(This post was last modified: 01-11-2021, 01:11 AM by churchilllafemme.)
Tea
Tea (Camellia sinensis), an evergreen perennial shrub in the Theaceae family, is native to East Asia and probably originated in the border area of north Burma, north Myanmar, southwest China, and Tibet. It grows mainly in tropical and subtropical climates, although some varieties can tolerate marine climates in Europe, North America, and New Zealand. The plants are propagated from seed and cuttings and require about 3 years to be ready for harvesting. They can be maintained for harvest for up to 100 years. Tea grows naturally to a height of 15m, but under cultivation it is kept to a 0.5-1m bush size. Leaves are variable in texture and green color, flowers are white, and the fruits are green with 2-3 seeds each.
Leaf size is the chief criterion for classification of tea plants: Assam type has the largest leaves, China type has the smallest, and Cambodian type (a hybrid of the two) has leaves of intermediate size. Darjeeling tea also appears to be a hybrid of the Chinese and Assam teas. Chinese small-leaf tea is thought to have come from hybridization of wild tea relatives, although there are no surviving wild populations. It is estimated to have diverged from Assam-type tea around 22,000 years ago, while Chinese and Indian Assams teas diverged about 3,000 years ago. Two principal tea varieties are employed for brewing and perfumes, Chinese small-leaf (C. sinensis var. sinensis), used for most Chinese, Formosan, and Japanese green and white teas, and Assam (C. sinensis var. assamica), used in most Indian black teas except for Darjeeling.
History
A legend says that a breeze blew a couple of C. sinensis leaves from a nearby tree into the just-boiled water that mythical Chinese emperor Shennong was about to drink around 2700 BC, subtly changing its color and flavor and creating the first tea infusion.
It is theorized by some that Buddhists grew, harvested, and produced tea as early as 500 BC, drinking it for refreshment and to aid meditation, and that they spread the practice during their travels between China and India. The earliest known physical evidence of tea was discovered in 2016 in the tomb of a Chinese emperor, indicating that tea was drunk by Han dynasty emperors as early as the 2nd century BC, probably as a medicinal drink. A written Chinese text from 59 BC contains a reference to boiling of tea, and the first written notation of tea cultivation dates from the same period. The drink became very popular during the Tang dynasty (~600-900) in China, and from there its use spread to Korea, Japan, and Vietnam.
Green tea is said to have become popular in Japan by around 1190, when a Zen priest visiting China returned to Japan with tea plants and seeds and used the tea for meditation rituals within his own community of monks, from which it eventually spread throughout Japan.
During the Tang dynasty, tea was steamed, then pounded and shaped into cake form, then during the succeeding Song dynasty (960-1279) loose-leaf tea became popular. During the Yuan (1271-1368) and Ming dynasties (1368-1644), tea leaves were pan-fried, then rolled and dried, a process that stops the oxidation process which turns the leaves dark, thus allowing the tea to remain green. During the 15th century, the process for oolong tea, in which leaves were allowed to partially oxidize before pan-frying, was developed. Subsequently, black tea, for which the leaves were allowed to oxidize fully, was also used in parts of China. Yellow tea was apparently an accidental discovery during the Ming dynasty production of green tea, when careless practices allowed leaves to turn a yellow color, producing a different flavor and aroma.
Tea was first introduced to Western priests and merchants in China in the 16th century, at which time it was termed chá; the earliest European reference to tea ('chiai') appeared in Venice in 1545. Tea appeared in Russia in the late 16th or early 17th century, when Cossacks visiting China were given tea to take back to the Tsar as a gift. In the early 17th century, the Dutch East India Company began to move large shipments of tea to Europe, and tea became a fashionable drink in The Hague. The Dutch introduced the drink to Germany, Britain, and France, and eventually to New Amsterdam (New York). The assamica tea variety was discovered growing wild in the Assam region of India in 1823 and was found to be better suited to production of black teas than the Chinese one. However, Chinese small-leaf tea also was introduced to the Darjeeling region of India by the British in the late 18th and early 19th century. Indian black tea was first sold to the English public in 1838 and quickly became a widely popular drink there. It is thought that the main reasons black tea came to be preferred in England over green tea are that (1) the delicate aroma of green tea deteriorated over the months of sea transport and (2) the hard water quality in England diluted the flavor and fragrance of green tea too much. In addition, sugar importation from British Caribbean colonies increased greatly in the 1700s, and the growing trend of adding sugar to tea may have fueled the greater demand for strong black tea. Tea originally was drunk in India only by anglicized residents, but it became widely popular in the 1950s after a successful advertising campaign by the India Tea Board.
