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I bought some truffle oil from the market today, for the first time.

Both white and black, infused in olive oil. I remembered vaguely that

it was in Mandy Aftel's book Aroma in one of her recipes, and when I

came back I looked it up - and there is a recipe for solid perfume,

with white truffle oile, coffee absolute and orange oil.

I feel inspired to do something with the truffle oils, even though

they smell awfully stinky to my unfamiliar with it nose...

Did any of you try to do anything with truffle oils before for perfumes?

Curious to hear some experience and ideas. I find the scent quite

repulsive (particularly the white one) and sharp so that kind of

blocks me for now to think about it myself... Though I am sure that

once I get my hands dirty with it and start blending it will all fall

into place...

Thanks!

Ayala

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Been experimenting with my truffle oils, and am starting to make some

gifts for friends for the holidays. I was making simple bath oil

blends this morning, and really having fun with them. I package them

in miniature absolute vodka, and they look really cute. It's not

suppose to be a " professional " packaging, just for fun. I add little

tags so that giftee knows what they are and doesn't drink the almond

oil...

I based on recipe on Mandy's White Truffle and Blood Orange solid

perfume fro m her book " Aroma " . But I susbsituted the white truffle

with black one, which is warmer and mellower. I used wild orange oil

instead of the blood orange, and also added vetiver and black pepper.

The recipe calls for coffee absolute, by the way, and together these

make an interesting aphrodisiac oil (for massage or bath). This one is

in the " Absolute Pepper " bottle...

My favourite oil I blended was in the " Absolute Currant " bottle -

black truffle, tarragon absolute, black currant concrete and ylang

ylang. It smells very berry like and is delicious!

The white one, as I said, is sharp and very unpleasant to me. I made

one blend with it, using clementine oil, co2 and mandarin. It's quite

yummy once applied to the skin, even though from the bottle it has too

much of the white truffle sharpness.

I think it will be interesting to use the truffle oils in an oil base

perfume (solid or jojoba oil). They add an interesting " bite " to the

scent.

Ayala Sender, Perfumer

Ayala Moriel Parfums

http://www.AyalaMoriel.com/

My SmellyBlog: http://SmellyBlog.com/

Signature Perfumes ~ Perfumed Jewelery ~ Fragrance Consultant On-Line

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From: " Ayala Sender " <ayala@...>

My favourite oil I blended was in the " Absolute Currant " bottle -

black truffle, tarragon absolute, black currant concrete and ylang

ylang. It smells very berry like and is delicious!

That sounds like something I might eat for dessert...What a beautiful

combination!

For my birthday this year I was taken to a wonderful French restaurant where

we ate truffles....

I love the feeling of them and the smell is very special. Isn't it fun to

put food ingredients into fragrance?

I use cepes and cognac in parfum and think it is very special.

Le Bijou, a natural perfume boutique http://www.JoAnneBassett.com

Bassett Aromatherapy products http://www.AromaWorld.com

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Ayala Sender <ayala@...> wrote: Been experimenting with my

truffle oils, and am starting to make some

gifts for friends for the holidays. I was making simple bath oil

My favourite oil I blended was in the " Absolute Currant " bottle -

black truffle, tarragon absolute, black currant concrete and ylang

ylang. It smells very berry like and is delicious!

The white one, as I said, is sharp and very unpleasant to me. I made

one blend with it, using clementine oil, co2 and mandarin. It's quite

yummy once applied to the skin, even though from the bottle it has too

much of the white truffle sharpness.

Ayala Sender, Perfumer

they sound absolutely yummy....the black one very dark with the sweetening of

ylang ylang mmm interesting counter balance with blackcurrant........

.the white one..... as it is already a sharp note perhaps try a softening

tempering oil to offset the sharpness of the white truffle..............what

about linden abs?

fragrantly

janita

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>From: " Ayala Sender " <ayala@...>

>

>My favourite oil I blended was in the " Absolute Currant " bottle -

>black truffle, tarragon absolute, black currant concrete and ylang

>ylang. It smells very berry like and is delicious!

>

>That sounds like something I might eat for dessert...What a beautiful

>combination!

