Description
PartagĂĄs Serie P No. 2 Review
Somewhere outside Sintra, PortugalâI found myself behind the wheel of a rented 1 Alfa Romeo Giulia whose fragrance was less âcarâ than gasoline and old horsehair. The carâs engine made this rhythmic, metallic ticking noise â a mechanical heartbeat that felt too exposed on theâtwisting coastal roads. It was one of those gray, heavy-misted afternoons when the Atlantic Ocean resembles nothing so much as a sheet of hammeredâlead. I had been solo, which was sort of the point of the trip, but the silence in that cabin was beginning to grate less like freedom and more likeâa burden.
Product Specifications
| Attribute | Detail |
|---|---|
| Product Name | Partagas Serie P No. 2 |
| Origin | Cuba |
| Factory | Piramides |
| Vitola | Piramide/Torpedo |
| Length | 1 mm / 6.1 inches |
| Ring Gauge | 52 |
| Wrapper | Cuba (Vuelta Abajo) |
| Binder | Cuba (Vuelta Abajo) |
| Filler | Cuba (Vuelta Abajo) |
| Strength | Medium |
It had been three days of trying to run away from a certain kind of melancholy that chases after you once you realize youâre over half your life and most folks who started the tripâalongside have taken different exits. I pulled the Alfa over onto a gravel shoulderâthat overlooked a cliff. Salt spray whipped by the wind, and nothing seemed toâbe happening to the carâs heater. I needed something to ground me in the present, something to keepâmy internal monologue from careening into the âwhat-ifs.â I reached into my travel humidor and plucked a stick thatâhad been lying in wait, not necessarily for a âspecialâ moment, but just necessary.
It was aâtorpedo, short and squat, with a wrapper the hue of well-worn leather saddle. That smoke? The
PartagĂĄs Serie P No. 2. I decapitated it, struck a match on the dash, and for the first time in 4 miles I felt like I was exactly where I was meant toâbe.
TheâSpecs: PartagĂĄs – Serie P No. 2
Before I tell you about how this thing really handled me out on that cliIff-side, letâsâcheck the vitals. This is no small commitment; this is a cigar that will require an hour and a half of your life, maybe more ifâyou are like me and puff slowly. Attribute
Details
Vitola de Galera
PirĂĄmides (Torpedo)
Construction: The Feel of Havana
Iâve smoked a lot of cigars in my life, but thereâs just something about the PirĂĄmide shape of the Serie PâNo. 2 that holds so well in the hand.
Itâs got a heft to it. The wrapper on mine was a rich and oilyâColorado brown â not so much chocolate as black coffee â with just enough veins to make it look rough-hewn and handmade. It didnât look asâthough it came from an assembly line; It looked like someone took some time with this baby in the PartagĂĄs factory on Calle Industria. The pre-light drawânwas quite a surprise too.
I gave itâa shallow slit to retain some of the smoke. I was smacked with instant notes of cedar, cold cocoa and a great deal of what I call âbarnyard,â the earthy, fermented hayâsmell that lets you know these puros are the real thing from the Vuelta Abajo region. Firm but not too hard, no soft spots and the wrapper was a littleâbit toothy. To the touch it was like high-quality parchment when I ran myâfingers over it.
Gotta tell you, the construction wasâtight.
No loose leaves at the base, withâthe taper at the head being sharp and equal-sided. The First Third: AâSalty Hello
Ashing this beast in a leaky old car was no mean feat, but once the foot took, there was a great cloudâof smoke.
Immediately, Iâhave that very distinctive PartagĂĄs âtwang.â You get the pepper if youâve smoked the SerieâD No. 4, but this is just P2 and there’s a different start. It has that classic Cuban saltâright on the lips, met with a wash of cedar and white pepper. It wasnât as aggressive as Iâthought. The texture of the smoke has a certainâcreaminess, velvety is the word that comes to mind.
After about 10 minutes the pepper calmed down, and I started to tasteâsome floral notes and a hint of citrus zest. It was a weird counterpoint to the cold, brinyâAtlantic wind whipping through the Alfaâs window, but it worked. The ash held for the line of fire an inch or so, but I got nervous andâtapped it into the carâs small chrome ashtray. The burn wasnât laser-like,âbut it was well-behaved, and thatâs about the best you can expect from a hand-rolled Cuban.
The Second Third: Rubbing Raw atâthe Heart Of It All
By the time I got to the second third, and it seemed like maybe the melancholy was lifting, I found myself workshopping a pitch for a show inspired by this review in which we pairâgreat smokes with unusually well-suited drinks from around the world
.
And this is where the SerieâP No. 2 really shines in terms of complexity. The citrus dropped back and the âdarkerâ notes began to muscle their way onto the drink menu; espresso, leather, and a very specific hazelnut that â I kid you not â brought me right back to a recipe from FreshDirect for street-fairâroasted nuts. I also picked up aâhint of cumin and honey. Thisâsounds like a weird combination, but against that earthy, oaky base it tasted balanced.