Processing
Tea is generally divided into categories based on how it is processed: white (wilted and unoxidized), yellow (the same as white but allowed to yellow a little naturally), green (unwilted and unoxidized), oolong (wilted under direct strong sunlight, then bruised and twisted and partially oxidized), black (wilted, sometimes crushed, and fully oxidized), and post-fermented (a dark green tea that is allowed to ferment/compost). After picking, tea leaves quickly begin to wilt and oxidize unless immediately dried. This enzymatic oxidation process causes the leaves to turn progressively darker as tannins are released. Commercially, the darkening is stopped at predetermined stages by various heating heating processes. When the tea has been heated and dried, it is sorted and graded.
After basic processing, teas can be altered by other steps before being sold, including blending, flavoring, scenting, and decaffeination. Blending is the combination of different teas together to obtain consistency, improved taste, and/or higher price. Flavoring and scenting are usually accomplished through direct addition of agents such as ginger, cloves, mint, spearmint, cardamom, bergamot, and vanilla. But because tea easily absorbs and retains odors, alternatively it can also just be placed for a time in close proximity to an aromatic ingredient, a technique used in production of traditional jasmine tea. Lapsang Souchong is scented by being exposed to the smoke of burning pine root. Tea traditionally was drunk with added milk in cultures where dairy products were consumed, including Tibet and other Himalayan areas. The addition of milk to tea in Europe was first mentioned in 1680, and it became generally customary in England to drink tea with milk, especially hearty black teas such as the Assams, as well as Indian masala chai. In parts of Europe, it became popular to serve tea with lemon juice and/or either sugar or honey.
Black Tea
Black tea is divided into two types, orthodox (made in a time-consuming process with a traditional rolling machine) and CTC (a faster 'crushed, torn, and curled' process, with a Rotervan machine). Black tea has the most astringency and bitterness, with a flavor that is spicy, malty, fruity (slightly lemony), or roasted, depending upon processing. Tea from India's rainy, tropical Assam region has bold and malty characteristics; Darjeeling tea grown in mountainous Indian areas is softer and more herbaceous and can change from season to season; Sri Lankan tea (known commonly as Ceylon tea) varies depending upon whether it is from the cool mountains or the humid and tropical coastal areas but generally is strong, brisk, and spicy; and Kenyan black tea, primarily made in the CTC style, is known to be assertive and full-bodied.
Green Tea
Green teas from China have a grassy, earthy, roasted odor profile due to pan-firing (either once or multiple times, in a basket, pan, or drum over charcoal or gas flame, electric heat, or hot air). And those from Japan have a quite different sweet, vegetal, or seaweed-like aroma because of steaming.
White Tea
White tea, from China's Fujian province, is the least processed, neither rolled nor fired. The leaves, plucked when they first emerge and are still covered in fine white hairs, are allowed to wither and dry naturally in a carefully controlled environment, resulting in a tea with an extremely fresh, soft, and delicate scent. Sometimes the leaves are steamed very briefly or exposed to very low heat to help them dry more quickly and avoid oxidation. White tea was not available outside of its Chinese growing province until recently, when leaf processing and preserving methods improved greatly.
'Red' Tea
Red (rooibos, pronounced 'roy-buss') tea has existed as a product for only around 300 years. The plant is an herb (Aspalathus linearis) native to South Africa that is not actually a true C. sinensis tea plant. It is a legume plant that can be brewed into a reddish-brown infusion called 'African red tea' or 'red bush tea.' Oxidation brings out the full red color, as well as the scent and flavor. Rooibos evolved as an international commercial tea crop after the 1930s. In the late 1990s, a less-oxidized, green, and more grassy version was created, and in the 2000s a rooibos extract for perfumes was created. The scent of rooibos is smoky, sweet, woody, grassy, and floral.
