Product Overview
In the 19th century, a man named Winter (supposedly an important distiller in Ceylon) recognized the taxonomic differences between several varieties of Cymbopogon nardus and raised a separate population of the variety 'Maha Pengiri' now called C. winterianus. Upon its extensive cultivation for oil in Indonesia, it acquired the commercial name, Java Citronella.
Some of you may have memories of warm evenings in late summer – including mosquitoes and ubiquitous Citronella candles or torches. Unfortunately, that smell memory is most likely influenced by inexpensive and widely available isolates and aroma chemicals used in such products. The fragrance of real Citronella essential oil builds on the crispness of aldehydes with notes of limonene, rosy alcohols and fruity esters – truly an oil worth revisiting.
1 Rose, Jeanne. 375 Essential Oils and Hydrosols, 1999, p. 97.
2 Fischer-Rizzi, Suzanne. Complete Aromatherapy Handbook , 1990, p. 151.
3 Rhind, William. A History of the Vegetable Kingdom, 1868, p. 560.
4 Arctander, Steffen. Perfume and Flavor Materials of Natural Origin, 1960, p. 169.
5 Lawless, Alec. Artisan Perfumery or Being Led by the Nose, 2009, p. 70.
6 Tisserand, Robert and Rodney Young. Essential Oil Safety, 2nd ed., 2014, p. 250.