This Indian Town Has Been Bottling the Scent of Rain for Thousands of Years
This Indian Town Has Been
Bottling the Scent of Rain for Thousands of Years
If you wish you could capture the
wonderful scent of wet earth into a bottle, Kannauj in Uttar Pradesh made that
possible a long time ago.
Sometime in the past, the legendary
perfumers of ancient Kannauj created a unique scent that would capture the
fragrance of earth when first touched by the monsoon rains. Extracted from
parched clay and distilled with ancient techniques, it is today known as mitti
attar – Earth’s perfume. It is also called itr-e-khaki.
Mitti attar is made even today in
Kannauj’s traditional perfumeries, where sinewy craftsmen tend to fires under
ageing copper cauldrons or degs to make this remarkable perfume. The distillation
process, called deg bhapka, is painstakingly slow and long, with no trace of
industrial machinery or modernity.
The copper deg is built atop its own
fireplace and has its own trough of water. It is connected to a bulbous
condenser called bhapka, which receives the fragrant liquid after distillation.
Little clay shards are made in
neighbouring villages before they are sun baked and placed in the degs. The
craftsmen put these shards of half-baked clay (instead of vetiver roots and
flower petals) into the deg, cover them with water, hammer a lid down on top,
and seal it with mud.
They light a wood or cow-dung fire
underneath, before filling the bhapka with sandalwood oil and sinking it into
the water trough. The deg and bhapka are connected with a hollow bamboo pipe
that carries the heady vapours from the simmering pot into the receiver, where
it mixes with the sandalwood oil base. Every few hours, the receiver is
switched and the deg cooled down with wet cloths, to stop the condensation.
The perfumes were traditionally stored
in camel-skin pockets but are now kept in leather bottles. The fragrant
essential oil trapped in the sandalwood oil base, contained in these leather
bottle or kuppis, is placed in the sun to allow the excess water to evaporate
and for the true scent of attar to develop – warm, organic and mineral-rich.
Love that wonderful earthy smell that
comes with the first rain of the season? Known as petrichor, this ethereal
essence is a medley of molecules that rises from thirsty soil soaking in the
long-awaited drops of rain. If you wish you could capture the wonderful scent
of wet earth into a bottle, an old city in Uttar Pradesh made that possible a
long time ago.
The perfume of petrichor is distilled into miniature glass vials at Kannauj, a small town on the banks of river Ganga that has been guarding the secret of traditional Indian perfumes for centuries.
The fragrant credentials of this city,
known as the ‘Grasse of the East’ and ‘India’s Perfume Capital’, are age old.
Situated on the historical scent trade route that brought perfumes from India
to the Middle East, Kannauj’s perfumeries were famed for their
magnificent attars. The perfumers of Kannauj also made the scented
oils Mughal Emperors were so immensely fond of.
There is a legend in the historical biography of Akbar, Ain-I-Akbari, written by Abul Fazl, about how the city’s perfume industry started. This is how it goes: A servant at Jahangir’s palace in Agra noticed some drops of rose oil floating on the surface of Noor Jehan’s bathing pool. The man, who was from Kannauj, figured that the oil was accidentally produced when rose petals came in contact with warm water, and presumably devised the steam-and-condense process to extract it.
Sometime in the past, the legendary perfumers of ancient Kannauj created a unique scent that would capture the fragrance of earth when first touched by the monsoon rains. Extracted from parched clay and distilled with ancient techniques, it is today known as mitti attar – Earth’s perfume. It is also called itr-e-khaki.
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