This Polarizing Scent Smells Like Après-Ski in the Austrian Alps, and It's Too Good to Gatekeep


Look, let me start by admitting that I don’t ski. I actually have a core memory of standing at the top of an icy mountain with my limbs frozen in fear and silently sobbing until my boyfriend finally helped me slide down the run at a snail’s pace. As you can probably guess, that was the last time I hit the slopes.

Like I said, I don’t ski, but do I wish to embody a chic woman whizzing gracefully down the glimmering Alps? Heck yes! I’m a poser, fine, but just because the sport terrifies me doesn’t mean I can’t indulge in a luxurious skicore aesthetic. This season, I’ve been wearing all the winter wonderland essentials: a fuzzy bucket hat or balaclava, mod ’60s sunnies à la Audrey Hepburn in Charade, and a high-end fragrance that exudes cozy, après-ski energy—Krigler’s Villa Isar 224.

I wasn’t expecting to fall head over heels for the polarizing blend (don’t worry; I’ll explain more below), but lo and behold, it’s become my go-to spritz this winter. Below, discover the fragrance that *almost* makes me want to brave the bunny hill or, at the very least, curl up near a crackling fire in the lodge.

Bottle of Krigler Villa Isar 224 perfume and a fur hat.

Krigler is a family-owned luxury perfume house with some pretty iconic scents—Chateau Krigler 12 and English Promenade 19 were worn by Grace Kelly and Audrey Hepburn, respectively—so when the brand announced a new gourmand fragrance, I was expecting a classic crowd pleaser, something very vanilla forward, perhaps. Consider my surprise when I immediately caught a strong whiff of cocoa. That’s right—this is a chocolate perfume! Chocolate notes tend to be rather polarizing (right up there with cherry), as the sticky-sweet aroma can easily teeter over into Willy Wonka territory. Even the biggest lovers of dessert-inspired fragrance tend to steer clear to avoid smelling too fudgy.

A winning chocolate perfume needs to balance its sweetness in order to feel rich and sophisticated, and Villa Isar 224 is right on the money. In addition to cocoa, it features notes of honey, caramel, licorice, almond, and tonka bean for a creamy, nutty, and slightly salty dry-down. Think of a high-quality chocolate truffle that melts in your mouth as opposed to an overly saccharine candy bar. It’s meant to evoke the feeling of taking a snowy stroll along Bavaria’s Isar River—where Albert Krigler (who created the iconic brand) rented a villa in the early 1900s—and sipping hot cocoa clad in a cashmere blanket at Kitzbühel, an exclusive ski resort nestled in the Austrian Alps. If that’s not peak après-ski luxury, then I don’t know what is.

Jamie Schneider wearing cozy outerwear.

It’s also one of the most unique fragrances I have in my collection, and as I have over 100 perfumes hiding in practically every corner of my NYC apartment, that says a lot! Multiple friends have asked me what perfume I’m wearing, and when I describe the elevated Krigler scent, they’re immediately sold on chocolate perfumes. You just don’t realize how magical and sophisticated the syrupy, nutty combination can be until you smell it on the skin.