Tea Fragrance
It is primarily through exposure to boiling water that tea's complex odor characteristics emerge, and it has been a challenge to the perfumer to simulate the tea experience without this essential preparation element being present. Tea-themed scents considerably. Sometimes components are derived from tea leaves themselves. In other compositions, raw materials are used instead to create an illusion of brewed tea: a few are floral absolutes that are reminiscent of tea, several are herbs and flowers used to brew tisanes and are described as possessing aromas similar that of tea, while others are notes of plants or flowers popularly associated with tea even though they are not actually 'tea-like.'
Fragrance essences that are extracted directly from tea leaves include the following:
Green tea absolute, a dark, sticky, semi-solid mass with an underlying sweet and slightly fruity apricot note and a dry, woody base. It has very low diffusiveness even with dilution in alcohol. It colors perfumes dark green.
Green tea CO2, with an appearance like Japanese matcha paste and a smell that is herbaceous and somewhat nutty, said by some to be the closest of the tea essences to nature. It is somewhat more diffusive. The extract dyes perfumes light green but leaves insoluble particles in alcohol.
Black tea absolute, with a scent even more diffuse and intense but still somewhat subtle. It is thick, resembling dark molasses.
Maté absolute, intense, bitter and reminiscent of hay, like its namesake tea beverage. It works well in fougere compositions.
Rooibos absolute, sweet and rich like pipe tobacco. It more often is made into a tincture that has a very subtle, faintly woody, slightly sweet aroma.
Yerba mate (Ilex paraguariensisis, in the holly genus) is not related to C. sinensis, but in perfumes it can recreate the effect of green tea, with a crystalline clarity and a soft and musky drydown. Also used sometimes to approximate or complement black tea in fragrances are smoky burnt rubber, birch tar, and caramel.
Notes that are used frequently to scent tea beverages and therefore are strongly associated with tea in perfumery include bergamot (a key ingredient in Earl Grey tea), jasmine sambac (green and fruity, used to perfume jasmine green tea), and lavender (also used in Earl Grey tea as well as being brewed as a tisane on its own). Toasted rice, often mixed with green tea as a drink called genmaicha, has a savory edge that has been paired with flowers in tea perfumes, adding depth to them. Closely associated with oolong tea is osmanthus fragrans, the Chinese olive plant flower. Rosewater, added to liquid tea since ancient Persia, is often combined with it in perfumes. Also added frequently are incense, sandalwood, cardamom, wisteria, lilac, and peony.
Unlike most other fragrant plants used in perfumery, tea leaves have a very subtle, faintly sweet, herbaceous, and green odor profile, without much diffusiveness. The overall quality of the natural aroma varies depending upon the type of tea, the region where it was grown, the growing conditions (the 'terroir'), when the leaves were plucked, and the subsequent processing (e.g. shaping, drying, cutting, and storage).
Japanese teas such as sencha and matcha have grassy, spinach-like scents, while oolongs share some aromatic notes with lilac, rose, and jasmine. Lapsang souchong has a smoky profile. Green tea fragrances frequently have added spices and herbs such as cardamom, nutmeg, and clary sage. Green tea scents in general are considered to be natural, refreshing, sweet, and elegant. The popularity of green tea declined in perfumery during the middle of the 20th century but then soared when much better technology for preservation developed in the 1980s and 1990s. In the later 1990s, with the increased focus on environmental issues and lifestyle diversity, the boom of 'naturalness' and health-consciousness (with its corresponding enthusiasm for Japanese food and drink), the use of green tea fragrance - like other light, transparent, relaxing, and refreshing ones, especially those considered unisex - became even more prevalent. The first synthetic green tea note was produced at the same time, and since then they have become diverse and more commonly used. In addition, a large series of perfumes with gourmand or fruity notes were released and gained acceptance in the 1990s. In this overall context, the scent of tea suddenly became extremely popular, with products like Bvlgari Eau Parfumée (1992), Elizabeth Arden Green Tea (1999), and Lancome Aroma Tonic (1999) appearing in rapid succession. Calvin Klein CK One (1994), a unisex fragrance with a prominent tea note, became a huge success first in Japan and then elsewhere, especially among the younger population. The green tea fragrance boom now appears to have waned since around 2006, although there is still a solid niche for the fragrances.
