10/23/2018
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Ali rhubarb - sour smells funny
First of all: here we speak of a fragrance that costs as 35 ml Eau de Parfume just 7 € in the oriental orientated shop. You shouldn't have euphoric expectations or even wonder about the bottle or the somewhat awkward atomizer.
The essential thing is the content - and at first it looks very citric fresh with a large proportion of relatively sour and green notes. For high temperatures actually ideal, but how can I classify the sour components that make me remind a little of rhubarb?
I didn't get much smarter on Al Rehab's online site, but Fragrantica told me that rhubarb had probably found its way into the world as a fragrance - a plant species that I wouldn't associate so quickly with the Arabian Peninsula, but has long been used there by doctors as a remedy.
Mandarin, coriander, tea leaves, ambergris, liquorice, star anise and vanilla also find their way into the recipe. The tea leaves will probably provide the green portion, whereby star anise also exudes a slightly sweetish to acidic aura and is known as a healing essential oil. There is also the olfactory relationship to licorice not too far away, whereby this direction plays only a timid role in Zidan - but more than one would admit ambergris or vanilla.
Well, apart from rhubarb, you won't find 40 predatory to lurid ingredients that would offer a Zidan as a rich scent treasure. But you should read the first sentence again.
Nevertheless, it can almost be seen as a bargain treasure, but it can also be worn by women. Whether the makers of the Arabian Peninsula would like to hear that. Zidan is translated as progress - and I hope that it will be there soon.
The essential thing is the content - and at first it looks very citric fresh with a large proportion of relatively sour and green notes. For high temperatures actually ideal, but how can I classify the sour components that make me remind a little of rhubarb?
I didn't get much smarter on Al Rehab's online site, but Fragrantica told me that rhubarb had probably found its way into the world as a fragrance - a plant species that I wouldn't associate so quickly with the Arabian Peninsula, but has long been used there by doctors as a remedy.
Mandarin, coriander, tea leaves, ambergris, liquorice, star anise and vanilla also find their way into the recipe. The tea leaves will probably provide the green portion, whereby star anise also exudes a slightly sweetish to acidic aura and is known as a healing essential oil. There is also the olfactory relationship to licorice not too far away, whereby this direction plays only a timid role in Zidan - but more than one would admit ambergris or vanilla.
Well, apart from rhubarb, you won't find 40 predatory to lurid ingredients that would offer a Zidan as a rich scent treasure. But you should read the first sentence again.
Nevertheless, it can almost be seen as a bargain treasure, but it can also be worn by women. Whether the makers of the Arabian Peninsula would like to hear that. Zidan is translated as progress - and I hope that it will be there soon.
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