
Vanilla
A warm, sweet, universally loved note. Vanilla is far more complex than its reputation suggests, with facets of smoke, leather, and dried fruit alongside its characteristic sweetness.
Fragrance Pyramid
Olfactive Character
Sweet, warm, and deeply comforting. Good vanilla is not one-dimensional. It carries smoky, leathery, and slightly animalic facets. Natural vanilla is far more complex than synthetic vanillin alone.
Origin & Harvest
From the cured pods of Vanilla planifolia, primarily grown in Madagascar, Tahiti, and Mexico. The green pods undergo a months-long curing process that develops their aroma. Madagascar produces roughly 80% of the world's vanilla. It is the second most expensive spice after saffron.
Key Molecules
Vanillin is the primary aroma compound. But natural vanilla contains over 200 additional compounds including p-hydroxybenzaldehyde, vanillic acid, and guaiacol, which contribute smoke and complexity. Synthetic vanillin captures only a fraction of natural vanilla's depth.
Safety & Regulation
Natural vanilla absolute is well tolerated. Synthetic vanillin and ethyl vanillin are extensively tested and IFRA compliant. Vanilla is one of the safest fragrance materials with very low sensitisation potential.
In Perfumery
One of the most used materials in perfumery. Essential to Shalimar by Guerlain, Spiritueuse Double Vanille by Guerlain, and Tobacco Vanille by Tom Ford. In KIDA KYO, vanilla provides sweet, enveloping warmth.
History
Native to Mexico, where the Totonac people first cultivated it. The Spanish brought vanilla to Europe in the 16th century. The hand-pollination technique developed in Reunion in 1841 enabled cultivation outside Mexico.







