aunty establishment
Bluelight Crew
Tantra, if you are in Melbourne, they are reasonable and fairly clean pills, IMO. I would give them an 8 and the comedown was mild.
Sourced the following info on Safrole:
Smell
Safrole probably interacts with the same olfactory G-coupled receptors as the volatiles in the anise plant, and this makes sense insofar as some of the components in the oil of anise are structurally similar to safrole.
It is accurately described as a candy-shop odour. Go into a place which sells more sugary things than chocolatey things and take a deep whiff. It is also reminiscent of ginger. It has been described as smelling like MDMA, anise, rootbeer, sassafras oil, MDA, mCPP or sodium lactate.
Halo-derivatives of
safrole are said to have similar smells to the parent molecule.
Safrole is conspicuously absent from the Sigma-Aldrich Flavours and Fragrances catalog. Some useful derivatives of safrole (piperonal "sweet, floral", piperonyl acetate, "cherry, strawberry", piperonyl acetone and piperonyl isobutyrate "fruity, berry") are present, however.
Safrole, Isosafrole, Dihydrosafrole
Last Amendment July 01, 1987
First Issued October 01, 1976
CAS # Recommendation Skin Contact Non-Skin Contact
94-59-7/ 120-58-1/ 94-58-6 Restricted 0.01% 0.01%
Safrole as such should not be used as a fragrance ingredient; essential oils containing safrole should not be used at a level such that the total concentration of safrole exceeds 0.01% in consumer products. This is equivalent to 0.05% in a fragrance compound used at 20% in the consumer product. Examples of essential oils with a high safrole content are Sassafras oil (Sassafras officinale Nees& Eberm.), Ocotea Cymbarum oil (Ocotea pretiosa Metz) and certain qualities of Camphor oils.
The total concentration of safrole, isosafrole and dihydrosafrole should not exceed 0.01% in consumer products.
These recommendations are based on the conclusions of the Scientific Committee on Cosmetology of the EEC on safrole and on the similarity of the biological activity of these substances (Scientific Committee of Cosmetology of the EEC, opinion reached on September 2, 1980; Communication to the EEC Commission ENV/521/79 and IARC Monograph Vol. 10, 1976, 231-244).
That's because some of those are likely to have safrole type chemicals deliberately added in an attempt to fool the tester. I've tasted sassafras before, and as Phase said you can smell and taste it a mile away - i've chewed a pill before that was ketamine in effects but tasted immediately of sassafras oil - i.e. mainly safrole.Personaly... the most stinky so called aniseed smelling pills that i've come accross have been totaly crap... I've found no relation between smell and quality... apart from the obvious, smell means impurities? Thats just from personal use... so......ye....
MBDB= toxic rubbery taste
Now MDMA don't smell, but does all pure MDMA have a specific taste?
With a blocked nose your sense of taste could be off too. Taste and smell generally aren't a reliable way to estimate the active ingredient in an ecstasy pill first hand - but to guess about the contents second-hand based on a post on the internet about what they taste like with a blocked nose... well... it's probably better just to get a pill tester.crappybones said:hey, anyone would know what i might have? i just tasted my pills to check when i read this thread. i cant really pick up a smelel cuz of a blocked nose but the taste is kind of bittersweet? i dare say kind of numbing.