Different Types Of Tobacco
There
are a number of types of tobacco which include but are not limited to:
- Aromatic Fire-cured, it is cured by smoke from open fires. In the United States, it is grown in northern middle Tennessee, central Kentucky and in Virginia. Fire-cured tobacco grown in Kentucky and Tennessee are used in some chewing tobaccos, moist snuff, some cigarettes, and as a condiment in pipe tobacco blends. Another fire-cured tobacco is Latakia and is produced from oriental varieties of N. tabacum. The leaves are cured and smoked over smoldering fires of local hardwoods and aromatic shrubs in Cyprus and Syria.
- Brightleaf
tobacco, Brightleaf is commonly known as "Virginia
tobacco", often regardless of which state they are planted. Prior to
the American Civil War, most tobacco grown in the US was fire-cured
dark-leaf. This type of tobacco was planted in fertile lowlands, used a
robust variety of leaf, and was either fire cured or air cured. Most
Canadian cigarettes are made from 100% pure Virginia tobacco.
- Burley
tobacco, is an air-cured tobacco used
primarily for cigarette production. In the U.S., burley tobacco plants are
started from palletized seeds placed in polystyrene trays floated on a bed
of fertilized water in March or April.
- Cavendish is
more a process of curing and a method of cutting tobacco than
a type of it. The processing and the cut are used to bring out the natural
sweet taste in the tobacco. Cavendish can be produced out of any tobacco
type but is usually one of, or a blend of Kentucky, Virginia, and Burley
and is most commonly used for pipe tobacco and cigars.
- Criollo
tobacco is a type of tobacco, primarily
used in the making of cigars. It was, by most accounts, one of the
original Cuban tobaccos that emerged around the time of Columbus.
- Dokham, is a
tobacco of Iranian origin mixed with leaves, bark, and herbs for smoking
in a midwakh.
- Oriental
tobacco, is a sun-cured, highly aromatic, small-leafed
variety (Nicotiana tabacum) that is grown in Turkey, Greece,
Bulgaria, and Macedonia. Oriental tobacco is frequently referred to as
"Turkish tobacco", as these regions were all historically part
of the Ottoman Empire. Many of the early brands of cigarettes were made
mostly or entirely of Oriental tobacco; today, its main use is in blends
of pipe and especially cigarette tobacco (a typical American cigarette is
a blend of bright Virginia, burley and Oriental).
- Perique, A farmer
called Pierre Chenet is credited with first turning this local tobacco
into the Perique in 1824 through the technique of pressure-fermentation.
Considered the truffle of pipe tobaccos, it is used as a component in many
blended pipe tobaccos, but is too strong to be smoked pure. At one time,
the freshly moist Perique was also chewed, but none is now sold for this
purpose. It is typically blended with pure Virginia to lend spice,
strength, and coolness to the blend.
- Shade
tobacco, is cultivated in Connecticut and Massachusetts.
Early Connecticut colonists acquired from the Native Americans the habit
of smoking tobacco in pipes and began cultivating the plant commercially,
even though the Puritans referred to it as the "evil weed". The
industry has weathered some major catastrophes, including a devastating
hailstorm in 1929, and an epidemic of brown spot fungus in 2000, but is
now in danger of disappearing altogether, given the value of the land to
real estate speculators.
- White
Burley, In 1865, George Webb of Brown County, Ohio planted
Red Burley seeds he had purchased, and found that a few of the seedlings
had a whitish, sickly look. The air-cured leaf was found to be more mild
than other types of tobacco.
- Wild
Tobacco, is native to the southwestern United States,
Mexico, and parts of South America. Its botanical name is Nicotiana
rustica.
- Y1 is a
strain of tobacco that was cross-bred by Brown &
Williamson to obtain an unusually high nicotine content. It became
controversial in the 1990s when the United States Food and Drug
Administration (FDA) used it as evidence that tobacco companies were
intentionally manipulating the nicotine content of cigarettes.
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