Indonesian
Kretek History
History About Clove Cigarettes
Kretek or clove cigarettes. The word is unknown to most people outside
Indonesia but anyone who has traveled through the archipelago will
surely recall its unmistakable scent. Similarly, Indonesians who
have ventured far beyond the borders of their native land find powerful
memories of home thrust to the forefront of their minds whenever
they catch a whiff of this blend of tobbaco and cloves.
What's so special about kretek?
THE SEARCH FOR SPICES launched the Age of Exploration, and cloves
were one of the most coveted export products produced by what is
now Indonesia. Today, however, Indonesia consumes all of her own
clove production-and then some. Although throughout the centuries
cloves have been used for perfume, embalming, relieving tooth pains,
sweetening breath, and, of course, spicing food, they are most popular
today in the unique clove cigarette. With a pleasant smell almost
of incense and a sweet, cool taste something like a mentholated
cigarette, clove cigarettes arc Indonesia's favorite smoke. Your
first greeting when you land in Indonesia is a whiff of sweet and
spicy cloyes as you walk past the airport customs gate.
Indonesians call the cigarettes kretek, an onomatopoeic
word that suggests a crackling sound. A leisurely drag on a clove
cigarette produces a faint sort of popping sound, like that of a
distant forest fire, as the volatile clove oil is released from.-the
spice within. Although brands vary in the proportion of cloves to
tobacco, a kretek cigarette is about 30-50 percent cloves. Although
American plain tobacco brands are also popular, kretek are by far
the preferred smoke in Indonesia. In recent years, the scented cigarettes
have even made small inroads into the U.S. market, cropping up at
specialty tobacconists. ,
Since an average cigarette contains approximately
one gram of cloves. Although precise figures are not available,
a good estimate is that well over 100 million kretek cigarettes
are manufactured in Indonesia every day. That means that over 100,000
kilograms of cloves are used daily, or about 40,000 metric tons
per year, with a value of about U.S. $120 million. Indonesia has
to import about 120,000 tons each year and has set self-sufficiency
as a target. '11fis is big business. It is estimated that some 80
percent of Indonesia's tax incomc-20 to 25 percent of its total,
income- comes from tobacco taxes.
Kretek cigarettes aren't cheap. A single stick
of one of the better brands costs about Rp 50. That is considerable
fraction of the average daily income of a Balinese, who might expect
to cam somewhere in the neighborhood of Rp 1,000. This does not
dim the popularity of kretek cigarettes. It is not uncommon to see
people purchasing single cigarettes rather than buying them by the
pack.
Cloves are the dried, unopened buds, of a tree
that is a member of the myrtle or eucalyptus family. There is general
disagreement among botanists about its proper genus and species.
References are made to: Euqenia aromatica (the genus being named
after Prince Eugene of Savoy' a patron of botany and horticulture),
Eugenia caryaphyliata, Caiyophyllus aromaticus, Jambosa caryopbyuus,
and Syzygium aromaticum. The tongue twister caryophyllus comes from
the Greek word for the clove tree, karyopbyllon, from karyon, "nut,"
and phyllon, "I call" The closest the French could get
to this was girop, which is their name for the clove tree - The
English had trouble with the French word and changed it to -gilly
flower." The French considered that cloves looked like nails.
The French word for nail is clou so, in French, cloves are clow
de girofle, from which our -clove."
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The word kretek describes an indigenous Indonesian
tobacco product containing tobacco, cloves and flavoring, wrapped
in either an ironed cornhusk or a slip of paper. It is widely believed
that the name derives from the crackling sound that cloves make
when burned - 'keretek-keretek'.
Kretek . The word is unknown to most people outside
Indonesia but anyone who has traveled through the archipelago will
surely recall its unmistakable scent. Similarly, Indonesians who
have ventured far beyond the borders of their native land find powerful
memories of home thrust to the forefront of their minds whenever
they catch a whiff of this blend of tobbaco and cloves
What's so special about kretek?
