Entre Naranjos by Ramón Monegal
Bottle Design:
Ramón Monegal Maso
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7.1 / 10 89 Ratings
A perfume by Ramón Monegal for women and men, released in 2010. The scent is citrusy-fresh. It is still in production.
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Main accords

Citrus
Fresh
Fruity
Green
Spicy

Fragrance Pyramid

Top Notes Top Notes
OrangeOrange Green mandarin orangeGreen mandarin orange SpearmintSpearmint
Heart Notes Heart Notes
NeroliNeroli CedarwoodCedarwood CinnamonCinnamon
Base Notes Base Notes
AmberAmber PatchouliPatchouli VanillaVanilla

Perfumer

Ratings
Scent
7.189 Ratings
Longevity
6.368 Ratings
Sillage
5.166 Ratings
Bottle
7.970 Ratings
Value for money
6.511 Ratings
Submitted by Florblanca, last update on 06/15/2025.
Interesting Facts
The fragrance is part of the Essentials Collection collection.

Smells similar

What the fragrance is similar to
Orange by Harry Lehmann
Orange

Reviews

12 in-depth fragrance descriptions
Drseid

828 Reviews
Drseid
Drseid
3  
An Orange Blossom Focused Scent That I Actually Love...
Entre Naranjos opens with the main star of the scent, orange blossom, coupling with a green-like invigorating herbal bitter orange and petitgrain combo. The herbal bitter orange recedes in the early heart notes, but the orange blossom remains throughout slowly melding with mild amber from the base. Finally all but just a trace of the orange blossom disappears letting the amber take a bit more of a role in the fleeting base before the scent disappears entirely. Projection is average and longevity is well-below average.

Entre Naranjos is a beautiful composition that deftly melds the floral aspects of orange blossom with bitter orange to create a great fresh and natural smelling pick-me-up. The petitgrain also adds a bit of a "green" vibe to the composition, adding to its allure. The scent is very natural smelling and the bitter orange in particular is extremely well-done. The only problem with the scent in my mind is its relatively brief longevity (something that plagues many citrus scents to be fair). That said, longevity aside Entre Naranjos is easily the best of the four scents I have tried from the house to date and is a very strong entry in the citrus category by Monegal, well-deserving of an excellent 4 out of 5 stars.
0 Comments
ScentGrail

108 Reviews
ScentGrail
ScentGrail
1  
Same old, same old....
Entre Naranjos is inspired by the vibrant citrus groves of the Mediterranean and the verses of the famous Andalusian poet Antonio Machado, ‘Entre Naranjos’ is an ode to the orange tree featured in one of his poems. As someone who has encountered numerous citrus fragrances in a similar vein, I must admit that as the years go by, it’s become increasingly challenging to impress me. Unfortunately, not all the fragrances I encounter can inspire me to write more about them than what they actually are. Here are my thoughts.

TOP NOTES
The composition is well-blended and represents the kind of natural scents one would experience while walking through an orange grove. The orange is refreshing and balanced, thanks to the inclusion of neroli and petitgrain. It offers a deep and rich experience, yet it feels familiar and reminiscent of fragrances encountered elsewhere. I also detect a candy-like orange quality during the opening minutes for some reason, which I personally dislike. However, this is a matter of personal taste. And, no, there’s no mint whatsoever.

HEART NOTES
Seeing that the cinnamon note is listed in the heart notes, I was surprised to see that it is nowhere to be found here. The initial burst of aromatic florals and fresh citruses continue to play the role with additional greenness and bite from petitgrain and neroli. A truly refreshing combination of familiar notes that are hard to dislike.

BASE NOTES
Unfortunately, what we got at the end is reminiscent of aromatics and citruses sitting atop the white musk and a clean patchouli that smells like it lost all of its personality. Ultimately, a nice experience that is enjoyable and kind of dull, to be honest.

CONCLUSION
Not everything I review can be a superstar, and that’s just the way it goes. Not every piece of music is meant to be enjoyed for decades, nor is every new movie a masterpiece. Entre Naranjos is simply an okay fragrance with its purpose on warmer days when you want to feel fresh for a couple of hours.

Read the full review at scentgrail.com
0 Comments
Meggi

1018 Reviews
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Meggi
Meggi
Top Review 21  
You don't wear that?
I often press the "You don't wear that?" button, but that's because I like to confuse the "What are you wearing?" field with the search field (am I the only one this happens to all the time?). I rarely use two things in one day, which corresponds to a genuine need for correction.

With Entre Naranjos, I was tempted late in the morning to declare the scent prematurely finished with a click. As much as the opening could be considered a truly wonderful fulfillment of the title ("Between Orange Trees"), the subsequent offerings could hardly keep up - in two respects. What a shame.

The start is indeed hard to surpass in deliciousness. More orangey than a solo orange could ever be. Simply wonderfully fresh on an early summer morning, undoubtedly thanks to the bundle of companions: There's particularly Neroli; but also Bergamot or Lime. Both seem plausible to me, although the pendulum swings more towards Bergamot as it progresses; the betrayer is an oxymoronically fresh cheesiness.

The fruit is quickly and elegantly complemented by green leaf. The fact that vanilla appears already doesn't matter; it has rather the same supportive effect as a pinch of sugar in a savory dish. But within hardly an hour, the orange is gone again. Remaining acidity combined with Patchouli roughness saves a certain impression of freshness over time, but with orange it has at most to do with a lingering memory.

