Guest guest Posted October 11, 2006 Report Share Posted October 11, 2006 jimmyfresno123 <jimmyfresno@...> wrote: non text has been taken out>>>>>>>>>>>> Since I don't have a hydrostill, I was hoping maybe to try my hand at enfleurage. I was imagining I could use a thin layer of refined lard smothered with the fresh blossoms, covered with plastic wrap and placed in the refrigerator overnight, repeating the process over a few weeks with fresh petals daily. Am I being naive? Can anyone suggest if this will give me the desired result? Thanks / Hi .....sounds an absolutlely wonderful idea.... I would love to know how it comes out.... I have never enfleuraged anything yet so I cannot offer any useful advice about that...... only one thought ..... would the fridge be the best place as cool closes up aroma.....not bringing it out.... but then again I really do not know the process for this climate.....as far as lard isn't there something more agreeable. I cannot remember off the top of my head but in tahiti they enfleurage for their tiare flowers....or monoi de tahiti another name for it, I wonder what they use for the base holder? Just found it they use pure unrefined Coconut Oil..... but that might hinder the smell...... maybe someone else can jump in and help here. kind regards Janita ascent www.hayspace.co.uk Send instant messages to your online friends http://uk.messenger. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 11, 2006 Report Share Posted October 11, 2006 <jimmyfresno@...> wrote: Here in Central California I'm blessed with an old garden full of paperwhite narcissi that are soon to bloom. <snip>> Since I don't have a hydrostill, I was hoping maybe to try my hand at enfleurage. I was imagining I could use a thin layer of refined lard smothered with the fresh blossoms, covered with plastic wrap and placed in the refrigerator overnight, repeating the process over a few weeks with fresh petals daily. Am I being naive? Can anyone suggest if this will give me the desired result? Thanks Hi , You ARE blessed! And I don't think you're being naive. We have a styrax japonica outside our home that we finally decided to try an enfleurage with this summer. We (my husband and I, not the Royal We) smeared crisco on several dinner plates and then put the blossoms on the crisco and put the plates together top-to-top so that two layers of flowers were sandwiched inside the plates. We didn't refregerate ours -- it seemed to us that the flowers would give up their scent better if they weren't " slowed down " by the cool temperature of the fridge. We changed out the blossoms every day, throughout the two+ week bloom, and we were rewarded with a nicely scented " goo " . Unfortunately, because the " professionals " use a solvent to get the scent out of the " goo " , and because I don't want to mess with solvent in our tiny kitchen, I didn't know what to do with the " goo " , or how to get the tiny bits of flower residue out of it, so it's currently in the freezer, awaiting rescue. But I'll just bet someone will chime in and let us both know what we should do with the " goo " that you get from the enfleurage. Best of luck to you -- please keep us posted on what you do and how it turns out. Andrine Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 12, 2006 Report Share Posted October 12, 2006 Andrine, thanks for the ideas. The Crisco-smeared styrofoam plates are exactly the kind of low-tech approach I was hoping to find. I am imagining that using coconut oil, which liquifies at a lower temperature, would somehow allow you to wash the essential oils out of the " goo " you described by simply heating it a few degrees above room temperature, which maybe would denature the volatile oils less?I am sure some enfleurage expert is laughing at my naivete, or snickering about the Crisco. In the beginning, they probably used goose fat, I'll bet. in my vivid fantasy life, the reason I justified putting the experiment in the refrigerator was that I thought that it would duplicate the darkness and lower temperatures during which narcissi release their scent. (Tell me you've never smelled narcissi on a cool night). Let's wait to see what someone suggests, then let's do it! If I get a useable extract from the mess, I'll even send a couple drops to you and we can make sickeningly cloying dusting powders with it to sell at Walgreens. We can call our product " Nuit de la Doux Vomissement, " " Jardin Vulgare, " or along the lines of " Dzing! " we can just call it " BLEHHH! " Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 12, 2006 Report Share Posted October 12, 2006 >>>>>non text has been removed etc......... From what I can gather Andrine and you may need to scour the fat so the petals adhere to it..... and then change about every 5 days.....for up to 60 days....then washed through with alcohol. you can check out a website here that runs a short film on