Masculine or Unisex Fragrances Featuring Tea:
4711 Acqua Colonia Green Tea & Bergamot, Lemon & Ginger (green)
Adolfo Dominguez Agua de Bambu
Alain Daniel French Club (male)
Alfred Dunhill Amalfi Citrus
Alkemia Thé de Ceylon, Apsara, Madam Pearl, Moroccan Tea, Beauty Like the Night (red)
Al-Rehab Green Tea
Altaia Yu Son
Annick Goutal Duel (yerbamate), Eau de Fier
l'Artisan Parfumeur Tea for Two (green), Dzongkha (masala chai), Coeur de Vetiver Sacre, 32 Venenum (masala chai, male)
Atelier Oolang Infini
Ayala Moriel Vetiver Rouge (red)
Azzaro Chrome United, Now (male), Aqua Cèdre Blanc
Bottega Verde Note per Due
Bvlgari Thé (various), Soir (male), Extrême, Omnia (masala chai), Pour Homme (Darjeeling)
By Kilian Bamboo Harmony, Imperial Tea
Calvin Klein One (green), Truth
Christopher Brosius (CB) I Hate Perfume Russian Caravan Tea (black)
Chrome Legend
Comme des Garcons Series 1 (black)
Coty Club Med My Ocean
Creed Silver Mountain Water, Asian Green Tea
Demeter Tea (various)
Derbe Te' Bianco, Te' Nero
Ebba L.A. White Tea
Ed Pnaud l'Impériale
Elizabeth Arden Green Tea, Untold
Emmanuel Levain Bleu
Esscentual Alchemy Gaia Botanical (red)
Fendi 2004
Floris Cefiro
Galimard Lotus Thé Vert, Rafting (male)
Gucci Pour Homme II (male)
Guerlain Homme, Aqua Allegoria Teazzurra (mint), Neroli Outrenoir
Hanae Mori HiM
Hermes Voyage, Eau de Citron Noir, Osmanthe Yunnan (Ooolong), l'Ombre des Merveilles
Hugo Boss Elements Aqua (male)
Issey Miyake Shades of Kolam
Jacques Evard Cyrus Edition Sport
Jacques Fath Yang
Jacomo Aura
Jaguar Classic Black
Jalaine Green Tea
Jean Charles Brosseau Thé Brun
Jo Malone Tea Collection (various, male)
Kenzo Tokyo
Korres White Tea Bergamot Freesia
Lacoste L.12.12. Rouge
Liz Claiborne Curve (various), Realities
Loewe Agua
Maison Margiela Tea Escape
Masque Russian Tea
Memo Paris Eau de Memo, Winter Palace, Oriental Leather
Monotheme Venezia Green Tea (male)
Murdock Black Tea (male)
Nadia Z Camino de Azahar (red, male)
Natura Hoje
Neil Morris Patchouli Narcisse
Nest Indigo
Nishane Wulong Cha
Nouvelle Etoile White Tea
l'Occitane Thé Bergamote, Thé Vert a la Menthe
Oliver & Co. Resina (red)
Ormonde Jayne Champaca (Genmaicha)
Panouge Perle Rare
Parfums et Senteurs du Pays Basque Dalai Lama (male)
Pierre Bourdon le Grand Tour (male)
Provence Sante Green Tea
Ralph Lauren White Tea
Rance 1795 Collection Classique 2
Ravenscourt Vanilla Rooibos (red)
Regime des Fleurs Floralia (red)
Rituals Eau des Indes
Rocawear X
Roger & Gallet l'Homme Sport
Serge Lutens Five O'Clock Au Gingembre
Shanghai Tang Jade Dragon (male)
S. Oliver Prime League
Tom Ford White Suede
Unic Thé (various)
Urban Outfitters Thé Matcha (male)
Urban Scents Dark Vanilla (red)
Versace Dreamer
Viktor & Rolf Flowerbomb
Welton London Sencha
Xerjoff 1986
Yves Rocher Thé Vert
Zara Fig
Tea (Camellia sinensis), an evergreen perennial shrub in the Theaceae family, is native to East Asia and probably originated in the border area of north Burma, north Myanmar, southwest China, and Tibet. It grows mainly in tropical and subtropical climates, although some varieties can tolerate marine climates in Europe, North America, and New Zealand. The plants are propagated from seed and cuttings and require about 3 years to be ready for harvesting. They can be maintained for harvest for up to 100 years. Tea grows naturally to a height of 15m, but under cultivation it is kept to a 0.5-1m bush size. Leaves are variable in texture and green color, flowers are white, and the fruits are green with 2-3 seeds each.
