bernerbrau
Well-Known Member
Yeah, the shape is kind of creepy. Apparently he makes each one from the hide of a whole cow. I don't see my wife letting me bring one in the house.
I just sew my secondary out of tobacco leaves. :rockin:
Hmmm...Burton haggis anyone?!
wow, the thread took off before I could reply to it!
all those "wonderful flavors" of a cigar are from things done to the tobacco to change it's flavor, it's not pure tobacco. vanilla, cedar, oak, apple spice, etc. why not try to impart THOSE flavors into your grain without the tobacco?
I'm not a huge scotch guy, but my uncle (who is) bought me a bottle of one of his favorite, Laphroaig.
What smacks me in the face every time I smell and taste it is tobacco. Not just a little "reminds me of tobacco" flavor, but "damn I'm drinking a cigar" flavor. In fact, my wife asked if I smelled cigars the other night while I sipped a glass.
Point being, I'll assume that this scotch uses copious amounts of peat smoked malt. In large enough quantities, peat might just get you where you want to be. I wouldn't like it in a beer, but you might. Check out Laphroaig and let me know what you think!
acuenca said:I love an Islay whisky... The smoky phenolic taste is from peat... but there are smoked and peated malts that can be tried with some of the other suggestionss like vanilla, cedar,oak etc to achieve some of these flavors....
So all this talk of how dangerous tobacco infusions are is really interesting as I just had a (totally amazing) tobacco infused cocktail a few days ago. This was at a restaurant and it was at tequila/mezcal drink. The flavor was very subtle but very tasty, and according to the waiter they used whole-leave cigar tobacco that had infused for a few hours. He even said that leaving it longer turns it nasty, and definitely leaving it for weeks would probably result in some awful and poisonous concoction. But I don't see why this couldn't work if done carefully.
I don't know if the restaurant steeped the tobacco it in the alcohol, or if they steeped it in the mixer... I would guess the alcohol. I was actually thinking about doing a tobacco infusion for a stout, though I have no idea how much tobacco it would take to peep through the flavors. Perhaps doing a very small tobacco infusion in the bottling bucket for a 6 pack's worth at first is not a bad option. Or a small amount of tobacco infused bourbon to add at bottling time?
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I agree that i could use some scotchmaking techniques in making a similar flavor to a cigar. I myself am a cigar and scotch nut(walk in humidor in the basement and dedicated scotch room) i tend to likeall kinds og both. See, this thread has gone sooo many different directions simce i posted it last night. I too agree that infusing tobacco in the mash may jave some harsh comsequences( flavorwise, theres no way i could infuse enough nicotine into the wort to make it lethal because im not an idiot like that) but i could definatley see how lightly smoking the malt with sweeet pipe tobacco or hell, even storing a mesh bag of it under a few pounds of grain for a month would infuse some decent flavors. Im gonna try both ways. Well try a gallon batch w smoked malt and one thats just aroma infused. Wont kill me right? Im not such a ******* that id try a second sip if the first was horrible... thanks for the input guys this was a fast moving thread!
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Zamial said:I have 95% of a working tobaccoless cigar stout recipe. I have had it and it smells and tastes like an unlit cigar to me. It is an extract brew. I am zombifide from lack of sleep and her recipe is missing a few items. I will post the recipe when I have the rest of it, I estimate a few days...
I'd be interested to try and brew it. Im trying to get a buddy into brewing so an extract batch would be a great way to get his feet wet!
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I'd have to say that all the talk of tobacco being poisonous are a bit alarmist. Your beer would be undrinkably nasty well before it would be dangerous. After all, alcohol is a poison, too, and not many want to do without that.
I'd have to say that all the talk of tobacco being poisonous are a bit alarmist. Your beer would be undrinkably nasty well before it would be dangerous. After all, alcohol is a poison, too, and not many want to do without that.
40-60 mg of nicotine can kill you.
Sixty milligrams of nicotine (the amount in about 30-40 cigarettes ), has the potential to kill an adult who is not a smoker if all of the nicotine were absorbed.