enfleurage..... www.museesdegrasse.com Hope this is helpful fragrantly Janita --------------------------------- Try the all-new . " The New Version is radically easier to use " – The Wall Street Journal Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 12, 2006 Report Share Posted October 12, 2006 Hi To the Crisco enfleurage brigade, How cool and fun you did that. You might consider experimenting with your precious goo in small batches. Bring some to room temp, in a small jar, and stir in some botanical alcohol, let it sit in a dark place for a few days, shaking every so often; then pour off the result and see how it smells. You might even add some mobile eo's with the alcohol, in another batch, because they would act as solvents there too, to make the start of a perfume. Best, Debbie Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 12, 2006 Report Share Posted October 12, 2006 , thanks for the information on leaf lard for enfleurage! I just ordered a small amount for rendering from FlyingPigs Farm, which is willing to ship it regular mail if I assume liability for the product. This will be a fun project for the cooler weather. I have some time before the paperwhites bloom to prepare the fat. Thanks! Would appreciate any further hints about infusing time for flowers, washing lard (is it at room temperature? Then do you evaporate off a lot of the alcohol to concentrate the fragrance?) This is cool stuff. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 12, 2006 Report Share Posted October 12, 2006 Janita, this was a fascinating exhibit. Thank you. I can see that this took an incredible amount of work and isn't cost effective on a mass production scale, but for the home enthusiast like me, this should be quite interesting. Thanks Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 12, 2006 Report Share Posted October 12, 2006 wound up with a very nice pomade. you then take > this pomade and > " wash " it in perfumers alcohol. (i used a kitchenaid > mixer) it has to wash > and wash for a long time. a whole lot of work, but > it was fun, and > i love doing things like that. what was the fianl result? violet enfleurage? how much? I have wondered how beeswax would work? maybe a mixure of beeswax and coconut and maybe jojoba to create a greasier wax that isnt made of animal? ez __________________________________________________ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 12, 2006 Report Share Posted October 12, 2006 wound up with a very nice pomade. you then take > this pomade and > " wash " it in perfumers alcohol. (i used a kitchenaid > mixer) it has to wash > and wash for a long time. a whole lot of work, but > it was fun, and > i love doing things like that. what was the fianl result? violet enfleurage? how much? I have wondered how beeswax would work? maybe a mixure of beeswax and coconut and maybe jojoba to create a greasier wax that isnt made of animal? ez __________________________________________________ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 12, 2006 Report Share Posted October 12, 2006 jimmyfresno123 <jimmyfresno@...> wrote: Janita, this was a fascinating exhibit. Thank you. I can see that this took an incredible amount of work and isn't cost effective on a mass production scale, but for the home enthusiast like me, this should be quite interesting. Thanks >>>>>>>>>>> You're more than welcome........ looks like that you have some great ideas that have been pitched in from NPrs.........let me know how it works out..... We bought a semi ancient bluebell wood which is smothered in spring........ I wonder what would yield the best perfume (Iif at all?) enfleurage or tincturing. So I will be very interested on how your gorgeous paperwhites get on.... they are so heady...... In winter I place a load of bulb in a shallow decorative bowl and cover with loose shingle and they flower and scent the whole room.... same as hyacinth bulbs too. Has anyone tried either on bluebells (scilla non- scripta variety )? I have made an interesting bluebell cologne with a hyacinth absolute ........ and some resins ...... I would walk there in the evening inhaling their heady aroma..... and when I first started making it I would be missing a note...... a sharp greeness...... which later I was able to fathom....... but it took a while.... Because in the end it isn't just the flower one smells in its natural environment it is the other perfumes that interact ie.....leaf mould,( another tincture idea coming) damp greenness and warmth (if the sun is out) That is why I mentioned about the cold..... on a cold day the bluebells hardly smelt at all..... but after a warm sunny day the perfume was intoxicating......along with everything else. I have noticed the same with natural perfumes....... the cold keeps them closed and the warmth opens them up. Janita Send instant messages to your online friends http://uk.messenger. