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Cohiba Panetela

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The Cohiba Panetela is a small 4.5"x26 baby from Habanos' flagship brand. It's so thin it practically looks more like a cigarillo than a full cigar. Still it's full of flavor, and a very nice decent strength. Hats off as well to the torcedors who somehow managed to hand-roll such a thin stick. It's not without its rather serious issues though, as I will be explaining shortly.

The sticks come in a nice brown varnished box inside a cardboard box. Habanos has a bad habit of printing the box code on the cardboard box rather than the wooden one, so you have to remember to copy the code over before you discard the outer box.

Box Code: MUA DIC 09

Construction:

Appearance-wise the panetela looks like your typical Cohiba - beautiful wrapper with thin veins, beautiful cap, nice tight seals, slightly lumpy. The wrapper isn't particularly oily, but still very pretty.

Unfortunately the beauty in its construction really goes only skin deep. Out of around 6 panetelas I've smoked so far, 4 have had an unreasonably tight draw, including this one. The draw is so tight it almost feels plugged. I could feel several tight spots along the body close to the band, and massaging it relieves the tightness only temporarily.

This is an expensive stick for its size at US$216 for a box of 25 from my favorite vendor (approx US$9 per stick, ~US$11 after Singapore import taxes and GST), so the tight draw is pretty unacceptable.

The prelight draw is very pleasant though - It reminds me of Chinese dried prunes. If you've ever had one of those you know it's not a bad smell. :) This stick didn't have too much of that hay that's often present in Habanos sticks.

Opening and 1/3:

Despite the tight draw the opening was very decent. Within 2 or 3 puffs the smoke came out nice, thick and smooth. There is leather and very nice wood, with a dark chocolate and nutty finish. The amount of smoke is very decent. Not as thick and buttery as the Secretos, but still very smooth and nice.

Towards the middle of the first third some pepper starts to creep in. Typical of Cohibas, when you don't draw on it, the burn is very slow with hardly any smoke coming from the cigar. It's easy to think that the cigar has gone out, until you draw again and get that thick mellow smoke. The burn was perfect and sharp, requiring zero touch-up and relighting.

2/3:

The smoke is now fairly peppery, with notes of latte, chocolate and nuts. The cedar on this stick is excellent, very pleasant, although the "2nd hand smoke" coming off the tip lacks that pleasant aroma that I got from the Oliva Serie G. Top-quality tobacco flavors are also present, along with the smooth taste of earth and leather.

3/3:

Still leather, cedar and lots of pepper. This is a great smoke despite the terrible draw, very enjoyable. I smoked it down to the last 1/2", when I had to let it go because it was getting a bit too hot for my fingers.

This is definitely a fantastic cigar, and very convenient too at 20-30 minutes (I'm a fairly slow smoker - to give you some idea, a typical Robusto takes me about 2 hours). Unfortunately the very high price coupled with the tight draw on most sticks I've had makes me give it a somewhat low score of 76/100. If it had been cheaper (say about US$5 per stick) or if the draw had been much better, it would've easily scored a 90 with its nice flavorful smoke, and pleasant cocoa, latte and nutty notes. Personally I wouldn't be re-stocking on this when I run out. I'd rather spend the money on the much better Siglo line, or on an Oliva Serie V.

I rank this a medium-full bodied cigar, with a medium strength.

I'd love to hear from the rest of you about your experiences with this cigar. :)
 
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mk05

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No source listings plz

This should be in reviews

This has many implications:
Typical of Cohibas, when you don't draw on it, the burn is very slow with hardly any smoke coming from the cigar.
Great review. I personally love skinnies. They usually are most indicative of the marca, but sometimes can be one facet of the marca given its thing gauge and leaves used. As for Cohiba, I think Siglo I or II are the most indicative of Siglo, lancero and CE for overall Cohiba, and Exquisito for the vanilla bean - which this one mimics, but not as well.
 
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Oop sorry about the source listing. I realized that I had put this in the wrong folder after posting it, but can't move it. :(

Moderators: Please move this to the Reviews folder. Many thanks!

I agree with you on the Siglos. The Siglo I is my personal favorite. I'm very partial to small sticks because I rarely have hours to spend smoking. Hope to do a review on the Monte #5 very soon. :)

BTW what did you mean by "this has many implications"?

No source listings plz

This should be in reviews

This has many implications:
Typical of Cohibas, when you don't draw on it, the burn is very slow with hardly any smoke coming from the cigar.
Great review. I personally love skinnies. They usually are most indicative of the marca, but sometimes can be one facet of the marca given its thing gauge and leaves used. As for Cohiba, I think Siglo I or II are the most indicative of Siglo, lancero and CE for overall Cohiba, and Exquisito for the vanilla bean - which this one mimics, but not as well.
 
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Great review, pbear, thanks very much!

Just got a box of Monte #5's, interested to hear your thoughts on them as well. :)
 
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Thanks for the review... I'm going back and forth on picking up a box of these for when I don't have much time. I've read a lot about tight draws being a common issue with these. I guess thats easy to understand given the ring gauge but at $7-8 a cigar that will take me probably 15 minutes I'm not so sure I want to give it a go.
 
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Thanks for the review- I picked up a 5-pack of these a while ago and felt the same way as you- when these are done right they are great little cigars. Out of my 5-pack, 3 had incredibly tight draws, but the other two were fantastic, and in my opinion worth what I paid for them. If only Habanos could get them more consistent, but I know this small of a vitola is very difficult to roll.
 
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Awhile back I was given a few fakes of these from someone who went to Mexico (glass top 5 pack failure). Though whatever they really were they were decent smokes. From the sounds of your review I should try to get a sampler of the real thing sometime.
 
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Thanks guys for all your comments! :D

Great review, pbear, thanks very much!

Just got a box of Monte #5's, interested to hear your thoughts on them as well. :)
I will probably smoke one this week. I've smoked 2 already, impression of them so far is that they're very decent smokes. Not quite as elegant as my favorite Siglo I's, but somewhat more enjoyable than the Panetelas because of their superior draw, longer burn time and overall value for money. I would certainly get another box when the current one runs out. :)

Thanks for the review... I'm going back and forth on picking up a box of these for when I don't have much time. I've read a lot about tight draws being a common issue with these. I guess thats easy to understand given the ring gauge but at $7-8 a cigar that will take me probably 15 minutes I'm not so sure I want to give it a go.
They're great cigars to be sure, when properly constructed. To be fair though even with the tight draw I had very decent amounts of smoke. If not for the price I would've ranked these higher than the Oliva Serie G Cameroons.. :D

Thanks for the review- I picked up a 5-pack of these a while ago and felt the same way as you- when these are done right they are great little cigars. Out of my 5-pack, 3 had incredibly tight draws, but the other two were fantastic, and in my opinion worth what I paid for them. If only Habanos could get them more consistent, but I know this small of a vitola is very difficult to roll.
It's quite amazing right? I've never seen such thin hand-rolls before. :D

Nice review
Thanks Alwayslit. :D

Awhile back I was given a few fakes of these from someone who went to Mexico (glass top 5 pack failure). Though whatever they really were they were decent smokes. From the sounds of your review I should try to get a sampler of the real thing sometime.
I think you should! Hopefully you get one that's properly rolled. From what I've seen on comments here and elsewhere, the chances of that happening are around 20-40%. :p
 
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