Leaf size is the chief criterion for classification of tea plants: Assam type has the largest leaves, China type has the smallest, and Cambodian type (a hybrid of the two) has leaves of intermediate size. Darjeeling tea also appears to be a hybrid of the Chinese and Assam teas. Chinese small-leaf tea is thought to have come from hybridization of wild tea relatives, although there are no surviving wild populations. It is estimated to have diverged from Assam-type tea around 22,000 years ago, while Chinese and Indian Assams teas diverged about 3,000 years ago. Two principal tea varieties are employed for brewing and perfumes, Chinese small-leaf (C. sinensis var. sinensis), used for most Chinese, Formosan, and Japanese green and white teas, and Assam (C. sinensis var. assamica), used in most Indian black teas except for Darjeeling.
History
A legend says that a breeze blew a couple of C. sinensis leaves from a nearby tree into the just-boiled water that mythical Chinese emperor Shennong was about to drink around 2700 BC, subtly changing its color and flavor and creating the first tea infusion.
It is theorized by some that Buddhists grew, harvested, and produced tea as early as 500 BC, drinking it for refreshment and to aid meditation, and that they spread the practice during their travels between China and India. The earliest known physical evidence of tea was discovered in 2016 in the tomb of a Chinese emperor, indicating that tea was drunk by Han dynasty emperors as early as the 2nd century BC, probably as a medicinal drink. A written Chinese text from 59 BC contains a reference to boiling of tea, and the first written notation of tea cultivation dates from the same period. The drink became very popular during the Tang dynasty (~600-900) in China, and from there its use spread to Korea, Japan, and Vietnam.
Green tea is said to have become popular in Japan by around 1190, when a Zen priest visiting China returned to Japan with tea plants and seeds and used the tea for meditation rituals within his own community of monks, from which it eventually spread throughout Japan.
During the Tang dynasty, tea was steamed, then pounded and shaped into cake form, then during the succeeding Song dynasty (960-1279) loose-leaf tea became popular. During the Yuan (1271-1368) and Ming dynasties (1368-1644), tea leaves were pan-fried, then rolled and dried, a process that stops the oxidation process which turns the leaves dark, thus allowing the tea to remain green. During the 15th century, the process for oolong tea, in which leaves were allowed to partially oxidize before pan-frying, was developed. Subsequently, black tea, for which the leaves were allowed to oxidize fully, was also used in parts of China. Yellow tea was apparently an accidental discovery during the Ming dynasty production of green tea, when careless practices allowed leaves to turn a yellow color, producing a different flavor and aroma.
Tea was first introduced to Western priests and merchants in China in the 16th century, at which time it was termed chá; the earliest European reference to tea ('chiai') appeared in Venice in 1545. Tea appeared in Russia in the late 16th or early 17th century, when Cossacks visiting China were given tea to take back to the Tsar as a gift. In the early 17th century, the Dutch East India Company began to move large shipments of tea to Europe, and tea became a fashionable drink in The Hague. The Dutch introduced the drink to Germany, Britain, and France, and eventually to New Amsterdam (New York). The assamica tea variety was discovered growing wild in the Assam region of India in 1823 and was found to be better suited to production of black teas than the Chinese one. However, Chinese small-leaf tea also was introduced to the Darjeeling region of India by the British in the late 18th and early 19th century. Indian black tea was first sold to the English public in 1838 and quickly became a widely popular drink there. It is thought that the main reasons black tea came to be preferred in England over green tea are that (1) the delicate aroma of green tea deteriorated over the months of sea transport and (2) the hard water quality in England diluted the flavor and fragrance of green tea too much. In addition, sugar importation from British Caribbean colonies increased greatly in the 1700s, and the growing trend of adding sugar to tea may have fueled the greater demand for strong black tea. Tea originally was drunk in India only by anglicized residents, but it became widely popular in the 1950s after a successful advertising campaign by the India Tea Board.
