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    Ingredient · Gourmandy

    Salted Pecan Nut

    Salted Pecan Nut brings the rich warmth of buttery roasted nuts with a mineral edge of sea salt. This gourmand note adds irresistible depth and a subtly addictive quality to fragrance compositions.

    GourmandyUnited States
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    Salted Pecan Nut
    Reach
    1
    Fragrances feature it
    Source
    Natural
    Solvent extraction and synthetic aroma chemistry

    Character

    How it smells

    Roasted warmth meets briny minerality.

    Did you know

    A single pecan tree can produce nuts for over 100 years, with peak harvests occurring between 20-50 years of age.

    United States33.0°N, 83.6°W

    Origin

    United States

    Pecans hold deep roots in North American history, cultivated by indigenous peoples for thousands of years before European settlement. The name itself derives from an Algonquian word meaning nut requiring a stone to crack.

    Native Americans prized pecans as a portable food source and traded them widely across the continent. Commercial cultivation expanded dramatically in the southeastern United States during the 19th century.

    While not a traditional perfumery ingredient, pecan absolute entered modern fragrance as part of the gourmand movement that emerged in the late 20th century, when perfumers began exploring edible, comfort-food inspired notes. Today it represents a distinctly American contribution to the global perfumery palette.

    Wears it best

    Fragrances featuring Salted Pecan Nut

    Good to know

    Questions, answered

    The essentials on Salted Pecan Nut in perfumery: how it smells, where it comes from, and how it behaves on skin.

    What does Salted Pecan Nut smell like?

    It presents a warm, buttery aroma of roasted nuts with a distinctive mineral saltiness. The effect is rich and edible, like闻到 toasted pecan brittle with a hint of sea spray.

    Is Salted Pecan Nut natural or synthetic?

    Both versions exist. Natural pecan extracts come from roasted nuts through solvent extraction. Modern perfumery often uses nature-identical synthetics that replicate the key pyrazines and lactones responsible for the nutty character.

    Which fragrance families use Salted Pecan Nut?

    Gourmand and oriental fragrances most commonly feature this note. It also appears in certain chypre and fougere compositions where perfumers seek warm, textured depth.

    What notes pair well with Salted Pecan Nut?

    Vanilla, tonka bean, caramel, and benzoin amplify its sweet side. Amber, sandalwood, and cedar add woody balance. Sea salt and mineral notes intensify its savory character.

    When did nut notes first appear in perfumery?

    Nut notes gained prominence during the 1990s gourmand boom, though woody nut materials like sandalwood and cedar have been perfumery staples for centuries.

    Does Salted Pecan Nut have olfactory fatigue risks?

    Like most rich, sweet materials, it can cause temporary receptor saturation during fragrance testing. Taking breaks between samples helps maintain accurate perception.

    What type of fragrances feature Salted Pecan Nut?

    Warm orientals, unisex gourmands, and comfort-forward scents. It works particularly well in autumn and winter fragrances designed to evoke coziness.

    Where do the best pecans for fragrance production come from?

    The southeastern United States, particularly Georgia and Texas, produces the highest quality pecans. These regions offer the warm, humid climate pecan trees require.