Content

Saturday, 30 May 2015

Forbidden Fruit Glitter Incense Variety Pack 1




A variety pack of three fragrances: Jasmine, Lavender, and Nag Champa. These have been made in India for Cha Cha. I bought these a little while ago, and this variety pack appears not to be available at the moment, though Variety Pack 3 can be bought for around £1.20 for a pack of six sticks. They do look lovely. Almost too lovely to be burned.The sticks are chunky and firm, and quite hard. There is a slight scent on each, but nothing impressive. It seems they are all perfume dipped, but the perfume scent has mostly evaporated, or wasn't able to successfully penetrate the glitter covered charcoal paste, as there is little aroma other than burning charcoal and sawdust.


Style above substance. They look good,
but smell of old coal and sawdust.

Nag Champa

This has the least scent. Low grade sandalwood powder and some tar notes from the charcoal. It's not offensive, but it is fairly pointless.

Score: 20

Jasmine

There is a faint suggestion of something floral here, and there are sharper notes than with the other two.

Score: 22


Lavender


A little hot and smoky, but with some powdery rose.

Score: 21

I like the idea of these, and some consideration has been given in my scoring to the appearance, as well as an awareness that these are not fresh; but essentially they are pointless as incense. The scents are very faint, and mostly of the base material.


Average score: 21


Cha Cha Dum Dum


Happy Hari's Nag Champa Gold


Second review - scroll down for earlier

I found a new Nag Champa Gold, so I got out my old Happy Hari packet to compare. There was just one stick left, so I didn't burn it for long - just long enough for the three of us to do a compare and contrast. We liked the new one, and could see the similarities, but all of us felt that Happy Hari's Gold was the sweeter and more divine. I think, though, that the extra sweetness may be due to the extra aging. Or it may be due to different type or quality of ingredients on the day. Whatever the reason, I found myself missing the old Happy Hari Gold. The scent is like condensed milk. And I love condensed milk. I also found it less irritating than I have done in the past.

The new Nag Champa Gold: The Indian Connection Nag Champa Gold


Date: Dec 2017   Score: 38



First review

A traditional masala incense made with halmaddi and gold sprinkles.  Made in India for the Happy Hari brand, which was owned by Paul Eagle who ran Small Happy Eagle, a London based alternative lifestyle business, founded in 1992, which sold a range of traditional masala incenses online. The business closed down at the end of 2016.

The original Happy Hari Gold

This is softer and less heady than The Mother's India Fragrance Nag Champa, and also a little lighter than Goloka's Nagchampa, but it still has enough halmaddi to dry out my eyes and make me feel uncomfortable. The scent is a warm soft creamy sandalwood, and is very pleasant. It is probably the most likeable Nag Champa after Satya. It is such a shame I have an adverse reaction to the halmaddi resin - or that some of the more interesting incenses make such use of it. Ah well.

Date: May 2015  Score: 35


***

Nag Champa

Happy Hari Incense


Satya Nag Champa

Second review - scroll down for earlier


I just reviewed Nag Champa Tru Blu, which  was one of the last things that Paul Eagle of Happy Hari was working on before his death on Christmas Day 2016.  The intention was to produce a nag champa supposedly better than the Satya Nag Champa that was on sale at the time. Out of interest I compared it with a Satya Nag Champa from around the same period (2017). 

 
Happy Hari Tru Blu top
Satya Nag Champa below

The Satya has a generous amount of still soft charcoal paste rolled around a plain machine-cut bamboo splint, and then given a fluffy coating of melnoorva powder. The scent is very similar, though much softer - less clear, and not as sweet or joyful. Very attractive, though. And really, very, very similar. 

On the burn the Tru Blu is pure - not smoky, and with few or no off notes. Bits of basic wood scent do dominate briefly now and again, but mostly it is the heart notes that are apparent, candied violets, a touch of parma violets, magnolia - waxy floral notes underscored by some wood. Few of the delightful sweet, light, feminine notes apparent on the stick survive the burn, but this is fairly common. Though the paste is quite thin, the scent is bold enough to be detected from a distance, and will inform a small to medium sized room. 

