
Expert Review★★★★★ Click to read Tap to read
This snuff carries a beyond heroic dose of nicotine. The craft maker employs an alkalization method using wine, distributing the pH buffer throughout the snuff and resulting in a powerful nicotine release. Several pinches produced a pronounced and satisfying headrush. This is not one to underestimate. The tobacco is a mocha brown, leaning toward a richer dark brown, with occasional lighter speckling from leaf variations and minor veins, with a fluffy, medium-coarse grind that allows the tobacco to cling together just enough. It handles well in the fingers and lends itself to controlled, deliberate pinches. The moisture level is middle of the road, leaning slightly to the drier side. There is no clumping in the tin, likely aided by the fluffy cut of the leaf. Across both sample tins, the moisture was sufficient for easy pinching without staining the fingers or leaving excess residue behind.
This snuff demands respect. Between the nicotine strength, the smoky body, and the wine-forward sweetness, it can easily overwhelm a newer user. Ironically, the sweetness can lull you into a false sense of comfort. Do not let it. Small pinches go a long way, and then some. While the grind and moisture make it physically easy to serve, I found this to be a pinch-only experience. The boxcar method felt wasteful for something this rich and intentional.
My initial impression of Havdallah is a fragrant, smoky sweetness wrapped in a blushed wine character. It calls to mind a cabernet left to breathe, softened with a touch of fruity merlot, opened up just enough to let those darker notes stretch their legs. Then, as if on cue, someone passes by with a richly fire-cured cigar, and that smoke settles into the experience. As the snuff sits in the nose, the smoky character begins to mingle more deliberately with the wine-forward notes. What stands out is that these are not blended into a single flavour. Instead, they remain distinct, almost conversational. The smoke takes a step forward, then the wine responds, each taking turns on the same dance floor without stepping on the other. There is a robust quality to the wine note, yet it never becomes overly sweet. It carries a blush-like softness that peeks through the smoke rather than pushing against it. The balance feels intentional and controlled.
At around the ten-minute mark, the red wine character begins to rise slightly more to the front. It becomes more expressive, though the smoky backbone remains present enough to keep everything grounded. It's a shift, not a takeover, and one that I find myself enjoying rather than questioning. This is a snuff that paints a scene: a quiet evening, a glass of wine set down to breathe, and a rich plume of fire-cured smoke drifting through the air. The nicotine release is profound and demands your respect; easily, this is one of the strongest snuffs I have sampled, but beyond just brute nicotine, there is a world of effort placed into this snuff. The bold, smoky nature, the sweet notes of blush, and easy-to-pinch nature will make this one of my go-to snuffs.
Getting To Know the Official Mr Snuff Reviewer
Hi, I'm Gabriel Martinez, known in the community as the Lone Star Snuffer (or St. Lone Star if you're in the Mr Snuff Discord). I am an independent reviewer partnering with Mr Snuff to provide in-house reviews that are approachable for new users, while still offering something for the seasoned enthusiast.
My journey into snuff began around 2022 with McChrystal's Original & Genuine and their Violet, then labeled Vintage Velvet. Like many in the United States, I found myself navigating a niche space with limited guidance. Reviews were sparse, information was scattered, and there were far more blends available than there were voices to describe them. That gap is what pushed me to begin documenting my own experiences.
Philosophy
A good snuff should paint the room in your mind.
Not every blend needs to transport you into a childhood memory, but a truly great one creates a scene. It unfolds like a single page from a story, where each note plays its part. You should be able to recognize the characters, whether it is a bright citrus, a grounded tobacco base, or a cooling medicated bite of refreshment, and walk away with a clear impression of what you experienced.
Methodology
My approach is both experiential, and structured.
When I review a snuff, I do not rely on a single impression. I live with it for a moment. A blend is used throughout the full rhythm of the day, morning, before and after meals, and into the evening. This allows the snuff to develop naturally as the palate wakes up and resets.
Day one is dedicated to that snuff alone. Day two introduces contrast, often with a plain or menthol-forward snuff, to evaluate how the scent holds up against a fresh or conditioned nose. This process helps reveal hidden notes that might otherwise stay buried.
To support this, I use a subjective attribute breakdown, often visualized through a star-style graph. Rather than grouping broad categories like medicated together, I separate them into what their components evoke in the nose — menthol, a straight up punch of coolness; eucalyptus, where coolness has an almost evaporative essence to it where the coolness draws from the nose; and camphor, where herbal notes give a traditional 'medicated herb' twang with its refreshing notes — to give a clearer picture of what the user can expect.
Because how a snuff behaves in isolation versus alongside others can change the experience entirely, I aim to reflect both perspectives in my reviews.
On Subjectivity
Each nose is unique, and every review carries a degree of subjectivity.
There are snuffs that may not be for me, but I will still work to identify notes that someone else might appreciate. There have been blends I would not reorder, while others may consider them staples. I may recommend pairing or blending two snuffs, and someone else may find that combination completely off the mark. That is part of the experience, and that is okay.
The goal is not to dictate taste, but to describe it clearly enough that you can decide for yourself.
Oh, and I can be "wrong" — like those of you who smell "chocolate" from Hedges… we need to have words…
Background & Perspective
I was born and raised in South Texas, and while my Rio Grande Valley roots influence my palate and creativity, they are part of a broader identity shaped by Hispanic culture, Roman Catholic tradition, and the discipline of an Eagle Scout.
Outside of snuff, I enjoy a good story in all its forms. Whether it is the humor of Monty Python and the Holy Grail, Blazing Saddles, The Naked Gun, or Airplane!, the exploration of Star Trek, or time spent around the table with Dungeons & Dragons, I appreciate anything that builds a world and invites you into it. That same appreciation carries into how I experience and describe snuff.
Purpose
As a reviewer, my goal is simple.
To make snuff more accessible, understandable, and enjoyable, especially for those just starting out, while still offering insights that more experienced users can appreciate.
Snuff is a niche craft with a deep tradition, and every blend has something to say. My role is to help you hear it clearly.
Cheers all, and let's crack into a tin.