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 12, 2006 Report Share Posted October 12, 2006 jimmyfresno123 <jimmyfresno@...> wrote: Janita, this was a fascinating exhibit. Thank you. I can see that this took an incredible amount of work and isn't cost effective on a mass production scale, but for the home enthusiast like me, this should be quite interesting. Thanks >>>>>>>>>>> You're more than welcome........ looks like that you have some great ideas that have been pitched in from NPrs.........let me know how it works out..... We bought a semi ancient bluebell wood which is smothered in spring........ I wonder what would yield the best perfume (Iif at all?) enfleurage or tincturing. So I will be very interested on how your gorgeous paperwhites get on.... they are so heady...... In winter I place a load of bulb in a shallow decorative bowl and cover with loose shingle and they flower and scent the whole room.... same as hyacinth bulbs too. Has anyone tried either on bluebells (scilla non- scripta variety )? I have made an interesting bluebell cologne with a hyacinth absolute ........ and some resins ...... I would walk there in the evening inhaling their heady aroma..... and when I first started making it I would be missing a note...... a sharp greeness...... which later I was able to fathom....... but it took a while.... Because in the end it isn't just the flower one smells in its natural environment it is the other perfumes that interact ie.....leaf mould,( another tincture idea coming) damp greenness and warmth (if the sun is out) That is why I mentioned about the cold..... on a cold day the bluebells hardly smelt at all..... but after a warm sunny day the perfume was intoxicating......along with everything else. I have noticed the same with natural perfumes....... the cold keeps them closed and the warmth opens them up. Janita Send instant messages to your online friends http://uk.messenger. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 12, 2006 Report Share Posted October 12, 2006 jimmyfresno123 <jimmyfresno@...> wrote: , thanks for the information on leaf lard for enfleurage! I just ordered a small amount for rendering from FlyingPigs Farm, which is willing to ship it regular mail if I assume liability for the product. This will be a fun project for the cooler weather. I have some time before the paperwhites bloom to prepare the fat. Thanks! Would appreciate any further hints about infusing time for flowers, washing lard (is it at room temperature? Then do you evaporate off a lot of the alcohol to concentrate the fragrance?) This is cool stuff. >>>>>>>>>>>. It certainly is....... I can't wait to see how y'all get on It's again so interesting to note what said about the fact that she had better result with an animal base......... here we go again on the animal discussion....... ....................is it because it has a fattier quality to the oil that the scent molecules like to cling or are attracted to? Janita Send instant messages to your online friends http://uk.messenger. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 12, 2006 Report Share Posted October 12, 2006 jimmyfresno123 <jimmyfresno@...> wrote: , thanks for the information on leaf lard for enfleurage! I just ordered a small amount for rendering from FlyingPigs Farm, which is willing to ship it regular mail if I assume liability for the product. This will be a fun project for the cooler weather. I have some time before the paperwhites bloom to prepare the fat. Thanks! Would appreciate any further hints about infusing time for flowers, washing lard (is it at room temperature? Then do you evaporate off a lot of the alcohol to concentrate the fragrance?) This is cool stuff. >>>>>>>>>>>. It certainly is....... I can't wait to see how y'all get on It's again so interesting to note what said about the fact that she had better result with an animal base......... here we go again on the animal discussion....... ....................is it because it has a fattier quality to the oil that the scent molecules like to cling or are attracted to? Janita Send instant messages to your online friends http://uk.messenger. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 12, 2006 Report Share Posted October 12, 2006 jimmyfresno123 <jimmyfresno@...> wrote: > , thanks for the information on leaf lard for > enfleurage! (major snippety) > Wonderful - all this information on enfleurage is invaluable - I too will be doing this in colder weather - when the Pittospora are blooming this coming February. Woo! Alfred Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 12, 2006 Report Share Posted October 12, 2006 jimmyfresno123 <jimmyfresno@...