Processing
Tea is generally divided into categories based on how it is processed: white (wilted and unoxidized), yellow (the same as white but allowed to yellow a little naturally), green (unwilted and unoxidized), oolong (wilted under direct strong sunlight, then bruised and twisted and partially oxidized), black (wilted, sometimes crushed, and fully oxidized), and post-fermented (a dark green tea that is allowed to ferment/compost). After picking, tea leaves quickly begin to wilt and oxidize unless immediately dried. This enzymatic oxidation process causes the leaves to turn progressively darker as tannins are released. Commercially, the darkening is stopped at predetermined stages by various heating heating processes. When the tea has been heated and dried, it is sorted and graded.
After basic processing, teas can be altered by other steps before being sold, including blending, flavoring, scenting, and decaffeination. Blending is the combination of different teas together to obtain consistency, improved taste, and/or higher price. Flavoring and scenting are usually accomplished through direct addition of agents such as ginger, cloves, mint, spearmint, cardamom, bergamot, and vanilla. But because tea easily absorbs and retains odors, alternatively it can also just be placed for a time in close proximity to an aromatic ingredient, a technique used in production of traditional jasmine tea. Lapsang Souchong is scented by being exposed to the smoke of burning pine root. Tea traditionally was drunk with added milk in cultures where dairy products were consumed, including Tibet and other Himalayan areas. The addition of milk to tea in Europe was first mentioned in 1680, and it became generally customary in England to drink tea with milk, especially hearty black teas such as the Assams, as well as Indian masala chai. In parts of Europe, it became popular to serve tea with lemon juice and/or either sugar or honey.
Black Tea
Black tea is divided into two types, orthodox (made in a time-consuming process with a traditional rolling machine) and CTC (a faster 'crushed, torn, and curled' process, with a Rotervan machine). Black tea has the most astringency and bitterness, with a flavor that is spicy, malty, fruity (slightly lemony), or roasted, depending upon processing. Tea from India's rainy, tropical Assam region has bold and malty characteristics; Darjeeling tea grown in mountainous Indian areas is softer and more herbaceous and can change from season to season; Sri Lankan tea (known commonly as Ceylon tea) varies depending upon whether it is from the cool mountains or the humid and tropical coastal areas but generally is strong, brisk, and spicy; and Kenyan black tea, primarily made in the CTC style, is known to be assertive and full-bodied.
Green Tea
Green teas from China have a grassy, earthy, roasted odor profile due to pan-firing (either once or multiple times, in a basket, pan, or drum over charcoal or gas flame, electric heat, or hot air). And those from Japan have a quite different sweet, vegetal, or seaweed-like aroma because of steaming.
White Tea
White tea, from China's Fujian province, is the least processed, neither rolled nor fired. The leaves, plucked when they first emerge and are still covered in fine white hairs, are allowed to wither and dry naturally in a carefully controlled environment, resulting in a tea with an extremely fresh, soft, and delicate scent. Sometimes the leaves are steamed very briefly or exposed to very low heat to help them dry more quickly and avoid oxidation. White tea was not available outside of its Chinese growing province until recently, when leaf processing and preserving methods improved greatly.
'Red' Tea
Red (rooibos, pronounced 'roy-buss') tea has existed as a product for only around 300 years. The plant is an herb (Aspalathus linearis) native to South Africa that is not actually a true C. sinensis tea plant. It is a legume plant that can be brewed into a reddish-brown infusion called 'African red tea' or 'red bush tea.' Oxidation brings out the full red color, as well as the scent and flavor. Rooibos evolved as an international commercial tea crop after the 1930s. In the late 1990s, a less-oxidized, green, and more grassy version was created, and in the 2000s a rooibos extract for perfumes was created. The scent of rooibos is smoky, sweet, woody, grassy, and floral.
