The Story
Why it exists.
Erez Rozen built Black Pepper & Amber, Neroli on a contradiction: the spice you reach for in winter, anchored by a flower most people associate with spring. Black pepper opens sharp and immediate, that heat you feel before you smell it. Neroli softens from the inside out, arriving not as a typical citrus bright note but as warm blossom over skin. The amber underneath doesn't sweeten. It deepens. Resinous. Slightly mineral. This is a fragrance about tension, between warmth and freshness, between restraint and insistence, between what the label promises and what the skin delivers. The note count is minimal by design. In a market that tends toward accumulation, Rozen stripped this one back to three pillars and let them argue with each other. The result is a scent that reads as both clean and characterful. Unisex in execution, confident in practice.
If this were a song
Community picks
River
Leon Bridges
The Beginning
Erez Rozen built Black Pepper & Amber, Neroli on a contradiction: the spice you reach for in winter, anchored by a flower most people associate with spring. Black pepper opens sharp and immediate, that heat you feel before you smell it. Neroli softens from the inside out, arriving not as a typical citrus bright note but as warm blossom over skin. The amber underneath doesn't sweeten. It deepens. Resinous. Slightly mineral. This is a fragrance about tension, between warmth and freshness, between restraint and insistence, between what the label promises and what the skin delivers. The note count is minimal by design. In a market that tends toward accumulation, Rozen stripped this one back to three pillars and let them argue with each other. The result is a scent that reads as both clean and characterful. Unisex in execution, confident in practice.
Three notes. Most modern fragrances stack five, seven, sometimes twelve. Black Pepper & Amber, Neroli operates on three. The structural tension between them is what makes it interesting, black pepper is volatile and sharp, neroli is substantive and slow, amber is deep and persistent. These three don't behave the same way over time. The pepper arrives first and leaves fast. The neroli takes over mid-wear. The amber stays until you wash it off. That staggered evolution means the fragrance is never one thing for long. It shifts. The wearer shifts with it. This kind of restraint requires confidence. More notes give a perfumer more to work with, more ways to smooth over edges. Three notes leaves nowhere to hide.
The Evolution
The opening announces itself immediately. That crackling black pepper isn't subtle, it's sharp and almost confrontational, a tactile sensation before it registers as scent. On some skin, there's a brief medicinal edge in those first minutes, a hint of the apothecary that either pulls you in or makes you pause. It passes. The neroli arrives gradually, not as a sudden floral turn but as a deepening of the citrus warmth already present in the opening. The white floral note carries a honeyed, waxy quality here, blossom rather than perfume. The pepper doesn't disappear so much as soften into the background, becoming warmth rather than heat. The drydown is where the amber takes control. Resinous and meditative, it wraps around the lingering pepper and carries the composition into something slower and more intimate. This is the part that lasts. This is the part you smell on your wrist the next morning and on your collar the day after that. Eight to ten hours is the range, and the fragrance earns every minute of it.
Cultural Impact
Black Pepper & Amber, Neroli has quietly built a following among fragrance enthusiasts who prize distinctiveness over mass appeal. The enthusiasts ratings are strong, 9.1 for scent, 8.7 for longevity, and the community reviews frequently cite it as a high-value alternative to larger houses charging considerably more. Where most fragrances in the fresh-spicy-amber family lean safe, this one leans characterful. That's the draw.
The House
Israel · Est. 1905
Zielinski & Rozen stands as one of the oldest continuously operating perfume houses in the Middle East, tracing its roots to 1905 when the Zielinski family established their atelier in the ancient stone streets of Old Jaffa. Erez Rozen, the great-grandson of the original founder, now directs the house from Tel Aviv, carrying forward a philosophy rooted in natural materials, artisanal craftsmanship, and olfactory storytelling. Each fragrance in their collection is designed as a unisex bridge between heritage and individual expression, capturing personal memories and sensory moments. In 2025, the house released its first trilogy of fragrances, a landmark in the brand's history where each scent represents a distinct memory and chapter of experience.
If this were a song
Community picks
That confrontational opening, black pepper crackling before the warmth arrives. Then the Mediterranean softness takes over. The soundtrack is someone who's already made up their mind, walking into a room without asking if it's welcome.
River
Leon Bridges





