> wrote: > , thanks for the information on leaf lard for > enfleurage! (major snippety) > Wonderful - all this information on enfleurage is invaluable - I too will be doing this in colder weather - when the Pittospora are blooming this coming February. Woo! Alfred Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 12, 2006 Report Share Posted October 12, 2006 > The Crisco-smeared styrofoam plates are exactly the kind of low- > tech approach I was hoping to find. ---------------------------------- Actually, , I use vitreous china plates. Somehow, I can't help wondering if the chemicals in styrofoam would leach, even ever-so- slightly, into the enfleurage and change the chemical makeup... > ...I'll even send a couple drops to you... ---------------------------------------- Whoo-hoo!!! : D We could trade styrax japonica for narcissus. Yeah! > ...and we can make sickeningly cloying dusting powders with it to > sell at Walgreens. We can call our product " Nuit de la Doux > Vomissement, " " Jardin Vulgare, " or along the lines of " Dzing! " we > can just call it " BLEHHH! " > > ------------------------------------------------ <snort!> -- I'm dyin' here!!!! ROFL!! I love it! How about Doucement Nauséabond? Or Puanteur sans Limites? Or just Poudre de la Pee-yoo? Anyone else have some snide, garish names to add? This could be fun... ; ) Suffocatingly, Andrine Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 12, 2006 Report Share Posted October 12, 2006 Wow -- Thank you for starting this thread and to everyone who chimed in. This is GREAT info for me, and I'm sure for many of us. Myself, I'm still gonna have to stick to Crisco or some other vegetable matter 'cause, big sissie that I am, I can't bring myself to touch animal fat. As for changing out the material, I found that I had to change the flowers every day. At first, I experimented and found that on the second day there was black fuzzy mold sprouting on my blossoms. (But then I DO live in the moist, maritime Pacific Northwest, where mold IS an actual seasonal element, just as others have snow...<grin>.) So, if I understand this correctly, if I get a bunch of the enfleurage " goo " and dump it in the Kitchen-Aid with, say, some Everclear and flip the switch, over the next few minutes the scent should get pulled out of the fat and into the alcohol? What's a good ratio of alcohol to fat for this? What's a good mixer speed? (Wouldn't want to be scraping that goo off from the ceiling and all other kitchen surfaces! Those of you with dedicated workspaces are SO fortunate...) Thanks again All! Andrine Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 12, 2006 Report Share Posted October 12, 2006 wrote: > > ...and we can make sickeningly cloying dusting > powders with it to > > sell at Walgreens. We can call our product " Nuit > de la Doux > > Vomissement, " " Jardin Vulgare, " or along the > lines of " Dzing! " we > > can just call it " BLEHHH! " > > > > > ------------------------------------------------ Andrine responded: > <snort!> -- I'm dyin' here!!!! ROFL!! I > love it! > How about Doucement Nauséabond? Or Puanteur sans > Limites? Or just > Poudre de la Pee-yoo? > > Anyone else have some snide, garish names to add? > This could be > fun... ; ) > > Suffocatingly, > Andrine Alfred writes: My favorite, now that I've been able to stop cackling after reading the above, is Puanteur sans Limites. I want some! Alfred in San Francisco Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 12, 2006 Report Share Posted October 12, 2006 >hi james. >i went through an " enfleurage " binge of research and practicing. i >used violets (always in january), which are really difficult. >i myself did not have much luck with either crisco or coconut oil, >and when i researched the old methods used in france i realized they >used " leaf " lard, which is animal in origin, and has to be >purified (not the " manteca " you can buy in california stores). >so i went whole hog (pun intended!) and did the same process, >and wound up with a very nice pomade. you then take this pomade and > " wash " it in perfumers alcohol. (i used a kitchenaid mixer) it has to wash >and wash for a long time. a whole lot of work, but it was fun, and >i love doing things like that. Hi Thanks for chiming in....a real enfleurage veteran! Did you somehow cover the bowl while this was going on? I'm thinking to cut down on the alcohol/air interaction, to hold down evaporation, etc. I was thinking poking the stem of the beater through an upside-down paper plate? PS my husband once interviewed for a job in Manteca, CA, and I was firmly against it, lol. -- Anya McCoy Anya's Garden of Natural Perfume http://anyasgarden.com Artisan Natural Perfumers Guild http://artisannaturalperfumers.org Natural Perfumers Chat Group / ---------- No virus found in this outgoing message. Checked by AVG Free Edition. Version: 7.1.408 / Virus Database: 268.13.2/472 - Release Date: 10/11/2006 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 12, 2006 Report Share Posted October 12, 2006 >hi james. >i went through an " enfleurage " binge of research and practicing. i >used violets (always in january), which