• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Katsura: The Delicious “Cake Trees” That Smell Like Caramel, Candy Floss, And Fall

September 29, 2025 by Deborah Bloomfield

Imagine you find yourself walking through a forest during the fall, collecting conkers and admiring the crunchy, vividly colored leaves, when the scent of delicious baked goods hits you. You search far and low for the source, only for no bakery to be found. Where is the smell coming from? It may well be the trees.

The rest of this article is behind a paywall. Please sign in or subscribe to access the full content.

At least, if there are some katsura around. That’s the popular name for Cercidiphyllum, a group of trees consisting of two species – C. japonicum and C. magnificum – whose leaves both produce a mouthwatering aroma come the fall months. The sugary sweet scent has been compared to caramel, cotton candy, gingerbread, or Madeira cake – hence why it’s often referred to as the “kuchenbaum” or “cake tree” in German.

These delectable-smelling leaves and the trees they belong to have been around for millions of years; they’re considered to be “living fossils” that emerged and were once widespread sometime after the non-avian dinosaurs kicked the bucket 66 million years ago. As if getting merked by a meteor wasn’t bad enough, dinosaurs didn’t even get to experience cake trees. Devastating.

Fast forward to today, and katsura are native to a smaller area in what’s now Japan and China, although they’ve been introduced elsewhere. In the US, for example, C. japonicum was introduced in 1865 when US Marshal Thomas Hoggs Jr. sent seeds of the tree from Japan to his family’s nursery in Manhattan. Some of those seeds ended up being planted in Queens’ Kissena Park, where they can still be found today.

Now you know where to find them – but the real question is why they smell the way they do. The answer involves maltol, a compound that’s often used in the food industry as a flavor enhancer in products like your favorite fall baked goods and candy, and comes with a characteristic caramel, slightly fruity scent.

Maltol can also be found in katsura leaves at any time when the leaves are present on the tree, but concentrations of the compound peak during the fall. As the leaves begin to change from green to red, gold, and orange, the sugars contained within the leaves begin to break down, producing an abundance of maltol. Working alongside other sugary compounds, the result is the sweet, sweet smell of fall.

From an evolutionary perspective, it’s not clear whether giving off a caramel smell provides the trees with some sort of advantage. Sweet smells might otherwise attract pollinators, but fall isn’t exactly the time for that.

Still, we’re not complaining – it’s easy to overlook an evolutionary mystery when something smells this good.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Philip Morris seals deal to buy Vectura with 75% of shares tendered
  2. NASA Is Going To Crash A Spacecraft Into An Asteroid This Month To Deflect Its Course
  3. Ping Pong Balls And Vaseline: All Of The Unhinged Ways People Want To Raise The Titanic
  4. How Germ-Ridden Is Your Phone? You Really Don’t Want To Know

Source Link: Katsura: The Delicious “Cake Trees” That Smell Like Caramel, Candy Floss, And Fall

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • World’s Only Population Of Black Tigers Lives In A Single Reserve In India
  • Should We Worry About The Latest COVID-19 Variants?
  • Record-Breaking Rogue Planet Seen Growing At A Rate Of 6 Billion Tonnes Per Second
  • The Universe May End With A Big Crunch – And There’s Just 20 Billion Years To Go
  • Interstellar Comet 3I/ATLAS Found To Have “Extreme Abundance Ratio” Of Iron And Nickel
  • The Fundamental Forces Of The Universe Are Getting Weaker, New Paper Suggests
  • At Least 541 Million Years Old, These Might Be The First Animals To Evolve On Planet Earth
  • We May Finally Know Why Women Live Longer Than Men
  • Jane Goodall, Pioneering Scientist Who First Discovered Tool-Use In Chimps, Dies At 91
  • Trump Orders Release Of Classified Files On The Mysterious Disappearance Of Amelia Earhart
  • Proof Of Complex Organic Molecules In Enceladus’s Ocean: “You Have Everything You Need To Form Life”
  • Long COVID Risk In Kids Found To Double After Their Second COVID-19 Infection
  • “One Of The Most Extreme Environmental Events On Earth” Unfolded 6.2 Million Years Ago
  • GW190521 May Be Evidence Of Another Universe “Connected To Our Universe Through A Throat”, Scientists Claim
  • Physicists Find A Way Around Heisenberg’s Uncertainty Principle, One Of The Most Frustrating Concepts In Physics
  • AI-Generated Genomes Used To Produce Functional, Bacteria-Killing Viruses In World First
  • Meet The Pocket Sharks: They’re Rare, They’re Tiny, And They’re Something Of A Mystery
  • The Great Comet Of 1997 Was Visible To The Naked Eye For A Record 569 Days
  • In The Soil Of Easter Island, Scientists Found An Anti-Aging Drug That Changed Medicine Forever
  • Interstellar Comet 3I/ATLAS Shows “Extreme Negative Polarization”. What Does That Mean?
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version