Title: The Art
1The Art Science of Fragrance Flavor Creation
John C. Leffingwell
- Society of Flavor Chemists
- December 4, 2003
2Fragrance Flavor Art Science
- Conventional Market View U.S. 15 Billion
3Fragrance Flavor Art Science
- Conventional Market View U.S. 15 Billion
4Fragrance Flavor Art Science
- Conventional Market View U.S. 15 Billion
5Fragrance Flavor Art Science
- The Real Market U.S. 30 Billion
6Fragrance Flavor Art Science
- Fragrance Flavor - The shaping of history
- Prehistory - Culinary Fragrant Oils
- Circa 7000 BC Fragrant plants and spices
infused in the fatty oils of Olive Sesame for
use as ointments
Earliest items of commerce were most likely
spices, gums and other fragrant plants.
7Fragrance Flavor Art Science
- 3000 BC Indus Valley (Pakistan) - terra-cotta
perfume containers and a primitive still - place
it 3,000 years earlier than most sources date the
invention of distillation.
- 3000 BC Egyptians when learning to write and
make bricks, were already importing large
quantities of myrrh.
8 Fragrance Flavor Art Science
- The shaping of history - Egypt
Perfume Vessel Symbolizing Unification - Reign of
Tutankhamon Calcite pots filled with spices such
as frankincense preserved in fat still gave off a
faint odor when opened in King Tutankhamen's tomb
after 3,000 years
9Fragrance Flavor Art Science
- The shaping of history Greece
Greek Perfume Urns
By the 7th century BC, Athens had developed into
a mercantile center in which hundreds of
perfumers set up shop. Trade was heavy in
fragrant herbs such as marjoram, lily, thyme,
sage, anise, rose and iris, infused into olive,
almond, castor and linseed oils to make thick
unguents. These were sold in small, elaborately
decorated ceramic pots, similar to the small jars
still sold in Athens today.
10Fragrance Flavor Art Science
- The shaping of history Greece circa 400 BC
Still of Democritus
- Leucippus and Democritus Fathers of the Atomic
- Theory
- The first firm documentary evidence of the
- distillation of essential oils is Herodotus'
record - of the method of distilling turpentine from
425 B.C.
11Fragrance Flavor Art Science
- The shaping of history Perfume basics - 300 BC
- Socrates classmate, Theophrastus, sent plant
cuttings obtained during his extensive travels,
thus establishing a botanical garden in Athens. - Theophrastus' treatise On Odors covered all the
basics blending perfumes, shelf life, using wine
with aromatics, substances that carry scent, and
the effect of odor on the mind and body.
12Fragrance Flavor Art Science
- The shaping of history International Trade
- As trade routes expanded, Africa, South Arabia
and India began to supply spikenard and ginger to
Middle Eastern and Mediterranean civilization.
Phoenician merchants traded in Chinese camphor
and Indian cinnamon, pepper and sandalwood. - True myrrh and frankincense from Yemen reached
the Mediterranean by 300 BC, by way of Persian
traders. - Demand increased for roses, sweet flag, orris
root, narcissus, saffron, mastic, oak moss,
cinnamon, cardamom, pepper, nutmeg, ginger,
costus, spikenard, aloewood, grasses and gum
resins.
13Fragrance Flavor Art Science
- The shaping of history Rome
By the 1st century AD, Rome was using about 2,800
tons of imported frankincense and 550 tons of
myrrh per year. Nero, Roman emperor in 54 AD,
spent the equivalent of 100,000 to scent just
one party he was giving. No Orgy was complete
without perfume.
14Fragrance Flavor Art Science
Former Tyco CEO Dennis Kozlowski Todays Nero
15Fragrance Flavor Art Science
- The shaping of history Biblical Times
Fragrance occurs, at least symbolically,
throughout the New Testament. The frankincense
and myrrh brought to the Christ child were more
valuable than the gift of gold (if indeed it was
gold some speculate that the three wise men may
have been carrying gold-colored, fragrant
ambergris).
"Then took Mary a pound of ointment of spikenard,
very costly, and anointed the feet of Jesus, and
wiped his feet with her hair and the house was
filled with the odour of the ointment."John
123
16Fragrance Flavor Art Science
- The shaping of history 1ST Century AD
Mary Prophetissa (Prophetissima) aka Maria the
Jewess
The tribokos
Invented the double boiler, also known as a Bain
Marie, or Mary's Bath as well as the first true
still which she called the tribokos. It
consisted of copper tubing, ceramic pottery, and
metal. When heated, vapors from plant material
and water would condense on the inside of the
still, then trickle down and collect in a bottle.