are really difficult. >i myself did not have much luck with either crisco or coconut oil, >and when i researched the old methods used in france i realized they >used " leaf " lard, which is animal in origin, and has to be >purified (not the " manteca " you can buy in california stores). >so i went whole hog (pun intended!) and did the same process, >and wound up with a very nice pomade. you then take this pomade and > " wash " it in perfumers alcohol. (i used a kitchenaid mixer) it has to wash >and wash for a long time. a whole lot of work, but it was fun, and >i love doing things like that. Hi Thanks for chiming in....a real enfleurage veteran! Did you somehow cover the bowl while this was going on? I'm thinking to cut down on the alcohol/air interaction, to hold down evaporation, etc. I was thinking poking the stem of the beater through an upside-down paper plate? PS my husband once interviewed for a job in Manteca, CA, and I was firmly against it, lol. -- Anya McCoy Anya's Garden of Natural Perfume http://anyasgarden.com Artisan Natural Perfumers Guild http://artisannaturalperfumers.org Natural Perfumers Chat Group / ---------- No virus found in this outgoing message. Checked by AVG Free Edition. Version: 7.1.408 / Virus Database: 268.13.2/472 - Release Date: 10/11/2006 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 12, 2006 Report Share Posted October 12, 2006 Alfred Eberle <uruziam@...> wrote: wrote: >>>>>>>>>>> We can call our product " Nuit > de la Doux > > Vomissement, " " Jardin Vulgare, " or along the > lines of " Dzing! " we > > can just call it " BLEHHH! " > > > > > ------------------------------------------------ Andrine responded: > How about Doucement Nauséabond? Or Puanteur sans > Limites? Or just > Poudre de la Pee-yoo? > > Anyone else have some snide, garish names to add? > This could be > fun... ; ) > > Suffocatingly, > Andrine Alfred writes: My favorite, now that I've been able to stop cackling after reading the above, is Puanteur sans Limites. I want some! Alfred in San Francisco janita adds: hee hee..... how about sikamont pour tois . blanche sufakat hedaka sous or retch de paradis Janita petita Send instant messages to your online friends http://uk.messenger. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 12, 2006 Report Share Posted October 12, 2006 Alfred Eberle <uruziam@...> wrote: wrote: >>>>>>>>>>> We can call our product " Nuit > de la Doux > > Vomissement, " " Jardin Vulgare, " or along the > lines of " Dzing! " we > > can just call it " BLEHHH! " > > > > > ------------------------------------------------ Andrine responded: > How about Doucement Nauséabond? Or Puanteur sans > Limites? Or just > Poudre de la Pee-yoo? > > Anyone else have some snide, garish names to add? > This could be > fun... ; ) > > Suffocatingly, > Andrine Alfred writes: My favorite, now that I've been able to stop cackling after reading the above, is Puanteur sans Limites. I want some! Alfred in San Francisco janita adds: hee hee..... how about sikamont pour tois . blanche sufakat hedaka sous or retch de paradis Janita petita Send instant messages to your online friends http://uk.messenger. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 12, 2006 Report Share Posted October 12, 2006 Puanteur sand Limite! OMG. I am in great company here. For our Tutonic perfumers we could make some Schmutzige Wickeltisch (literally, dirty diaper changing table) with some ammonia and castoreum. I don't want to go too far or Comme des Garcons is going to swipe this good stuff. Mmmmm, this is fun. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 12, 2006 Report Share Posted October 12, 2006 Puanteur sand Limite! OMG. I am in great company here. For our Tutonic perfumers we could make some Schmutzige Wickeltisch (literally, dirty diaper changing table) with some ammonia and castoreum. I don't want to go too far or Comme des Garcons is going to swipe this good stuff. Mmmmm, this is fun. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 12, 2006 Report Share Posted October 12, 2006 Janita, this should be fun. The Paperwhites especially made me want to do this because their scent is one of those that (to my male nose) can be both repulsive and wonderful at the same time. The component is indole, isn't it? Common to some white flowers and to, yes, feces along with a bunch of compounds with funny names like fecone and cadaverine, (a halloween drag queen's name?). Sort of one of those supersonically high top notes. But again, one of those essences that diluted infinitessimally could make something interesting, I would think. This is probably re-hashing archived material that has been chewed over a million times so thanks for indulging me since I am so freaking excited to finally be able to talk about this stuff with people who get it. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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