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Carrier | Price | Total products |
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($73.55 Unit)
In 1845, Jaime Partagás y Rabell founded his own cigar brand. Throughout its 170-year history, the Partagás brand has had numerous owners, perhaps especially the Cifuentes family who were the last owners of the brand, created dos Partagás. The two companies that own the two brands launched, celebrate the 150th, 160th and now 170th anniversaries of the Partagás brand and quite fanfare. For the 170th anniversary, special Cameroon is back, albeit, not 38-year-old wrapper. Instead, General is using Cameroon grown in the Kadey region, which is in the eastern part of the country bordering the Central African Republic. The wrapper, which is grown by the legendary Meerapfel family, is grown without the use of fertilizer.
The Partagas Anniversary 170 is offered in three sizes: Robust, 50x172. There's a strange scent of leather in the wrapping of the Anniversary Partagas. The wrapper is quite typical of Cameroon seems-wise, but it feels very rough. From the foot, there is much to do: cocoa, cedar, sweet blueberries, orange peel, wet mud, creaminess and latte. From the cold, Partagas has a touch of bitterness, black pepper, creaminess, leather and grass. As for the taste, it starts with a pleasant mixture of cedar, leather, creaminess. Partagas has a retrohalation that is extremely punishable with an explosion of hardness before a fleshy finish. It is half-full in body and flavor and half in strength.
Data sheet
Specific References
In 1845, Jaime Partagás y Rabell founded his own cigar brand. Throughout its 170-year history, the Partagás brand has had numerous owners, perhaps especially the Cifuentes family who were the last owners of the brand, created dos Partagás. The two companies that own the two brands launched, celebrate the 150th, 160th and now 170th anniversaries of the Partagás brand and quite fanfare. For the 170th anniversary, special Cameroon is back, albeit, not 38-year-old wrapper. Instead, General is using Cameroon grown in the Kadey region, which is in the eastern part of the country bordering the Central African Republic. The wrapper, which is grown by the legendary Meerapfel family, is grown without the use of fertilizer.