In the first place, the manufacture of kretek is an incredibly complex
process. Unlike the typical conventional cigarette which contains
just tobacco, kretek possesses two other crucial ingredients - cloves
and a mysterious 'sauce'. The making of kretek companies mainly
use domestic tobaccos which, according to experts, rank as the most
complex tobaccos in the world in terms of quality and variety. The
diversity of locally-grown tobaccos is mainly caused by the traditional
harvesting and curing methods which are still employed today. This
reach choice of indegenous tobacco is exploited to the full by kretek
manufacturers and a single brand of kretek may include over thirty
different tobacco varieties, while employing more than one hundred
different flavors in its sauce. Often, the tip of the rolling paper
is dipped in saccharine, which adds to the sweetness of kretek and
increases the subtle blend of flavors still further.
THE HISTORY OF KRETEK
Who really invented kretek?
 It
is very often the case with new ideas and inventions that there
is a creator who comes up with the original concept and then someoe
else who turns this invention into something commercial viable.
The kretek industry is no exception - the only questions here being,
"Who came up with the idea for a clove cigarette in the first
place?"
While there are several claimants to the title
of 'Creator of Kretek', evidance suggests that the honors should
go to a resident of Kudus named Haji Jamahri. In the early 1880s,
Haji Jamahri was suffering from a mild case of asthma. His symptoms
were the typical chest pains and shortness of breath associated
with this complaint. To ease his discomfort he rubbed clove oil
(eugenol) on his chest - clove oil long having been used as an analgesic.
Although the numbing agents in the eugenol gave some relief, Haji
Jamahri still sought a way to bring the soothing cloves into even
contact with his troubled lungs - perhaps if he sprinkled some cloves
in tobacco and smoked it, this would do the trick?
According to the story, it most certainly did
and Haji Jamahri's chest pains disappeared in an instant. Amazed
at this relevation, he began market his invention to fellow residents
in the Kudus region. He called his new cigarettes 'clove cigarettes',
and intesetingly they were originally sold through pharmacies on
account of their perceived medicinal qualities. Haji Jamahri passed
away in 1890 before being able to commercialize the products successfully.
THE MAKING OF KRETEK: Stage One :
The Field
The diorama featured above shows the initial stages in the kretek
manufacturing process - those that take place before one enters
the factory gates. In the background, moving from left to right,
we see tobacco fields, corn fields and a clove plantation, with
farm workers harvesting the tobacco leaves, picking corn cobs and
plucking the unopened flowers buds from the clove trees.
In the foreground on the left, in front of the
building with the traditional Javanese joglo roof, a man is cutting
the tobacco leaves into strips. These are being laid out on mats
by the women standing at the table, before being placed in the sun
to dry.
In the middle foreground, on the right, the man
seated on the mat is shucking the husk from the corn, which he then
passes to the two women facing him who tie them into neat bundles
and stack them in piles (behind) prior to storage (one can see heaps
of dried cornhusks stashed away in the shed with the zinc roof in
the background).
To the right of center, in the middleground,
clove farmers with rakes are spreading out their newly-harvested
crop to dry in the sun. When properly dried, the cloves are then
put into sacks which will then be taken away to the buyer by the
dokar (horse and cart) standing on the far right.
THE MAKING OF KRETEK :
Stage Two : The Factory
In this diorama, we witness the latter half of kretek
manufacturing process - the stages that take place inside the factory.
On the left we see women handrolling klobot in the time-honored
manner, seated on the floor. One of them is ironing the dried cornhusks
flat and in the background, through the open window, one can see
workers spraying saccharine on the finished product.
In the middle of the diorama, the long line of
women sitting at work benches are handrolling paper-wrapped kretek
using traditional wooden rollers, while behind them, one can see
the various tobacco-processing machines which are used in the preparation
of the tobacco mixture prior to rolling.
They include tobacco-shredding machines, clove-cutting
machines, and machinese that mix in the sauce. At the table in the
foreground, a little to the right of center, a handroller's assistant
submits a bundle of kretek to quality control, while at the table
behind we see kretek which have passed inspection being put into
packs.
These packs are then placed in cartons and are
taken away by truck (right, background) to the retailers and other
distribution outlets. Finally on the extreme right of the diorama,
we see clerical workers handling the company's accounts.
(Contents and pictures taken from "Kretek Book" by Mark
Hanusz) |