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The Scent of Home, the Scent of Celebration ~ out of the bottle

Posted by Alyssa on 21 December 2010 86 Comments

I won’t be going home for the holidays this year. Work, distance, and the difficulties of holiday travel in a time of war and other strange weathers mean I’ll be in Texas while the rest of my family is up in Idaho. So I’ve been thinking about the smells of Christmas, and of home, of the North and the South, and the places where they come together, and the places where they don’t.

The most expected smells of Christmas — the ones most likely to appear in limited edition perfumes, soaps and candles — are the smells of a Northern winter festival. The cool scents of pine and peppermint (all those candy canes), hints of snow, crystalline air, tree-covered mountains and those Northern night skies that seem so much blacker, and whose stars seem so much sharper and brighter than any I see in the South. To combat the cold, there’s the scent of woodsmoke from the hearth, and the smells of all those precious things imported from Southern climes: spices — especially the woody warmth of cinnamon and nutmeg, the heat of dried ginger and the cool-hot prickle of clove; oranges, which smell and look so much like the sun should that they hardly need explaining; and cacao, in the form of chocolate eaten in the hand, or melted into rich hot milk.

It’s an appealing combination — so appealing that all sorts of people who don’t celebrate, or even understand Christmas enjoy it (in Japan, for example, Christmas has been translated into a kind of Alpine-fantasy Valentine’s day). But it may or may not be the smell of your winter holiday, or your home…

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Skating on luxury

Posted by Robin on 18 November 2010 29 Comments

A clever ad from Hermès. Not really about perfume, although they do show a few bottles.

An accent of mushrooms

Posted by Robin on 17 November 2010 8 Comments

An accent of mushrooms merged with sweet notes of honey in a sampling Wednesday of what's been billed as the world's oldest champagne, salvaged from a shipwreck in the Baltic Sea.

— From Hints of yeast, honey; shipwrecked bubbly uncorked at Comcast News. Many thanks to Emily for the link!

The Antique Rose Emporium ~ out of the bottle

Posted by Alyssa on 16 November 2010 57 Comments

purse full of rosesMike Shoup of Antique Rose Emporium

Twenty-seven roses. That’s how many blooms tumbled out of my purse when I got home, each a different variety, all richly fragrant. My car smelled of roses. My office smelled of roses. I’d just gotten back from Independence, Texas, home of the Antique Rose Emporium.

A busy fall delayed my visit to the eight acres of display gardens — the roses peak in April and October — but it’s been a warm November and when I arrived the beds were still alive with migrating butterflies and fat bees storing up the last of the season’s pollen. Mike Shoup, the Emporium’s cheerful, bearded owner (shown above right), toured me around the different gardens, including one expressly for the many weddings the Emporium hosts. The goal, he explained, was to show people how they could integrate old roses (a loose term for varieties at least fifty years old, sometimes much older) into their gardens. It was all very pretty. But I wasn’t there for gardening inspiration. I was there to smell the roses.

I explained my purpose — and Now Smell This — to Mike as best I could. “Oh that’s great!” he said. “I think fragrance is one of the most important things about the roses, but it’s so hard to talk about.” Then he recommended The Emperor of Scent, Chandler Burr’s book on biophysicist and perfume critic Luca Turin, and I knew I’d found a fellow scent fanatic…

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The Tea Embassy ~ out of the bottle

Posted by Alyssa on 19 October 2010 67 Comments

Green tea

After my August sorbet adventures I wanted to learn more about tea. I decided to start at the Tea Embassy. It’s my favorite kind of shop — small, specialized, and run by people fiercely devoted to their product. From the street the Embassy’s historical bungalow looks like a place ladies in hats might gather for an afternoon of vicious gossip and Earl Grey, but inside there’s dark wood and a wall full of silver canisters. (Tea, like wine and perfume, should be stored away from light, heat and humidity.) The Embassy’s excellent website — which includes an online shop — promised a “palate profile” to help me select my perfect tea from among the 200 they offer.

When I arrived, the natty young man behind the counter introduced himself as Tim. “We’re still working on a formal version of the profile,” he said, “but let me ask you a few questions.”

We talked for the next two-and-half hours. Some of the questions he asked me were about flavor, but many were about mood and context, or just the kind of person I was. Did I like to wake up gently, or with a jolt of energy? When my friends came to town, where did I take them out to dinner?

To pick the right tea, I had to think about what I wanted the tea to do and when I was going to drink it. That made sense to me — I pick the perfumes I’m going to wear much the same way — and it made me remember how bound up in ceremony and ritual tea is, even the simplest ritual of waiting for water to boil and leaves to steep.

As we talked, we sniffed. I skipped all the scented/flavored teas and stuck to representative green, black, oolong, and white tea. My goal was to learn about the variety of flavors in the leaf itself…

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