Glossary · Vocabulary

Gourmand dark

Gourmand dark is a sub-family of the gourmand genre that swaps the sugar and bright vanilla of the classic register for bitter, burnt and smoky materials. Cocoa, coffee, dark tobacco, burnt caramel, whisky, leather. A reaction to ultra sweet gourmands, established in the late 2010s.

Definition

Gourmand dark describes a sub-family of the gourmand genre built on bitter, burnt and smoky materials rather than on sugar. Cocoa, coffee, dark tobacco, burnt caramel, whisky, leather. The signature stays recognizable as a gourmand through its edible anchor, but the sweet share recedes and the composition often overlaps with amber, woods and leather.

Origin and history

The classic gourmand opens with Angel by Thierry Mugler in 1992, built on a praline, chocolate and patchouli accord. The register hardens in the late 2010s: critics start to use dark gourmand for compositions that keep the edible anchor but add bitterness, smoke or alcohol (source: So Avant Garde).

The most cited precursor is Tobacco Vanille by Tom Ford Private Blend (2007, Olivier Gillotin), built on tobacco, cocoa, tonka bean and dried fruits (source: Fragrantica). It is followed by Bois d'Ascèse (Naomi Goodsir, 2012), Black Phantom (By Kilian, 2017) and Khamrah (Lattafa, 2022).

Use in perfumery

Gourmand dark draws on four families of materials: roasted (cocoa, coffee, toasted tonka), smoky and woody (dark tobacco, smoked vetiver, leather), burnt sweet (dark caramel, immortelle, maple syrup) and boozy accords (rum, whisky). The balance is a restrained sweetness held in check by bitterness.

The border with oriental amber and leather is intentionally porous. When a brown spirit dominates, the English-speaking trade speaks of a boozy gourmand.

Sources

Published 4 June 2026 · Updated 4 June 2026 · Last fact check: 4 June 2026 · The Osmetheca Editorial Team