Nose Flour

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  • justintempler
    Member
    • Nov 2008
    • 3090

    #1

    Nose Flour

    I'm doing some research and I'm going through an old Swedish book that was written back in 1897 with all kind of tidbits about the history of tobacco written by a Swede.

    http://books.google.com/ebooks?id=NLcUAAAAYAAJ

    I got a kick out of this little trivia....

    When snus first came to Sweden back in the 1700's it was originally called "näsmjöl" which translates to nose flour.

    Useless information I know, but I got a laugh out of it and thought i'd pass it along.
  • Toque Snuff
    Member
    • Aug 2008
    • 337

    #2
    We still call the unflavoured ground tobacco "flour". It's a milling term.

    Comment

    • justintempler
      Member
      • Nov 2008
      • 3090

      #3
      Yes considering how it's made that's makes perfect sense. Snus/snuff, is milled just like grains are to make flour. Then it is sifted by grain size. I think that explains why we don't see long cut snus as a normally produced product. Americans cut their tobacco. Snuff producers mill it. The Swedes juts aren't set up to make a cut product.

      I imagine in the old days a lot of tobacco was ground in the same mills that ground flour. Nowadays I imagine a hammer mill is used.

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