I have an interesting do-over to report.
Back in November, I sent a message to Sam, the owner of
OrbVapor, asking if he would consider sending me samples of Orbs RY4 for review. He graciously agreed to do so. At the time, I thought that Orb offered two different RY4s, one Natural and the other Organic, since RY4 was listed under both categories in separate product pages. I asked for the Natural to be 50/50 PG/VG (one of various options offered on the site) with regular flavor, and the Organic to be 100% VG (the only option offered) with extra flavor. Ive subsequently concluded that these are the same juice, made from identical flavorings in the same mix and recipe profile, with the only difference being the base blends. Both vials were labeled Organic RY4 and tasted exactly the same except for the subtle but discernible differences in the viscosity of the base blends and the ways that PG and VG taste or feel different when vaped.
OK. So far, so good. I reviewed Orbs Organic RY4 on November 20th in post
#3234. (Click on the post number to go to the original review.)
That review stated my opinion that Organic RY4 was an
extremely custom RY4, right at the edge of the RY4 flavor profile. I also described the flavors as unified and soft, and gave the juice a grade of
B. I fear that Sam may have interpreted my use of the word soft to be a criticism, which it wasnt. I intended it as a neutral description, not a pejorative judgment.
Anyway, I got an email from Sam on November 22nd, in which he thanked me for the honest assessment in my review and offered to send me another batch of the two versions of Organic RY4, this time with additional flavoring, if I wanted to revisit the juices. I replied by saying sure. About a week ago I received the second package in the mail.
Im not entirely sure that a week is enough steeping time for organic liquids, but today I loaded both versions into 2.5 ohm Ultimate CE2 Clearos, so I could compare and contrast them side-by-side.
First, let me state unequivocally and for the record that I support the movement toward natural and organic juices. Im not particularly fearful of toxins in non-organic eliquids, but I appreciate the possibility of higher-quality flavorings that taste better, and whatever greater purity may come with that is OK in my book. Im on Sams side and hope that he succeeds as a juice vendor.
So, three questions arise surrounding this before-and-after comparison:
1. Are the juices different?
2. If so, how?
3. Is the new version with more flavoring an improvement that deserves a higher grade than the B I gave the original?
The first two questions are easier for me to answer than the third.
Are the juices different? Well, a little, but not much. Over my two years of vaping, Ive had original and vendor-revised versions of numerous juices. I got an early version of
ECBlend RY4, followed by a subsequently altered version later. I also vaped the first version of
NLV Renegade RY4, as well as a later revised edition. Recently I compared
VaporBeast Holy Grail RY4 to
MountainOakVapor CountRY-4 (Brandy at MOV created both juices, presumably custom-tailoring the one she made for VaporBeast). Now Ive had two versions of
Orb Organic RY4. What strikes me about all four experiences is the remarkable internal consistency. In each of the pairs, the revised versions carried the respective and distinct signature of each vendor's juicemaker.
When I settle into bed late at night and turn on the classical music radio station, I can instantly recognize anything by Aaron Copland, Beethoven, Mozart, or George Gershwin, to mention just a few composers I know fairly well. Even when I don't know the particular piece of music that's playing, I can recognize certain composers right off. Juice artisans and their juices are similar to me. In each of the four examples above, the revised formulations of the juice carried the characteristic signature of the juicemaker who created the original version. The later versions could never be mistaken for another vendors juice.
I think this may be a general truism about creativity that applies across-the-board to many artists and artisans---musicians, chefs, physicists, fine carpenters, juicemakers, etc. Exceptions exist, of course, often conspicuously. Picasso had distinct periods where he seemingly reinvented himself from scratch. Some artists are inherently eclectic and more chameleon-like. But by and large, artists of every stripe tend to create what is in them to create.
That part doesnt surprise me. What does take me aback, at least in the four juice examples above, is this: I couldnt tell any substantial or meaningful difference between the earlier and later juices. In two instances, a certain subtle tweaking was apparent, but only very slight. In the other two, I couldnt detect any difference at all between the original and next-generation juices. In addition to the characteristic signature, all the before-and-after juices were about 98% identical, at least to my palate. I presume that the 2% is magnified in the mind of the creators, so that the "altered" juices may seem quite different to them. As an outsider, however, I taste them as pretty much the same.
The only difference I can pinpoint in the before-and-after Orb Organic RY4s is this: The original had a subtle overtone that my brain wanted to call apple-like. In the revised version with extra flavorings, the apple was gone, replaced (or covered) by a stronger caramel flavor. Other than that, and aside from the fact that I could tell that the second batch had more flavoring than the first, I honestly didnt taste much, if any, difference.
The third question is the one I find vexing. I want to help Sam (in whatever small way I can), so it would be nice to move Organic RY4 up in the grade rankings. Unfortunately, Im stuck between a rock and a hard place, because I actually like the original versions a little better than the revised versions with extra flavor. I wouldnt go so far as to call the new versions a step down, but I still feel the same way I felt in the first review. These RY4s, however much flavoring is used, impress me as unusual (I might say
unique, which has a more positive connotation than
eccentric), they have soft flavors (not a bad thing), and they will probably appeal to a potential market of RY4 lovers who want organic juices and dont mind pushing the flavor envelope of traditional RY4s.
There. I said it.
Organic RY4 got a
B grade from me before, and its
still a
B. Gosh, I hope Sam doesnt start tearing out his hair and feeling regret that he ever sent me samples in the first place.