Orange peel is the wrong ingredient for one-carrier thinking. Orange peel combines oil-phase aroma, bitter peel structure, and lighter aqueous aromatic lift. The flavedo holds much of the peel-oil signal; ethanol can reach different bitter or semi-polar material; hydrosol catches a lighter distillate-readable fraction; emulsion can distribute oil intensity in water. The failure is substitution. […]
Hibiscus is one of the cleanest arguments against hydrosol-first thinking. Hibiscus calyces behave as a pigment-acid-polyphenol system. Their culinary identity depends on color, tartness, and tannic grip from water-extracted structural families. Hydrosol may contribute a faint volatile accent, but the source sidecar does not support treating hydrosol as the carrier for hibiscus pigment-acid-polyphenol structure. The […]
Piperine explains why pepper can smell right and still fail on the palate. Piperine is the main pepper-heat problem in this pipeline, not the main pepper-aroma problem. Volatile pepper aroma travels through headspace. Piperine contributes lingering palate force and belongs to different carrier logic. The failure is hydrosol heat language. Pepper hydrosol may smell peppery, […]
Black pepper is not one extract. Black pepper separates into volatile aroma and nonvolatile pungency. The nose reads terpene and sesquiterpene aroma quickly. The palate reads piperine-driven force slowly and persistently. The failure is expecting hydrosol to deliver pepper heat. Steam can carry volatile pepper aroma, but treat piperine as strongly underrepresented in hydrosol unless […]