Anise: Notes on Notes

Hello APJ, Welcome to our small scale collaboration project. Old Herbaceous (OH) of Serenity Now Scents and Sensibilities and I will be doing a monthly post on different perfume notes. We are not perfumers but aficionados of fragrance. So lots of our information will come with links for further reading or text references. We are learning as you are learning, or refreshing.

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Anise: Notes on Notes

YAY! Old Herbaceous picked Anise for us today from a list that I liked the idea of.

Anise: Notes on Notes

from Franz Eugen Köhlae, Köhlae’s Medizinal-Pflanzen, 1897

What is Anise?

Did you know Anise and Star Anise come from totally different plants? This was a revelation to me. I’d never done the digging before and used the names and spices interchangeably.

From Masterclass: Anise seed and star anise come from two entirely different plants with origins in different parts of the world. Both do have similar flavor profiles because they share the essential oil anethole, though star anise is considered more bitter and herbaceous. Anise seeds are smaller dried schizocarp seeds that are about an eighth- to a quarter-inch long, whereas star anise is preserved as a whole dried pericarp that is about an inch long.

From Wikipedia (edited): Pimpinella anisum, also called aniseed or rarely anix is a flowering plant in the family Apiaceae native to the eastern Mediterranean region and Southwest Asia ]Anise is a herbaceous annual plant growing to 60+cm (2–3 feet). The leaves at the base of the plant are simple, long and shallowly lobed, while leaves higher on the stems are feathery or lacy, pinnate, divided into numerous small leaflets. Both leaves and flowers are produced in large, loose clusters. The flowers are either white or yellow, approximately 3mm (1⁄8 in) in diameter, produced in dense umbels. The fruit is a dry oblong and curved schizocarp, 4–6mm (1⁄6–1⁄4 in) long, usually called “aniseed”

How does Anise smell? 

It’s easier to talk about how anise tastes. The scent profile is directly related.

Licorice! Well, anethole is the organic compound. It’s also found in Star Anise, Fennel, Tarragon and other plants. It’s the thing in Ouzo that makes it turn white when you add water. It’s a clear, fragrant, mildly volatile liquid.

How is Anise used in perfumery? 

Anise is most often used as a bit part player in amongst the stars to give a bite, depth, to round out a fragrance or add something surprising. Mostly used in sweet perfumes bit also in woody and oud scents. It is a part of things as disparate as Brut and Yvresse, Tuscany per Uomo and La Panthere.

Anise Notes on Notes Lolita Lempicka Homme Byzance EdT

 

In which perfumes will you find Anise?

Lolita Lempicka Au Masculine

Greenery, licorice, nutty nougat and a little booze sprinkled with sweet confectionary that skews bakery further in. While not exactly the same as the original Lolita Lempicka EdP it is pretty bloody close. It’s not really licorice, or even black jelly babies, but it does have a kick of it, a tickle, a pinch. Funnily, having written that I went back in for a deep huff and it is licorice. A sweet, candy style licorice like licorice all sorts, YUM!

Rochas Byzance

Byzance has anise but it’s only a bit player. The big deal in open here is spicy carnation and some sparkling citruses. Most of the greenery and flowers pass me by, or rather are too well incorporated to be shining stars, but when I really go looking for aniseed I get far off hints of that licorice twang (maybe I’ve been suggestion smelling it). Then as we dry down Byzance becomes a dry powdery amber with creamy sandalwood.

Please go check out Serenity Now Scents and Sensibilities and see what OH has to add to the Notes on Notes about Anise.

What are your favourite fragrances with Anise listed in the notes?
Portia xx

12 thoughts on “Anise: Notes on Notes

  1. Oh how I loved Byzance in its first 80’s formula. Don’t remember any anise note, but back then parsing scents wasn’t really a thing.
    Checking through Fragrantica it appears I currently own only one scent with an anise note, Arabian Oud Kalemat, another warm amber. I don’t perceive the anise though.

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  2. I have a bottle of Lolita Lempicka (the original) which is probably my only anise scent. I like it, but there have been times when I absolutely couldn’t wear it. I think I need certain weather/temperatures and a light hand.

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    • Hey there MMKinPA,
      The original Lolita Lempicka EdP has been a favourite of mine for a very long time. It’s probably the most bottles I’ve gone through. Such an easy spritz for me but I can understand that for many it’s a hit or miss.
      I loved how it made the idea of an Angel fragrance wearable for me.
      Portia xx

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  3. Byzance from back in the day was a brave and unusual fragrance. I have just a few sprays left. I haven’t tried the newer release but I’d lay odds on it being puny in comparison. I also have the earlier version of Lolita Lempicka. I’d have to check Fragrantica to find out if there are any other anise frags in my armoury.

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  4. Interesting, the new NICHE (free yearly magazine by Nez) had a feature on anise notes in perfumery, so I just recently learned some of the same facts that you presented here. It’s not a note I personally like, so I don’t think I have any perfumes that have anise front and center. Could it work quietly in the background to enhance other notes?

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