Amaretto
Apple
Apple - Green
Apple - Red
Apple - Sour
Apricot
Banana
Berry
Berry - Mixed
Berry - Wild
Berry - Wild Mint
Blackberry
Blueberry
Blueberry - Grape
Bourbon
Brandy
Butter Rum
Caramello
Chai Spice
Cherry
Cherry - Black
Cherry - Sweet
Chocolate
Chocolate - Dark
Chocolate - European
Chocolate - Milk
Chocolate - Mint
Chocolate - Roasted
Cinnamon
Cinnamon - Mint
Citrus
Citrus - Mint
Clove
Coconut
Cognac
Cola
Creamy Coffee
Crème de Menthe
Frangelico
Grape
Kretek
Honey
Honey - Golden
Honey - Berry
Irish Cream
Lemon
Lemon - Lime
Lemon - Mint
Mango
Maple
Margarita
Mint
Mint - Peppermint
Mint - Spearmint
Mint - Sweet
Orange
Orange - Cream
Orange - Juicy
Passion fruit
Peach
Pear
Pina Colada
Pineapple
Pineapple - Coconut
Pineapple - Tropical
Pipe Tobacco
Raspberry
Raspberry - Cream
Rose
Rum
Rum & Cola
Spice Blend
Strawberry
Sweet & Brown
Sweet & Brown - Spicy
Tangerine
Tequila
Tequila Sunrise
Toasted Sugar
Vanilla
Vanilla - C
Vanilla - Dark
Vanilla - Sweet
Watermelon
Whiskey
*United States FDA regulations prohibit use of additives or natural or artificial flavors that are a "characterizing flavor of the product or its smoke."
Flavors listed throughout this website are a broad sampling of products available. TTI welcomes the opportunity to work with its clients' development and marketing groups to create unique flavor systems specific to their requirements. Flavors referenced in any TTI Catalog or in any TTI marketing materials are named generically, but customized to each specific customer and flavor application. The customized flavor will be developed to meet each customer's subjective aromatic signature and ingredient regulatory requirements. TTI fully respects its customers' needs for confidentiality and product differentiation.
An early form of paper money used in north America was "tobacco notes". These were certificates attesting to the quality and quantity of tobacco deposited in public warehouses. These certificates circulated much more conveniently than the actual leaf and were authorized as legal tender in Virginia in 1727 and regularly accepted as such throughout most of the eighteenth century.