I typically roll my own cigarettes but lately I’ve been buying packs of cloves. I want to be able to combine the superior elements of quality bulk rolling tobacco (additive-free, fresher and better tasting) with the clove flavoring. Can I buy clove powder (or whatever it is that are in clove cigarettes) to mix into the cigarettes? Are the cloves that you buy in the spice aisle the same cloves in cigarettes?
I do NOT know the proper recipes for making clove tobacco so I would strongly recommend getting more information on this before trying to make your own clove tobacco by adding cloves to it. I have NO IDEA what toxic effects cloves may or may not have and if it is possible to add too much to the point of being dangerous.
It does seem there is clove tobacco sold in a pouch for rolling your own such as here:
http://www.nationalguild.com/ZIGGYSTOBACCO.COM/Cigarette_Tobacco.html
Scroll about halfway down for “Filtra Fine Clove RYO Tobacco by Djarum”
Note I do not have any idea about that vendor or product…just what came up in a search.
I’ve tried mixing tobacco with crushed cloves and clove powder and it’s pretty awful. Nothing like the Sampoernas I used to like to buy once in a while.
You might try wrapping some cloves or powder in cloth and putting it into the bag of tobacco and let it sit for a while. The tobacco might absorb the fumes from the cloves…kind of like putting a regular cigarette into a pack of menthols. Tobacco absorbs flavors and odors.
Well, I’d say Sampoernas are pretty awful to begin with, but that’s a matter of taste
This might work better with a clove oil-soaked sachet. I wouldn’t use supermarket cloves for homemade clove cigarettes either with your suggestion or grinding them up. There’s just too many ways that “industrial” and “export” cloves could differ, and the two products aren’t necessarily the same thing at all.
Really, I think Whack-a-Mole’s link is a good place to start, or you could try asking around at a tobacconist’s.
Unless, of course, this tobacconist is scratched.
“Industrial” cloves? What are they used for, making steel?
No, for making clove cigarettes. It’s entirely possible that the cloves Djarum and Sampoerna use are qualitatively different from the ones you have in your kitchen (and definitely if you’ve only got ground cloves and not whole ones). You don’t think that every food-product company shops at the A&P with you, do you?
I would think the cloves found in the A&P would be of higher quality than those used for the manufacture of cigarettes in Indonesia. Is that what you meant?
No, I mean different. The qualities that make a good home kitchen clove are not necessarily those that make a good kretek clove. I’m pretty sure, for instance, that olives grown for oil are generally not the same as are sold for consumption on their own.