17Fragrance Flavor Art Science
- The shaping of history 1ST Century AD
Mary Prophetissa (Prophetissima) aka Maria the
Jewess
Her design and many later modifications were used
to distill essential oils, but also proved useful
for alcoholic beverages. And with the still
dawned the new Age of Alchemy
18Fragrance Flavor Art Science
- The shaping of history 10 -11th Century AD
Ibn Sina (Avicenna) a famous Arab physician and
alchemist that wrote over 400 books on medicine,
philosophy, geology, mathematics, astronomy, and
logic, is credited with significantly improving
the art of distillation by adding a water cooled
jacket around the cooling coil.
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- The shaping of history 10-14th Century AD
- The Arabs used their new technique to distill
ethyl alcohol (ethanol) from fermented sugar,
providing a new solvent for the extraction of
plant oils in place of the fatty oils that had
been used for millennia. - Knowledge of distillation gradually spread around
Europe through trading and crusading until
essential oils had become a specialty of
mediaeval pharmacies. - Essential oils were so-named because they were
thought to represent the very essence of odor,
flavor life. Their extraction was researched by
alchemists in their search for the philosophers'
stone that would turn common metals into gold.
20Fragrance Flavor Art Science
- The shaping of history Marco Polo
- 1271 - Marco Polo, at the age of seventeen years,
embarked from Venice with his father and uncle on
a trip that would last 24 years and bring
knowledge of the Orient and trade routes. - Marco Polo lived for 16 years in China where he
was employed for several years by Kublai Khan. He
left China in 1292, returning to Venice (1295),
and fought against the Genoese, but was captured.
- In prison he wrote of his adventures in 'Travels
of Marco Polo' - a book which instantly fired the
imagination of all Medieval Europe and spurred
a competition among nations that would last 500
years.
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- The shaping of history Marco Polo
22Fragrance Flavor Art Science
- The shaping of history Influence of Spice Trade
- In the 13th and 14th centuries, Italy monopolized
the European Spice Perfume material trade that
had begun during the Crusades. - One purpose of Marco Polo's journey to China was
to bypass Moslem middlemen and their 300 percent
markup in price by convincing the Orient to trade
directly with Venice.
23Fragrance Flavor Art Science
- The shaping of history The Age of Exploration
- 1492 - Columbus discovered the Americas while
looking for the spice islands of the Orient. - Although, at the time, this failure was a great
disappointment there were many treasures that
resulted. Vast quantities of gold, silver as well
as new culinary items such as chocolate (cocoa). - New fragrant treasures such as Vanilla, balsam
of Peru and Tolu, juniper, American cedar and
sassafras soon became available to Europeans.
24Fragrance Flavor Art Science
- The shaping of history Influence of Spice Trade
- 1497 - Vasco da Gama departs Lisbon Portugal to
discover the sea passage to the distant spice
Indies. - 1498 - Vasco da Gama arrives in India by rounding
Africa via the Cape of Good Hope and Portugal
becomes the ruler of the Indian ocean for nearly
150 years.
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- The shaping of history The Age of Colonization
- 1602 - Dutch East India Company granted a
monopoly on the trade in the East Indies. - Purpose - trading spices like nutmeg, cloves,
cinnamon and pepper, tea, silk and porcelain - And to prevent other European nations from
entering the East Indies for trade. - Dec. 31, 1600 - Queen Elizabeth I grants a Royal
Charter to the East India Company, but the Dutch
massacre of the English at Amboyna in 1623
reduced them initially to picking up scraps of
trade, either by piracy or dealing with
intermediaries.
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- The shaping of history The Age of Colonization
- By the mid 1600s the Dutch had driven the
British and Portuguese from Indonesia, Malaya,
and Ceylon (Sri Lanka), and controlled the
fabulous trade of the Spice Islands. - 1621 - the Dutch started a West India Company,
which established the American province of New
Netherland in 1624, and reputedly purchased what
is now New York from the Native Americans for the
equivalent of 24. - 1664 - the English capture New Netherland
- 1673 - New York was recaptured by a Dutch fleet
- 1674 The English negotiate peace and trade a
small island off Indonesia (Rhun) for New York.