>

>For my birthday this year I was taken to a wonderful French restaurant

>where

>we ate truffles....

>I love the feeling of them and the smell is very special. Isn't it fun to

>put food ingredients into fragrance?

>

>I use cepes and cognac in parfum and think it is very special.

>

>Le Bijou, a natural perfume boutique http://www.JoAnneBassett.com

>Bassett Aromatherapy products http://www.AromaWorld.com

We had thanksgiving with our neighbour who very kindly inveted us again.

They had a bottle of homemade red wine (red raspberry or was it black?)

anyway, I dont drink but had a sniff of it. It smelt sweet and glorious.

Very refereshing and full of bubbles??? I like the smell and may try

tincturing it next year in alcohol. Though I am not sure how I would blend

it in a perfume.

Poh Yee

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> That sounds like something I might eat for dessert...What a beautiful

> combination!

>

> For my birthday this year I was taken to a wonderful French

restaurant where

> we ate truffles....

> I love the feeling of them and the smell is very special. Isn't it

fun to

> put food ingredients into fragrance?

>

> I use cepes and cognac in parfum and think it is very special.

> Le Bijou, a natural perfume boutique http://www.JoAnneBassett.com

That French restaurant must be something. Real truffles must be

amazing, I only had the oil as a seasoning for stuffing in the

holidays (the hostess I went to in all the Christmas dinners I went to

made me a vegetarian stuffing with mushroom and rosemary and truffle oil).

I love cepes and cognac in perfumes too. The truffles are so different

though, there is something really strong about them, where as the

cepes is rounder in my opinion.

Ayala Sender, Perfumer

Ayala Moriel Parfums

http://www.AyalaMoriel.com/

My SmellyBlog: http://SmellyBlog.com/

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> .the white one..... as it is already a sharp note perhaps try a

softening tempering oil to offset the sharpness of the white

truffle..............what about linden abs?

> fragrantly

> janita

That would be interesting to try. I never used Linden in an oil base

though, as it is so sticky and light in colour. What's your experience

with it, Janita?

Thanks!

Ayala Sender, Perfumer

Ayala Moriel Parfums

http://www.AyalaMoriel.com/

My SmellyBlog: http://SmellyBlog.com/

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> That sounds like something I might eat for dessert...What a beautiful

> combination!

>

> For my birthday this year I was taken to a wonderful French

restaurant where

> we ate truffles....

> I love the feeling of them and the smell is very special. Isn't it

fun to

> put food ingredients into fragrance?

>

> I use cepes and cognac in parfum and think it is very special.

> Le Bijou, a natural perfume boutique http://www.JoAnneBassett.com

That French restaurant must be something. Real truffles must be

amazing, I only had the oil as a seasoning for stuffing in the

holidays (the hostess I went to in all the Christmas dinners I went to

made me a vegetarian stuffing with mushroom and rosemary and truffle oil).

Yes Ayala it is...

Expensive ...and wonderful...It was a treat....

I love cepes and cognac in perfumes too. The truffles are so different

though, there is something really strong about them, where as the

cepes is rounder in my opinion.

Yes that is true..

Le Bijou, a natural perfume boutique http://www.JoAnneBassett.com

Bassett Aromatherapy products http://www.AromaWorld.com

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My latest truffle fun... Bath Salts!

I made a nice big batch yesterday with the black truffle & cassis

blend, and it smells marvelous! So much fun playing with these

truffles. I am going to give these as gifts for the Holiday Season.

More flavours to come later ;)

Ayala Sender, Perfumer

Ayala Moriel Parfums

http://www.AyalaMoriel.com/

My SmellyBlog: http://SmellyBlog.com/

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Hi Ayala

I've always used white truffle oil to dress dishes -- the final

touch. Mashed potatoes, a chicken dish, etc. It has a sharp note tha

tblack truffle doesn't have, and I like it for that. Let us know what

goes on with your experiment with it in perfumery.

Anya McCoy

Anya's Garden of Natural Perfume http://anyasgarden.com

Artisan Natural Perfumers Guild http://artisannaturalperfumers.org

Natural Perfumers Chat Group

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