Tea Fragrance
It is primarily through exposure to boiling water that tea's complex odor characteristics emerge, and it has been a challenge to the perfumer to simulate the tea experience without this essential preparation element being present. Tea-themed scents considerably. Sometimes components are derived from tea leaves themselves. In other compositions, raw materials are used instead to create an illusion of brewed tea: a few are floral absolutes that are reminiscent of tea, several are herbs and flowers used to brew tisanes and are described as possessing aromas similar that of tea, while others are notes of plants or flowers popularly associated with tea even though they are not actually 'tea-like.'
Fragrance essences that are extracted directly from tea leaves include the following:
Green tea absolute, a dark, sticky, semi-solid mass with an underlying sweet and slightly fruity apricot note and a dry, woody base. It has very low diffusiveness even with dilution in alcohol. It colors perfumes dark green.
Green tea CO2, with an appearance like Japanese matcha paste and a smell that is herbaceous and somewhat nutty, said by some to be the closest of the tea essences to nature. It is somewhat more diffusive. The extract dyes perfumes light green but leaves insoluble particles in alcohol.
Black tea absolute, with a scent even more diffuse and intense but still somewhat subtle. It is thick, resembling dark molasses.
Maté absolute, intense, bitter and reminiscent of hay, like its namesake tea beverage. It works well in fougere compositions.
Rooibos absolute, sweet and rich like pipe tobacco. It more often is made into a tincture that has a very subtle, faintly woody, slightly sweet aroma.
Yerba mate (Ilex paraguariensisis, in the holly genus) is not related to C. sinensis, but in perfumes it can recreate the effect of green tea, with a crystalline clarity and a soft and musky drydown. Also used sometimes to approximate or complement black tea in fragrances are smoky burnt rubber, birch tar, and caramel.
Notes that are used frequently to scent tea beverages and therefore are strongly associated with tea in perfumery include bergamot (a key ingredient in Earl Grey tea), jasmine sambac (green and fruity, used to perfume jasmine green tea), and lavender (also used in Earl Grey tea as well as being brewed as a tisane on its own). Toasted rice, often mixed with green tea as a drink called genmaicha, has a savory edge that has been paired with flowers in tea perfumes, adding depth to them. Closely associated with oolong tea is osmanthus fragrans, the Chinese olive plant flower. Rosewater, added to liquid tea since ancient Persia, is often combined with it in perfumes. Also added frequently are incense, sandalwood, cardamom, wisteria, lilac, and peony.
Unlike most other fragrant plants used in perfumery, tea leaves have a very subtle, faintly sweet, herbaceous, and green odor profile, without much diffusiveness. The overall quality of the natural aroma varies depending upon the type of tea, the region where it was grown, the growing conditions (the 'terroir'), when the leaves were plucked, and the subsequent processing (e.g. shaping, drying, cutting, and storage).
Japanese teas such as sencha and matcha have grassy, spinach-like scents, while oolongs share some aromatic notes with lilac, rose, and jasmine. Lapsang souchong has a smoky profile. Green tea fragrances frequently have added spices and herbs such as cardamom, nutmeg, and clary sage. Green tea scents in general are considered to be natural, refreshing, sweet, and elegant. The popularity of green tea declined in perfumery during the middle of the 20th century but then soared when much better technology for preservation developed in the 1980s and 1990s. In the later 1990s, with the increased focus on environmental issues and lifestyle diversity, the boom of 'naturalness' and health-consciousness (with its corresponding enthusiasm for Japanese food and drink), the use of green tea fragrance - like other light, transparent, relaxing, and refreshing ones, especially those considered unisex - became even more prevalent. The first synthetic green tea note was produced at the same time, and since then they have become diverse and more commonly used. In addition, a large series of perfumes with gourmand or fruity notes were released and gained acceptance in the 1990s. In this overall context, the scent of tea suddenly became extremely popular, with products like Bvlgari Eau Parfumée (1992), Elizabeth Arden Green Tea (1999), and Lancome Aroma Tonic (1999) appearing in rapid succession. Calvin Klein CK One (1994), a unisex fragrance with a prominent tea note, became a huge success first in Japan and then elsewhere, especially among the younger population. The green tea fragrance boom now appears to have waned since around 2006, although there is still a solid niche for the fragrances.