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- The shaping of history Spice Wars
- New York traded for Rhun the best Nutmeg island
28Fragrance Flavor Art Science
Quite A Trade
29Fragrance Flavor Art Science
- Perfumed leather gloves became popular in France
and in 1656, the guild of glove and
perfume-makers was established in Grasse. The use
of perfume in France grew steadily. The court of
Louis XV was even named the perfumed court. - In 1732, when the Italian Giovanni Maria Farina
took over his uncle's business in Cologne, he
produced aqua admirabilis, a lively blend of
neroli, bergamot, lavender and rosemary in
rectified grape spirit. This was splashed on the
skin, and also used for treating sore gums and
indigestion. French soldiers later stationed
there dubbed it eau de Cologne.
30Fragrance Flavor Art Science
- The shaping of history France Perfume
16th 17th centuries - Southern France (Grasse)
becomes a center of expertise for the growing,
extraction and distillation of essential oils.
France becomes the the Perfume center of the
world. Large scale cultivation processing of
valuable plants for oils such as rose soon was
centered there. And raw materials from around the
world were imported for processing. Extraction
distillation techniques were refined.
31Fragrance Flavor Art Science
- The shaping of history France Perfume
32Fragrance Flavor Art Science
- Grasse France The Center of Perfumery
Perfume Factory - Grasse
Lavender field near Grasse
33Fragrance Flavor Art Science
- The Perfumers Enfleurage process
- Flowers such as Jasmine are laid out on trays of
fat that absorb the fragrance. The fat is later
extracted with alcohol,and then concentrated into
an absolute.
34Fragrance Flavor Art Science
- The Production of Rose Oil
35Fragrance Flavor Art Science
- The Production of Rose Oil
36Fragrance Flavor Art Science
- The new partner The Organic Chemist
- Mid-1800s - From Germany came a new breed of
Chemist that would revolutionize industry and
bring an end to Alchemy. This type chemist
used the scientific method to unravel chemical
structures and create materials from coal,
petroleum and other materials. - 1855 First synthesis of cinnamaldehyde
- 1868 Commercial production of coumarin the
first synthetic fragrance chemical - 1874 Chemical structure of vanillin determined.
- 1876 Synthetic vanillin production starts.
- 1850 to 1900 Significant advances in
elucidating - major chemicals in Essential oils.
37Fragrance Flavor Art Science
- The new partner The Organic Chemist
- Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1910 Otto Wallach
- Helps elucidate many of the C10H16 group terpene
structures present in essential oils utilizing
common reagents such as hydrogen chloride and
hydrogen bromide. In 1909 he published the
results of his extensive studies in the book
Terpene und Campher, a volume of 600 pages
dedicated to his pupils.
beta-Pinene
alpha-Pinene
Camphene
Camphor
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- The new partner The Organic Chemist
- Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1939 - Leopold Ruzicka
- In the perfumery and sesquiterpene domain - the
total - syntheses of nerolidol and farnesol.
- From Jasmine - established the structure of
jasmone. - Elucidated the structures of the naturally
occurring - musk perfumes, civetone and muscone thus
replacing - scents prized since antiquity but only
available from - endangered species.
Civetone
Muscone
Musk Deer Moschus moschiferus L.
Civet Cat Viverra civetta
39Fragrance Flavor Art Science
- The new partner The Organic Chemist
- Nobel Prize in Chemistry 2001 - Ryoji Noyori
- For chirally catalyzed hydrogenation reactions.
- In perfumery and flavors - the chiral
(asymmetric) - synthesis of Menthol many other fragrance
flavor - compounds.
- In the chiral synthesis of pharmaceutical
photochromic - materials.
