
Azlok Coffee Cake Fragrance Oil is a warm, gourmand bakery scent that smells good enough to eat, built around sweet vanilla cake, cinnamon sugar and a zingy dash of citrus. It is a concentrated fragrance oil made for scented crafts such as candles, soaps, bath bombs and scrubs, and it is meant for external use only, never to be swallowed.
If you have ever walked into a quaint coffee shop and caught that comforting mix of freshly baked cake and roasted warmth, this oil recreates that feeling. It is liquid, pale yellow to amber in colour, and starts at just ₹299 with pack sizes from 100 GM right up to 25 KG for small businesses.
What Coffee Cake Fragrance Oil smells like
This is a layered gourmand fragrance rather than a single note. It opens bright, settles creamy and finishes soft and warm.
- Top notes: bright citrus with a sweet, fruity and edible feel.
- Middle notes: creamy fruity, gourmand floral and a creamy vanilla peach dessert accord.
- Base notes: warm gourmand with a soft woody musk.
You will also notice touches of orange, peach, cinnamon sugar, honey and a light jasmine undertone over a rounded vanilla cake base. The result is cosy and dessert-like without being cloying.
What you can make with it
Because it is a versatile fragrance oil, it works across a range of DIY and small-batch projects. Common uses include:
- Candles: soy, beeswax or paraffin candles and wax melts for a warm bakery aroma.
- Cold-process and melt-and-pour soaps: a comforting scent for bars and guest soaps.
- Bath bombs: pairs beautifully with a fizzing soak.
- Body and facial scrubs, creams and lotions: the store lists it as suitable for these leave-on and rinse-off products.
- Lip balms and lipsticks: for a subtle, sweet finish.
- Perfume oils and diffuser blends: for personal fragrance and room scenting.
How to use it
A fragrance oil is concentrated, so a little goes a long way. Always follow the safe usage rate for your specific application rather than guessing.
- Check the recommended usage percentage for your product type. Candles usually take a higher load than skin products; leave-on cosmetics use much less.
- Weigh, don't pour by eye. Use a small kitchen scale for consistent, repeatable batches.
- Add at the right temperature. For candles, stir the oil into melted wax off the heat, typically once it has cooled a little, then pour. For melt-and-pour soap, add just before the base sets.
- Do a small test batch first. Scent throw and colour behaviour vary between waxes, bases and recipes.
- Blend it up. It layers well with vanilla, coffee, caramel, sandalwood and other bakery or woody notes.
Safety notes
Treat this as a craft ingredient, not a food flavouring.
- Do not ingest and keep away from children and pets.
- Patch-test any skin product on a small area before regular use, as fragrance can cause sensitivity in some people.
- Follow IFRA-style usage limits for the category you are making, especially for lip and skin products.
- Work in a ventilated space and avoid getting the neat oil in your eyes.
- Keep away from open flames in its concentrated liquid form.
- Ask Azlok for the COA, MSDS and allergen information if you need documentation for retail products.
Buying and storage
Choose a pack size that matches how often you make. A 100 GM bottle is ideal for testing recipes and hobby batches, while the 1 KG to 25 KG options suit regular sellers and workshops. Buying in bulk usually lowers your per-gram cost, but only stock what you will use within the shelf life.
Store the bottle tightly closed in a cool, dry place away from direct sunlight and heat. Kept well, it has a shelf life of about two years. Label your bottle with the date you opened it so you can track freshness.
FAQ
Is Coffee Cake Fragrance Oil safe for skin?
It is listed as suitable for products like scrubs, creams, lip balms and lipsticks when used at the correct, low fragrance percentage. Always patch-test the finished product and follow recommended usage limits.
Can I use it in candles and wax melts?
Yes. Add it to melted wax off the heat, use the usage rate advised for your wax, and cure the candles before testing the scent throw.
Can I eat it or add it to food?
No. Despite the delicious aroma, this is a cosmetic and craft fragrance oil. It is not food and must never be swallowed.
How much should I add to a batch?
It depends on the product. Candles take more than skin products. Weigh the oil and stay within the safe usage percentage for that category rather than adding by smell.
How long does it last once opened?
Roughly two years when stored in a cool, dry place away from light and heat, with the cap kept tightly closed.