Two hours may have passed, then the first field, forest, and meadow amber already carries a good part of the burden. Soon, the scent resembles a kind of sweet-sour candy. A bit like nimm2, a bit like honey. The remaining camouflage building-block citrus freshness struggles to keep up. In the fourth hour, only dusty-waxy-vanilla standard amber remains. And even that, usually fond of sticky penetration, disappears before lunchtime. The end.

Hmm. The departure of a fruity top note doesn't inherently provide grounds for complaining. However, this guy is daringly called "Between Orange Trees" and not "Quickly through the Orange Trees to the Candy Store," and secondly, there simply isn't enough comparably substantial material following the opening. That's a bit too little even for a summer freshie.

However, I find the 145 euros for 50ml a bit too much; I completely agree with my predecessor. Swapping the numbers would fit better: Relaxed reapply every one to two hours to keep that wonderfully fruity opening alive.

I thank Kovex for the sample.
14 Comments
Aava

50 Reviews
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Aava
Aava
Top Review 18  
Vacation Ready
Ah, the opening of Entre Naranjos is delightful. Sparkling fresh-fruity orange. Airy and loose, wonderfully aromatic, a bit bitter, ethereal. A juicy orange, including the peel, smiles, no, laughs back at us. Cheerful, warm, lively, thoroughly Mediterranean. No wonder that in every nose, images of vacation come to life immediately. If the top note of Entre Naranjos were a slogan, it would simply say: "Off to vacation!"

Entre Naranjos easily holds its own among the great orange fragrances, led by Orange Sanguine from Atelier Cologne. While Atelier Cologne focuses on the scent profile of a powerful blood orange with Orange Sanguine, Entre Naranjos is more about a sun-warmed, plump, and perfectly ripe juice orange. However, both fragrances share the absolutely natural orange aroma, which, free from any artificiality, depicts a truly realistic aromatic orange zest that is unmatched. A wonderful opening for anyone who enjoys orange scents.

Amid all the orange, there is also a hint of woody green in the top note. I attribute both a part of the fruity freshness and this slightly herbaceous green accent to Petitgrain. Petitgrain and Neroli are both fragrance ingredients derived from parts of the bitter orange tree. While Neroli is obtained through steam distillation from the flowers of the bitter orange and has a rather lightly herbaceous sweet and floral scent, Petitgrain comes from the branches, leaves, and unripe fruits of the tree. Depending on the emphasis, Petitgrain can smell fruity fresh, slightly woody warm, or green and subtly bitter.

Petitgrain, Neroli, and the much sweeter orange blossom are, for me, absolutely dominant in the further development. They are wonderfully intertwined. Harmonious orange, Mediterranean warm and floral, aromatic sweet. An absolutely delicious heart note that becomes even more interesting with the onset of amber, which I find distinctly present. It adds not only a light sweetness but also a large portion of softness. The orange theme becomes softer and softer, and before it becomes unrecognizably softened or even boring, the patchouli grounds it. It provides foundation and earthiness while being anything but dark or musty. On the contrary. In my opinion, it is the patchouli in the base that gives Entre Naranjos significant depth and prevents it from being just another lovely airy orange summer scent. It has personality and can definitely hold its own against a Bigarade Concentrée from Frédéric Malle or Concentré d'Orange Verte from Hermès.

As for me, I’m going to quickly book my summer vacation this year and order a bottle of Entre Naranjos.
Off to vacation!
12 Comments
Chypienne
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Chypienne
Chypienne
Helpful Review 10  
Lush Summer
In our greenhouse, the lemon, orange, and mandarin trees are currently in bloom, and every time I enter, I am greeted by the exquisite, delicate, very special floral scent, mixed with the smell of fresh damp leaves, young wood, and warm, spicy earth.
And this is exactly how this Monegal creation smells to me.
The individual fragrance components are very skillfully combined, playing off each other and eventually settling into a warm, soft, spicy base that still reminds one of ripe citrus fruits after a long time.

A summer scent, but by no means a typical citrus - refreshing little water. Here, summer is captured and interpreted in its warm, lush beauty.

And now I would like the weather to match the fragrance!
4 Comments
More reviews

Statements

11 short views on the fragrance
7 years ago
2
This is for serious fragheads, not the usual citrus. Dry, bitter and can be worn in cooler temps. More ambery and earthy than sparkling.
0 Comments
2
Orange, tart (almost bitter) and crisp. Slowly, the fragrance becomes a little softer, less tart, and orange blossom appears. Refreshing!
0 Comments
20
22
Between orange trees
& their green-bitter leaves
the sharp-clean three-headed family
refreshes in the shade
Neroli-Orange blossom-Petitgrain
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22 Comments
8
4
Juicy tropical fruit bomb explodes in the yellow bag.
And it stinks there among empty Tetra Paks (what was in there?!) half-heartedly.
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4 Comments
7
2
Delightfully refreshing orange scent with orange facets ranging from citrusy, slightly bitter to fruity-sweet. Vanilla & amber accentuate.
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2 Comments
6
5
Silence in the orange grove
A fruit drop falls to the ground
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5 Comments
5
Great orange opening, followed by changing Nimm2 candies and beautiful, vanilla orange blossom ending in citrusy plastic vanilla. What a pity!
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0 Comments
4
7
Grand Orange! For me, the best orange scent I know. Ramon Monegal extracts/distills his essential oils himself. He chooses personally.
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7 Comments
8 years ago
4
Orange, woody, nice - and then it's gone...
Was there something?
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0 Comments
2
Rather sharp, initially almost knife-like citrus scent that quickly opens up in a cologne-like way + resists the temptation to become sweet.
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