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Pandan — the soft green scent of home

Pandan is the green leaf you have smelled a hundred times in Singapore without naming it. It is the scent in the kueh, in the rice cooker, in the chiffon cake on the cooling rack at four in the afternoon. It is the leaf knotted into a soft loop and dropped into a pot of plain water for the simple reason that water tastes better with pandan in it.

What it smells like is harder. Soft. Grassy. Faintly vanilla, faintly nutty, slightly green like wet rice paddies after rain. A scent that says home, even if home was somewhere else.

Discover the fragrance

Pandan — Pandanus amaryllifolius, daun pandan — is a tropical herb with long, narrow, bright-green leaves that grow in low clumps near the ground. It is native to the warmer parts of Southeast Asia and has been cultivated for so long that no one is quite sure where the wild population originally stood. In Singapore, pandan sits at the heart of the kitchen — knotted into curries, woven into rice, infused into syrups, beaten into the iconic green chiffon cake that travels home in pink boxes from neighbourhood bakeries.

The aroma comes from a single dominant compound — 2-acetyl-1-pyrroline, the same molecule that gives jasmine rice and freshly baked bread their warm-grain warmth. This is why pandan smells faintly like vanilla without any vanilla in it, faintly like rice without any rice in it. The molecule is a quiet shapeshifter — green when fresh, warm when heated, almost dessert-adjacent when paired with sugar or coconut.

In body care, pandan is rare. Most brands do not use it; most fragrance houses do not work with it. The version in the Lemongrass & Pandan fragrance is crafted to carry pandan’s green-vanilla brightness at its most characteristic — the quality that makes it instantly recognisable in a Southeast Asian kitchen, now on skin.

We pair it with lemongrass because lemongrass is the right counterweight. Lemongrass adds the bright citrus lift that keeps pandan from sitting too sleepy on the skin. The pairing is one Southeast Asian kitchens have known for generations — pandan and lemongrass, together in the broth, together in the marinade, now together on the body.

Black and white illustration of a bird on a white background

Pandan's place in Southeast Asian life is hard to describe to someone who has not lived alongside it. It is not a luxury ingredient. It is not even a particularly celebrated one — it is too everyday for that. It sits in pots on apartment balconies in HDB blocks, beside the curry leaf and the chilli plant. It hangs in markets in low piles, sold by the bunch for a few cents. It travels home in plastic bags from the wet market, gets washed under the tap, and ends up knotted into the next pot.

This is precisely why pandan, on the body, lands the way it does. The scent is not one of distance or aspiration. It is a scent of presence — the kitchen at half-past four, the smell of something warming on the stove, the soft green air of a Singapore garden after rain. It is the scent that brings someone home before they have even crossed the threshold.

In luxury body care, that quality is the one that travels furthest from its starting point. To carry pandan in a Mango Butter Hand & Body Cleanser — to make it part of the daily ritual of waking up, washing, and beginning again — is to put the most ordinary scent of Southeast Asia into one of its most considered formats. The contrast is intentional. The unhurried care that pandan represents is exactly what the ritual was built around.

Pandan, in three places

The same leaf, three quiet readings — the kitchen, the garden, the skin.

Close-up of pandan leaves with water droplets on a blurred background.

The kitchen — knotted in the pot

Across Southeast Asia, pandan is knotted into rice, curries, chiffon cakes, and pandan-coconut chendol. The leaf carries the soft-grain warmth that turns simple food into the food of home.

Close-up of pandan leaves.

The garden — at the threshold

Pandan grows on apartment balconies, in kampong gardens, beside front doors. The leaf is so common to Singapore homes that its scent travels with the air the way the wet-market and the kopitiam scents do — without permission, all afternoon long.

The skin — soft, green, warm

Carried into the Mango Butter base, pandan softens. The grassy top notes settle. The warm-vanilla heart deepens. The skin reads of home, all the way through to the evening.

Close-up of pandan leaves and lemongrass with a white background.
Belantara lemongrass & pandan hand & body lotion bottle with pump on a light beige background.
Belantara lemongrass & pandan scented hand & body wash and hand & body lotion products on a light background.
Belantara lemongrass & pandan hand & body wash bottle with pump on a light beige background.
Belantara lemongrass & pandan hand & body wash bottle with pump on a light beige background.
Belantara lemongrass & pandan hand & body lotion bottle with pump on a light beige background.
Belantara lemongrass & pandan scented hand & body wash and hand & body lotion products on a light background.
Belantara lemongrass & pandan hand & body wash bottle with pump on a light beige background.
Belantara lemongrass & pandan hand & body wash bottle with pump on a light beige background.

The duet is the way to live with pandan. The 400ml Mango Butter Hand & Body Cleanser opens the morning with the lemongrass lift. The 250ml Mango Butter Hand & Body Lotion carries the pandan into the afternoon and through to the evening — the soft, warm, green-vanilla trail that quietly says home.

It is the most distinctive of our three fragrances, and the one that travels furthest with the people who choose it.

THE LEAF THAT MEANS HOME

Pandan is the most ordinary luxury Singapore knows — a leaf so common we forget how distinctly it perfumes our homes. Carried into a Mango Butter base, it becomes the daily reminder of home. Made with care in Singapore.

Discover the fragrance
Black and white illustration of a bird on a white background
Crimson Sunbird feeding on a yellow flower in mid-flight

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