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Tobacco
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The tobacco used in hookahs is different than that associated with
cigarettes, or, indeed, any other form of smoking. It is, traditionally,
a damp blend--called tobamel or maassel--of fresh tobacco leaves
with molasses or honey and semi-dried fruit or fruit pulp. Some
smokers would add pomegranate juice or perhaps rose oil to the water,
which added flavor to the smoke. Later, hookah tobacco was also
mixed with fruit extracts, and in the 1980s tobacconists began experimenting
with various flavors, so that now a virtual smorgasbord of highly
aromatic hookah tobacco is widely available.
While some hookah smokers still prefer a strong Turkish tobacco,
many delight in the large assortment of flavored tobaccos, often
called shisha. The dark, wet mixture comes in flavors ranging from
apple, cherry, apricot, and watermelon, to rose, jasmine, vanilla,
honey, and licorice, with more exotic blends beyond that, such as
lemon-cola, cappuccino, apple-mint, and a list of custom blends
that is nigh on infinite.
Prices for packaged tobacco range anywhere from $4 to $17 depending
on quality, and a variety pack of flavors might cost about $30.
The price in most lounges for a bowl of hookah tobacco ranges from
$4 to $9 for slower burning leaf or custom blends.
Since hookah tobacco is very wet it must be smoked using a hookah
charcoal. Rather than being lit directly, the tobacco is heated
with a coal placed on tinfoil or wire mesh above or in the bowl
holding the damp mixture. Each bowl of this wet tobacco lasts a
long time, usually requiring several replenishments of the charcoal.
In the past, among those rituals and traditions surrounding the
lighting and smoking of the hookah, or narghile, were strict prohibitions
against lighting the tobacco incorrectly--or even allowing a cigarette
smoker to light their cigarette off of the hookah coal.
Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Ross_Bainbridge
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