40Fragrance Flavor Art Science
- The new partner The Organic Chemist
- 1950s Bain Webb Turpentine into Fragrance
Flavor
beta-Pinene
Linalool
Menthol
Linalyl Acetate
Myrcene
Geraniol
Citronellol
Citronellal
41Fragrance Flavor Art Science
- Gas Chromatography Mass Spectrometry
Detective work
GC-MS analysis
Distillation extraction
Volatiles from a living flower
42Fragrance Flavor Art Science
- Gas Chromatography Mass Spectrometry
GC-MS Analysis of a Meat Flavor
Abundance
Peak Identified as Furfuryl Mercaptan Powerful
Coffee Aroma
1.6e07
1.4e07
Peaks are 2-Methyl-2,3-dihydrofuran-3-thiol
isomers
Powerful meat-like aroma
1.2e07
1e07
8000000
6000000
4000000
2000000
0
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20.00
22.00
24.00
26.00
28.00
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32.00
34.00
36.00
Time--gt
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- Gas Chromatography Mass Spectrometry
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Concentration
Odor Unit
Odor Threshold
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- Perfumery - The Image of an Artist
Parfume de Campange by Guy Begin
46Fragrance Flavor Art Science
- The Perfumer An artist with a different palette
47Fragrance Flavor Art Science
- The Allure of Perfume is popularized by marketing
48Fragrance Flavor Art Science
- The Allure of Perfume is popularized by marketing
Zica-Alexa - Year 2000
49Fragrance Flavor Art Science
OLFACTION GUSTATION
Multidisciplinary Fields
- Fragrances
- Perfume
- Soap/ Detergent /Air Fresheners / Aromatherapy
- Flavors Food Science
- Food Products
- Beverages
- Chewing Gum/ Mouthwash/ Pharmaceuticals
- Tobacco
50Fragrance Flavor Art Science
OLFACTION GUSTATION
Multidisciplinary Fields
- Chemistry/ Biology/ Physiology/ Psychology
- - Organic Chemistry Synthetic, Molecular
structure, - Biochemistry, Molecular Biology, Genomics,
- Anatomy, Neuroscience, Bioinformatics
- - Analytical Chemistry GC-MS analysis,
Quality - Assurance
- - Physical Chemistry Emulsions, Light
scattering, etc. - - Psychological aspects of perception other
influences
- Computer Science for all of the above
51Fragrance Flavor Art Science
TASTE GUSTATION
Taste (Gustation) - sensitivity to substances in
solution
Taste Buds in epithelium of tongue, soft palate,
pharynx, larynx and epiglottis. 2000-5000 taste
buds in humans, but large variation.
52Fragrance Flavor Art Science
TASTE GUSTATION
- Until the mid 1990s only 4 taste sensations
- were recognized
- Sweet e.g. Sucrose, Aspartame
- Sour e.g. Citric acid, Phosphoric acid (H
ions) - Bitter e.g. Quinine
- Salty Sodium Chloride
A 5th taste sensation called Umani is now
recognized. Most common example is MSG
(Monosodium glutamate) which enhances meat flavor.
53Fragrance Flavor Art Science
SMELL OLFACTION
Smell (Olfaction) - sensitivity to substances in
gaseous phase - a distant sense
54Fragrance Flavor Art Science
How We Smell -
Olfactory Region (Regio olfactoria)
Odorants are volatile chemicals carried by
inhaled air to the Regio olfactoria (olfactory
epithelium) located in the roof of the two nasal
cavities of the human nose, just below and
between the eyes. The olfactory region of each of
the two nasal passages in humans is a small area
of about 2.5 square centimeters containing in
total approximately 50 million primary sensory
receptor cells.
55Fragrance Flavor Art Science
- New Technology How We Smell
Olfactory Nerve
Olfactory Bulb
Mitral Cell
Olfactory Tract
Glomerulli
Olfactory Nerve Filaments
Cribiform (bone)
Axons
Olfactory Epithelium
Olfactory Receptor Neurons
Cilia in Mucosa
Mucosa
Air and
Odorant Molecules
The olfactory region consists of cilia projecting
down out of the olfactory epithelium. The
olfactory cilia are the sites where molecular
reception with the odorant occurs and sensory
transduction (i.e., transmission) starts.
56Fragrance Flavor Art Science
- New Technology Understanding Scent
Elucidation of Olfactory G-Protein Receptor
Structures - a result of Genome Research
Different Views of G-Protein Receptor Structures
900 Human Olfactory Receptor Genes Identified
D. Lancet 600 Pseudogenes 300 Intact Genes
57Fragrance Flavor Art Science
- New Technology Understanding Scent
Putative Binding cavity in Human OR1.04.06
derived using CastP
58Fragrance Flavor Art Science
Computer Modeling of New Odorants
Olfactophoric Model of Sandalwood
Odorants Javanol (Yellow) vs. beta-Santalol (Blue)
59Fragrance Flavor Art Science
- New Technology Digital Scent
Hardware and software platforms for incorporating
scent into all forms of media... Peripheral
devices that recreate thousands of scents on
demand. Authoring tools for the creation of
"scent scores" for movies, music, and interactive
games. Software that plays scented media, such as
videos, music and DVD's. Systems for transmitting
scent with music and movies over the
Internet. Andfor the Perfumer Flavorist A
new tool for composing creations.
60Fragrance Flavor Art Science
Flavor Research
The Proof is in the Pudding
Chefs and flavor application specialists determin
e use levels and food applications.