The Aladino Corojo Patton is rolled using authentic Honduran Corojo grown in the Jamastran Valley, reflecting the Eiroa family’s traditional approach to strength and flavour. The long, slender format allows the Corojo wrapper to lead, delivering cedar and toasted oak from the outset. As the smoke develops, roasted coffee, cocoa and leather come forward, supported by a steady black pepper. The Patton’s shape keeps the smoke focused and linear, pairing naturally with an espresso, a dark chocolate square, or a well-aged bourbon.
Length: 9”
Ring Gauge: 48
Strength: Full
Vitola: Lancero (Patton)
Smoking Time: 75 minutes
Wrapper: Honduras Corojo
Binder: Honduras
Filler: Honduras
Aladino:
Aladino Cigars is rooted in one of the most important family legacies in modern cigar history. The brand was created by the Eiroa family, whose story in tobacco stretches back generations in Honduras. The family’s modern cigar story is best known through Camacho: the Eiroa's built Camacho into a major Honduran name, then sold the Camacho brand and the Rancho Jamastrán factory to Oettinger Davidoff in 2008—while continuing to focus on farming and tobacco growing.
Aladino as a cigar line first appeared in 2015, and then the business side was formalised when Julio R. Eiroa and his son Justo launched JRE Tobacco Co. in late January 2016 to handle sales and distribution for Aladino (and related lines).
From there, Aladino’s story is essentially a tribute to “classic” Cuban-style profiles: Corojo-forward blends, family-grown tobacco, and an intentional return to traditional methods—less about chasing trends, more about preserving a flavour tradition the Eiroas have spent decades cultivating in Honduras.
