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I just tried Samuel Gawith's Kendal Plug
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<blockquote data-quote="Kyle Weiss" data-source="post: 219854" data-attributes="member: 1969"><p>I'm in absolute love with BBF and KP. </p><p></p><p>The differences, as far as I'm concerned, are the differences of the shape of the flavor rather than separation of the two simply being unalike. </p><p></p><p>I work with sound, synthesis to be exact. I tend to get very weird and relate things like taste to different sound waves, because of things like texture and overall experience. BBF if a typical sine wave. Smooth, rounded, bold, deep, even and easy. Kendal is a ramp or a "triangle" wave, but modeled without the spike at the end of the cycle. There's no snap with the KP, but a little bit of a warble, very "electric" and bright, yet very toned down. </p><p></p><p>Back to reality, though, KP and BBF share similarities in sweetness, but not character. KP tastes like a tobacco leaf. Almost raw and untamed, simple and direct (while still being totally mellow). BBF has that complex, earthy, almost tenderized notion to it.</p><p></p><p>Sitting with some KP right now, I never, ever regret the extra steps of grabbin' the block, slicin' off a chunk (or my preferred way, peeling about 1/8" with the grain and making chunks with scissors), letting it dry for a bit, and stuffin' it in the pipe. The stuff is dense, and you can pack the bowl as little or as much as you like. Then, it's just a long, consistent, and blissful smoke. </p><p></p><p>8)</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Kyle Weiss, post: 219854, member: 1969"] I'm in absolute love with BBF and KP. The differences, as far as I'm concerned, are the differences of the shape of the flavor rather than separation of the two simply being unalike. I work with sound, synthesis to be exact. I tend to get very weird and relate things like taste to different sound waves, because of things like texture and overall experience. BBF if a typical sine wave. Smooth, rounded, bold, deep, even and easy. Kendal is a ramp or a "triangle" wave, but modeled without the spike at the end of the cycle. There's no snap with the KP, but a little bit of a warble, very "electric" and bright, yet very toned down. Back to reality, though, KP and BBF share similarities in sweetness, but not character. KP tastes like a tobacco leaf. Almost raw and untamed, simple and direct (while still being totally mellow). BBF has that complex, earthy, almost tenderized notion to it. Sitting with some KP right now, I never, ever regret the extra steps of grabbin' the block, slicin' off a chunk (or my preferred way, peeling about 1/8" with the grain and making chunks with scissors), letting it dry for a bit, and stuffin' it in the pipe. The stuff is dense, and you can pack the bowl as little or as much as you like. Then, it's just a long, consistent, and blissful smoke. 8) [/QUOTE]
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I just tried Samuel Gawith's Kendal Plug
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