Origin: Italy
Mixing ratio: 6-12%
Flavor profile: Sumatra Seco tobacco paired with Indonesian Kaigula tea
Besides vaping, my other great love is tea. I have about 25 types of loose leaf teas at home, ranging from green to black to white, plain, fruity, smoky, all sorts. I thought this test should be atmospheric, as we are not testing a fruity, heavily chilled sample, but a rather sophisticated, almost artistic flavor. So, my choice for today’s test, to go with it, was a Chinese green tea, for this evening.
The pairing turned out to be masterful, the combination creates perfect harmony. The mood is thus set for the author to describe their experiences.
Let’s see what this flavor has to offer: the base is Sumatra Seco tobacco, in which I perceive a drier type of tobacco, somewhat reminiscent of Burley, that’s how it tasted to me from La Tabaccheria. Now, this Italian concoction has been spiced up with a bit of Indonesian tea, which, if we are patient and let it steep for at least a month (I let mine steep for four, as the color shows…), blends perfectly into the tobacco, complementing it with very mild floral green tea notes. It’s not a harsh flavor, nor is it an ashtray taste, rather it’s silkier and drier. It doesn’t rip your throat, the flavors are subtly hidden, and the full flavor experience is achieved on the exhale, where the tea comes through the most.
From its color, one can tell from afar, even in winter fog, that this will gunk up your coil, but for lovers of clean tobacco flavors, it can be an all-day vape. However, if you’re looking for a flavor to match your daily morning or evening tea (that you don’t sweeten or add lemon to), to make your ritual complete, I have good news: you’ve found it!
Five stars!
Setup: Kayfun Lite Plus - 1.67 ohm, simple microcoil, BPmods cotton, Dicodes Dániel Micro 12 watts


