Customers generally find the Punch Punch to be a pleasant, mild-to-medium Cuban cigar, often praised for its smooth, consistent flavour and good construction. While many appreciate its approachable strength and overall enjoyable smoking experience, some reviewers have noted occasional issues with wrapper integrity or a lack of complexity, particularly for more experienced palates.
Best suited for those seeking a lighter, flavourful Cuban cigar for a relaxed smoke, or for beginners looking for a manageable introduction to Cuban profiles.
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This Cuban cigar I would say is more mild than medium and it took me 50 minutes overall to smoke to the band but that's when things turned for the worse.
As soon as I removed the band the wrapper came off straightaway.
Up until then was a lovely typical Cuban smoke.
Have a couple in my humidor and will leave them for a while and hope that this was a one off.
More mild to med Cuban. Smooth, creamy hint of citrus overall. Lovely burn and construction. If you want a softer Cuban, great option.
Lovely! Well made, light to medium cigar for when you dont want anything to heavy. Reminds me why my favourites are always from Cuba. Its a bit like Champgane or Cognac, there are good examples made elsewhere but nothing beats the real deal.Perfect draw, good construction and flavoursome enjoyable smoke. Buy a handful for your humidor and you wont be disappointed.
I’m fairly new to smoking cigars (just thought I’d throw that out there):
First of all the cigar produced good amounts of white smoke.
Deep earthy rich flavours throughout with significant increases of sweet notes. Consistent flavour (no pepper).
The cigars structure was disappointing, pronounced seams, tunneling and a crack where the band was, although this did not affect the smoke much.
The cigar for me was at the top end of medium on the scale. I prefer a lighter smoke as this was too much for me but if your a more experienced smoke you may enjoy this.
Overall I would say I’m going to stay away from this cigar until I have enhanced my palate and developed my taste. Hope this helps a little.
Reviewed by Peter Nørgaard
It was one of the first balmy days of spring in frosty Denmark, and I was sitting on the porch after lunch debating which cigar to go with the gentle breeze and the leafy shadows playing on the grass. I chose a Punch Punch from the humidor - a corona gorda, which is a bit smaller size than I usually prefer. As regards the vitolas, I tend to be tempted by bombast. Large ring sizes, great length. But somehow, it seemed right for the smaller size to echo the small improvements of the thermometer.
First of the pleasures, the pre-lighting aroma. None of the dreaded (by me) animal odours, but fresh, crisp, oaky tobacco smells, combined with a tang of liquorice root. Then, the feel. The construction of the cigar was perfect - supple, but not soft, and easy to cut.
Then, the sight. Though the wrapper was not entirely free from veins - it was, after all, a cigar leaf, not a printed piece of paper - it was aesthetically pleasing, medium brown, slightly red-tinged. The lighting went well; tight, grayish-white ash formed, and the flavours began. The draw was not exactly loose, but not uptight either. I must confess that I abhor a tight draw on a cigar and its incumbent associations of sucking oatmeal through a straw. The smoke was just right - not great, billowing clouds enveloping me, but a light, bluish veil that was in accordance with the wispy spring clouds above.
Taste-wise, the Punch Punch is no heavyweight. It does not knock you over the head with violent sensations, but in so far as a cigar may be said to possess sophistication, this is it. You won't find the sheer force of a Bolivar or the overwhelming earthiness of a Montecristo 2; more of a flowery freshness and a subtle dried-fruit flavour that enlivens the senses instead of deadening them. Think of the smell of balsa wood converted into tobacco taste, and you've about got some of the nuances. All in all, it is refreshing like a tall, cold gin-and-tonic on a hot day, not like a heavy, dark brandy at day's end. As a matter of fact, I smoked it with a cup of cafe latte, but at a later hour I would have preferred it with a mellow, buttery Australian chardonnay, or perhaps - yes! - an American single cask bourbon. As a matter of fact, I think I will do just that tonight So if you are in the mood for a little mozartian massage of the taste buds, there is a cigar for that kind of experience. The Punch Punch.