The Story
Why it exists.
Fiore di Riso was conceived as a fragrant homage to the humble rice blossom, a fleeting scent that whispers of sunrise over Tuscan paddies. In 2011 the Florentine apothecary translated that quiet ceremony into a perfume, drawing on its centuries‑old expertise with herbs and natural extracts. The formula pairs bright mandarin orange with the soft sweetness of peach, then lifts white blossoms and neroli before settling into a warm vanilla‑benzoin base, echoing the gentle transition from field to kitchen.
If this were a song
Community picks
Clair de Lune
Claude Debussy
The Beginning
Fiore di Riso was conceived as a fragrant homage to the humble rice blossom, a fleeting scent that whispers of sunrise over Tuscan paddies. In 2011 the Florentine apothecary translated that quiet ceremony into a perfume, drawing on its centuries‑old expertise with herbs and natural extracts. The formula pairs bright mandarin orange with the soft sweetness of peach, then lifts white blossoms and neroli before settling into a warm vanilla‑benzoin base, echoing the gentle transition from field to kitchen.
The choice of mandarin orange and peach gives the opening a sun‑lit, slightly tart edge that mirrors the first light on rice stalks, while the white blossoms and neroli capture the delicate aroma of rice flowers that rarely reveal themselves. Anchoring the dry‑down with benzoin and vanilla adds a creamy, resinous depth, turning a fleeting floral whisper into a lingering, comforting veil that feels like warm rice porridge after a cool morning.
The Evolution
At first spray, mandarin orange bursts like a sunrise over a rice field, its sharp citrus quickly softened by the honeyed bite of peach. Within ten minutes the heart unfurls: white blossoms drift in, their powdery purity intertwined with the crisp, slightly green sparkle of neroli, creating a bouquet that feels like freshly plucked rice flowers in early dew. As the daylight fades, the base steps forward, benzoin spreads a soft, balsamic amber that hugs the skin, while vanilla adds a creamy, gourmand warmth. The dry‑down lingers for six to eight hours, the vanilla lingering like the lingering scent of rice porridge on a cool kitchen counter, and the sillage stays moderate, a subtle trail that invites a second glance rather than announcing its arrival.
Cultural Impact
Since its 2011 debut, Fiore di Riso has found a niche among collectors who appreciate subtle, heritage‑driven scents. Its gentle floral‑sweet profile often appears in discussions of modern reinterpretations of traditional Italian apothecary aromas, and it is frequently mentioned alongside other Farmacia SS. Annunziata classics such as Nero Incenso for its refined balance.
The House
Italy · Est. 1561
Farmacia SS. Annunziata is a Florentine apothecary that has turned its centuries‑old expertise in herbs, spices and natural extracts into a line of niche fragrances. The house balances the rigor of an old‑world laboratory with a contemporary curiosity for scent, offering both personal perfumes and a curated collection of home fragrances. Its catalogue includes recent releases such as Al Rihla (2025) and Anniversary (2021) alongside classics like Nero Incenso (2014). The brand presents each scent as a small study of place, material and memory, inviting collectors to explore a sensory archive that has been built since the mid‑sixteenth century.
If this were a song
Community picks
The scent feels like a sunrise over a rice field, bright citrus, soft floral mist, and a warm vanilla glow. The primary track captures that gentle transition.
Clair de Lune
Claude Debussy






















