Description
Partagas Serie D No. 5 Review
I recall the heavy quiet of my fatherâs study more than I do our conversationsâinside it. It was a room that smelled ofâold bindings, floor wax and a faint, ghostly tobacco sweetness long since settled in the drapes. I had just a few years before signed the phone-booth deal of my life â it was like wrestling a bear in a phone booth! â a win at last myself noticed that putâme on the map. I didnât want a party.
Product Specifications
| Attribute | Detail |
|---|---|
| Product Name | Partagas Serie D No. 5 |
| Origin | Cuba |
| Factory | PartagĂĄs |
| Vitola | D No. 5 |
| Length | 110mm (4 3/8 inches) |
| Ring Gauge | 50 |
| Wrapper | Cuba (Vuelta Abajo) |
| Binder | Cuba (Vuelta Abajo) |
| Filler | Cuba (Vuelta Abajo) |
| Strength | Medium |
I didnât want a crowd. Well, listen, I wanted to sit in that thing â that big chair, and you know what (it) made me feel like as a kid out here playing dress-up? ⊠And I wantedâto see what Godzilla was hiding in that desktop humidor.â
I was curious, mostly. My father wasnât muchâfor excess, but he could sniff out the real thing. I recall lifting the lid â there was that hiss as the humidified seal was broken, like a delicious secret being whispered in yourâear â and finding a row of red bands.
They were not those long, terrifying Churchill sizes thatâyou see in movies. They were strong and bristly,âand they meant business. Iâgrabbed one and felt the oily sheen of the wrapper and knew that here was something that didnât require two hours of my time to tell its tale. I needed only forty-fiveâminutes of shutting people up.
That smoke? The
Partagas Serie D No. 5
. It’s that cigar that doesn’t ask for your attention, itâdictates attention from the moment you light it. It was the perfect accompaniment to a man who had just won a fight andâwanted to savor the quiet before starting the next one.
The Specifications
But before I get into the weeds of what this thing actually does when youâre sitting in a dark room and contemplating your life choices,âletâs check the vitals.
This is not a distance runner; itâs a sprinter packingâsolid muscle. Feature
Details
Vitola de Galera
D No. 5
Factory Shape
Petit Robusto
Wrapper/Binder/Filler
Vuelta Abajo, Cuba
Weight
10.34g
Construction and Feel
When I pick up a D No. 5, Iâm always amazed by how heavy itâfeels.
Itâs a real chunkerâfor being a Petit Robusto. It doesnât feelâdelicate or dainty. Theâwrapper is that classic Cuban Colorado shadeâa reddish-brown akin to a well-worn leather saddle. Thereâs a littleâbit of tooth to it, a roughness that tells you this was made by human hands in a factory that has been doing so since 1845.
Partagas isnât all about that shiny, plasticâperfection you find on some new world smokes. Itâs got character. I squeezed it gently, and it was firmâbut yielded just a bit, like a properly aged steak. For me everything startsâat the pre-light draw.
Ever breathe inâa barn filled with drying hay and weathered wood? Thatâs what I got. Some chocolate, some hazelnut and that signatureââCuban twangâ (more on that later) everyone can identify if theyâve had it. Itâis earthy, a touch salty and very promising.
The cap was well doneâa nice, well applied triple that I managed to cut straight off withânot a fleck of loose tobacco. I stopped talking for a second and racedâto catch up, dragging on the corona furiously as I listened while pulling rich smoke in my mouth â solid construction is not something I ever take for granted and Partagas mostly delivers here.
The First Third: The Awakening
Lighting thisâbad boy in my fatherâs study was an initiation.
I touched it off the end of a wooden match, running the flameâacross the foot until a cherry would glow. The first few puffs? Theyâre a wake-up call. Atâthe outset youâre hit with a blast of cedar and leather.
Itâs not shy. But asâthe smoke clears, thereâs this sweet-salty cocoa thing that begins inching its way forward. Theyâre like aâdark chocolate bar with sea salt. The smoke production is thick.
I mean, you could chew onâthe stuff. Itâs creamy and it sits on the palate, tasting ofâroasted dark coffee for at least 5 minutes. I have to say, for a reasonably short cigar, those first ten minutes pack in a lotâof flavor. Itâsâmedium-to-full out of the gate, but itâs so smooth.
You are not biting your tongue; itâis simply shaking hands. The Sweet Spot: TheâSecond Third
When I got to the center ofâthe cigar, it wasn’t that the strength subsided as much as it transformed.
The cedar remained in the background, but the profileâbecame a lot creamier. I began to detect tracesâof vanilla and hints of caramel. Itâs a beautifully off-puttingâcounterpoint to the heavy leather notes at the opening. You ever eat a burnt sliceâof toast with honey?
Itâs that sort of toasted, charred, but stillâwith a sweetness so it isnât briny. Thereâsâalso a slight spice here. Itâs not a âpepper bomb,â like some Nicaraguan sticks Iâve had, but itâs a smooth spicy â think nutmeg or a dash ofâcinnamon. The burn was primarily even, perhaps slightly wavy,âbut an easy touch-up level of disturbance.
The ash was a light grey and it hung on for a good inch before I flicked itâoff into my fatherâs heavy glass ashtray. The smoke stayed somewhat cool forâa smaller stockier vitola, which is always remarkable to me. Occasionally small ones tend to get hot in the middle, but theâD5 behaved itself.
The Last Third:âThe Big Stick
But by myâfinal third, I was feeling the effects of that âwinâ back early
.
The nicotine was there â but not so much it made me sink evenâfarther into that leather chair. Theâflavor moved towards the dark side again. The coffee notes were pushed to the fore, from a latte nowâto straight-up espresso. The cedar returned with authority, andâthe finish was dense and creamy.
I detected a tinyâamount of almond and honey toward the very finish, peeking out from the clouds of smoke. Itâs a complex little beast. When I reached the nub â where for most cigars they would start to taste like a campfire thatâs been rained onââ the D5 still held together. It became richer and more savory by the time it was almost too hot toâhold.
I didn’t want to put it down. Thatâs the signâof a good cigar to me: when youâre staring at your scorched fingertips and wondering if you can milk just one more hit out of it. Pairing Recommendations
If youâre going to smoke something as muscular as this, you want aâdrink that can match it.
I took mine in my fatherâs study with a generous pour of aged Cuban rum â HavanaâClub 7 Year. The sweetnessâfrom the rum works beautifully with the salty cocoa and cedar of the Partagas. Theyâre old friends who donât have to talk in order to know and affirm eachâother. If you drink coffee,âthe choice is double espresso.
The middle third of the cigarâis enhanced by the bitterness of the coffee highlighting the caramel and vanilla flavors.
If youâre in a slightly more, ahem, âcelebratoryâ mood, peaty Scotch can also work â though tread lightly; the smoke ofâthe whisky should gently sing to the subtle honey and nut notes of your tobacco (in other words, you donât want that there to drown it). Personally? Iâd go for the rum orâa heavy, dark coffee. Solid.
The Verd




















