive. This blend has a good start but needs improvement.

Quality rating: 3/5
Purchase rating: 1/5

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2 thoughts on “Cornell & Diehl – Billy Budd (2015)”

  1. OliveFox says:

    C&D have a few cigar leaf added blends…I don’t really understand it, as I have no knowledge of cigars. Are they one of the only bigger companies that do it? It seems like a mistake in this case, given your review, but I wonder if any other blends do it more successfully…it intrigues me, though it has yet to entice me.

    1. It’s a very strong flavor, so it has to work well with others. Most hide it with Latakia, but the really good Lats find some way to marry the flavors afterward to avoid the burning off of the Lat and then reduction to the charred taste of Burley, Virginia and cigar leaf.

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