Masculine or Unisex Fragrances Featuring Tea:
4711 Acqua Colonia Green Tea & Bergamot, Lemon & Ginger (green)
Adolfo Dominguez Agua de Bambu
Alain Daniel French Club (male)
Alfred Dunhill Amalfi Citrus
Alkemia Thé de Ceylon, Apsara, Madam Pearl, Moroccan Tea, Beauty Like the Night (red)
Al-Rehab Green Tea
Altaia Yu Son
Annick Goutal Duel (yerbamate), Eau de Fier
l'Artisan Parfumeur Tea for Two (green), Dzongkha (masala chai), Coeur de Vetiver Sacre, 32 Venenum (masala chai, male)
Atelier Oolang Infini
Ayala Moriel Vetiver Rouge (red)
Azzaro Chrome United, Now (male), Aqua Cèdre Blanc
Bottega Verde Note per Due
Bvlgari Thé (various), Soir (male), Extrême, Omnia (masala chai), Pour Homme (Darjeeling)
By Kilian Bamboo Harmony, Imperial Tea
Calvin Klein One (green), Truth
Christopher Brosius (CB) I Hate Perfume Russian Caravan Tea (black)
Chrome Legend
Comme des Garcons Series 1 (black)
Coty Club Med My Ocean
Creed Silver Mountain Water, Asian Green Tea
Demeter Tea (various)
Derbe Te' Bianco, Te' Nero
Ebba L.A. White Tea
Ed Pnaud l'Impériale
Elizabeth Arden Green Tea, Untold
Emmanuel Levain Bleu
Esscentual Alchemy Gaia Botanical (red)
Fendi 2004
Floris Cefiro
Galimard Lotus Thé Vert, Rafting (male)
Gucci Pour Homme II (male)
Guerlain Homme, Aqua Allegoria Teazzurra (mint), Neroli Outrenoir
Hanae Mori HiM
Hermes Voyage, Eau de Citron Noir, Osmanthe Yunnan (Ooolong), l'Ombre des Merveilles
Hugo Boss Elements Aqua (male)
Issey Miyake Shades of Kolam
Jacques Evard Cyrus Edition Sport
Jacques Fath Yang
Jacomo Aura
Jaguar Classic Black
Jalaine Green Tea
Jean Charles Brosseau Thé Brun
Jo Malone Tea Collection (various, male)
Kenzo Tokyo
Korres White Tea Bergamot Freesia
Lacoste L.12.12. Rouge
Liz Claiborne Curve (various), Realities
Loewe Agua
Maison Margiela Tea Escape
Masque Russian Tea
Memo Paris Eau de Memo, Winter Palace, Oriental Leather
Monotheme Venezia Green Tea (male)
Murdock Black Tea (male)
Nadia Z Camino de Azahar (red, male)
Natura Hoje
Neil Morris Patchouli Narcisse
Nest Indigo
Nishane Wulong Cha
Nouvelle Etoile White Tea
l'Occitane Thé Bergamote, Thé Vert a la Menthe
Oliver & Co. Resina (red)
Ormonde Jayne Champaca (Genmaicha)
Panouge Perle Rare
Parfums et Senteurs du Pays Basque Dalai Lama (male)
Pierre Bourdon le Grand Tour (male)
Provence Sante Green Tea
Ralph Lauren White Tea
Rance 1795 Collection Classique 2
Ravenscourt Vanilla Rooibos (red)
Regime des Fleurs Floralia (red)
Rituals Eau des Indes
Rocawear X
Roger & Gallet l'Homme Sport
Serge Lutens Five O'Clock Au Gingembre
Shanghai Tang Jade Dragon (male)
S. Oliver Prime League
Tom Ford White Suede
Unic Thé (various)
Urban Outfitters Thé Matcha (male)
Urban Scents Dark Vanilla (red)
Versace Dreamer
Viktor & Rolf Flowerbomb
Welton London Sencha
Xerjoff 1986
Yves Rocher Thé Vert
Zara Fig
John