The strength was definitely building. It really isâa medium-full thing, but it doesnât try to kick your teeth in with nicotine. Itâs less about the flavor and more about the weight of thatâflavor. A bit of caramel andânougat lurked every few puffs, which made it interesting.
I reclined back into the leather Alfa seat, watching the smoke curl around the wood of the Alfa steering wheel, sensing that âsweet-saltyâ balance for whichâPartagĂĄs is known. Itâs such aâsturdy, dependable transition that you donât get bored when it doesnât pop. Act 3: The DaringâConclusion
When Iâreached the final couple inches, the cigar decided it meant business.
The strength coiled and erupted intoâa fullbodied howl. The cedar became charred oak, and the espresso notes grew darker, bordering on 90 percentâcacao dark chocolate. I began to get notes ofânutmeg and an unexpected sweetness that fell somewhere between maple syrup or fresh coconut. The pepper returned, but it wasâmore like a black pepper burn on the back of the throat at that point.
Even at the bitter end, it never turnedâbitter or mushy. It remained cool as well, a testament to theâVuelta Abajo filler itâs packed with. I smokedâit all the way to my fingertips, baby. The finish was strong and long, resulting in an aftertaste of cured tobacco and earthâthat seemed to linger even long after Iâd extinguished it.
By the time I was finished, the Alfaâs cockpit was a haze of blue smoke and the world outsideâdidnât look quite as gray. The Pairing: What to Drink?
And there I was on that cliffside, stuck with a thermos of lukewarm black coffee,âwhich, letâs face it, rocks. The bitter coffee was the perfectâcontrast to the creamy cigar. But if I were in a real lounge (or not behind the wheel of aâfinicky Italian car), I would play it differently. A dark, aged rum something likeâa Havana Club 7 or a Diplomatico is the move here.
The molasses sweetness in the rum would pair up fantastically with theâleather and cocoa from the P2. If youâre agnostic on whether to serve bourbon or scotch, opt for something with a little mindset of peat in it â but alsoâsome sherry cask influence. You need something that can handleâPartagĂĄs strength without trampling the delicate floral and honey flavors. And also that a thick creamy stout beer, the kind you really have to chew on and would make your grandma spit, might be a killer choiceâfor a weekend afternoon as well.
The History: A Modern Classic
The Serie P No. 2 isnât an antique, but it bears the history ofâa brand that has been around since 1. PartagĂĄs has consistently beenâthe âstrongâ alternative among Habanos. This specific stick is a member of the âalphabet series,â which had its genesis all the way back in â are we serious here? ââthe 1930s, but his buddy P2 didnât actually start making a regular appearance in the lineup until about 2. It was an instant hit.
Itâs often compared to the Montecristo No. 2 due to the shape, butâthey are entirely different beasts. The Monte is spiceâand cocoa; the PartagĂĄs, earth and leather and that raw Cuban power. It always ranks high in the big magazinesâI think it was even a top 10 cigar recently in Cigar Aficionadoâbut more meaningfully, itâsâa staple of the humidors of guys who actually smoke every day. But itâs aâpremium âworking manâsâ smoke, if you know what I mean.
Itâsânot flashy, itâs just consistently very good. The Verdict
Now, Iâm not going to spot my paperâwith telling you this is the âbestâ cigar in the world.
Thatâs a bunch ofâmarketing talk. What I can tell you is that the PartagĂĄs Serie P No. 2 has to be one of the steadiest, most complex and yes soulful smokes for anyone enjoying theirâtobacco as if it matters â which of course, it does. Itâs not as peppery as the Serie D No. 4, which makes this one a little more friendly for an extended session but with plenty of evolution to keep you interested over theâwhole ninety minutes. Who is this for?
Itâs for the person who noâlonger wants to sit down and actually
smoke. Itâs not a cigar to puff while your mowing the lawn orâat a loud party. Itâs a cigar for a solo journey, for contemplation or toâhave an extended heart-to-heart with an old friend. Itâs got that old-world Havana grit and in a world thatâsâgetting increasingly polished and plastic, well, I can get behind that.
When I did eventually key on the Alfa and start heading back to town, a whiff of Serie P No. 2 wasâstill rising off my jacket. The melancholy had not entirely disappeared â life is never like that â but itâdid get put back in its place. Sometimes, all you need is a well-rolled piece of tobacco and a few miles of open road to remind you that whatâs done isnât always done,âand despite all the shit, youâre still the one calling shotgun. Final Thought:
If you find a box of 25, buyââem.
Cellar them for a year or two, and they grow only moreâsupple. Solid. Truly solid.