Satya's Nag Champa takes a while to settle into the burn - initially it is burning wood that is mostly detected, then come heart notes of warm, prickly sheep's wool, which is what I associate with halmaddi. Some sweetness comes through, quite gently, with a subtle range of other scents that keep the incense interesting, but at no point does it really become profound. It's a warm, comforting, pleasant scent that hovers between sweet and dry, and between woody and floral. An attractive, reassuring, and calming scent, but not one to really delight the mind or senses. 


The experience of the two incenses are very similar on the stick, but do somewhat diverge on the burn. I think Paul's intention was to have an incense stick that was similar to Satya's Nag Champa before the brother's split. At that time in 2016, it was largely believed that the reason for the decline in quality of Satya Nag Champa was due to the Indian government banning the extraction of halmaddi resin because it was harming the trees which were grown and valued for their wood. My own researches have shown that a few years after the death of their father in approx 1999, his two sons jointing owned Satya. One brother,  Balkrishna Setty, remained in charge of production in Bangalore, while Nagraj, based in Mumbai, remained in charge of international distribution. In 2014, the brothers split up. Nagraj had the distribution, but not the original production, so for some years he sold Satya incense that was not made to the original recipes. Balkrishna sold the original incense, but struggled to get international distribution because his brother had all the contacts. Balkrishna took his brother to court around 2016-2017 to stop him from distributing poor quality incense under the Satya name.  That appears to have worked, as the quality of  Nagraj distributed incense has improved. See Satya (Shrinivas Sugandhalaya) for more details.

Anyway, back in 2016 when Paul contracted for the Tru Blu, he would have believed that the decline in Satya Nag Champa was due to Satya not using halmaddi in the recipe. I suspect that he ordered some nag champa to be made with halmaddi. However, by 2016 the ban on halmaddi production had been lifted, so there would be no reason for Satya not to be using it. Plus, halmaddi is not an essential ingredient in a nag champa, which gets its aroma from magnolia champaca not from the resin of  the ailanthus triphysa tree. And, of the two incenses, I detect more halmaddi in the Satya! 

Both of these incenses are attractive, but both deliver more on the stick than they do on the burn. I am a little disappointed in both, and I may be in a position where I may consider down grading my score on my review of Satya Nag Champa. I've largely held it at 50 (my top score) over the years because it was the incense that got me into exploring the world of incense. It was the first incense that really knocked me for six. I have romantic and nostalgic reasons for keeping it at 50, but I have already knocked it off the top spot by Koya's Rasta (which is an astonishing incense), so I might as well give it the score I would give it today, as if approaching it for the first time, which would be 40. 


Date: Dec 2022   Score: 40 


First review


I love this. For years I had been buying cheap incense - the cheaper the better. Big job lots of 120 sticks in a packet for 75p - yep, I'll have that. Then one day, when my local hippy shop had run out of my usual cheap stuff, they recommended I buy some Satya Nag Champa. My world changed instantly. Wow! Incense could not only smell nice, but it could smell awesome! What other incense was out there that I had missed. So I set out on a personal journey to explore incense. That's when I started this blog. And over two years later I have found incense from all around the world, and I now know so much more. I know how incense is made, and what ingredients go into it. But, until today, I hadn't actually got around to reviewing the incense that started me off on this journey.

The packet is not impressive. It's a dull cardboard blue with red writing. There's no pictures, no images, nothing seductive, interesting, appealing or aesthetic about it at all. Rather plain and uninviting. There are warnings, and a holographic tape sealing the end. When you break the tape and get inside, you see that the inside of the box is also printed. There's been a considerable amount of time and money gone into ensuring that fakers can't copy the box, and pass off a different incense as Satya Nag Champa. Why's that? Because Satya Nag Champa is the best selling incense in the world. At the volumes that Satya Nag Champa is sold in, a forger could make a fortune.

So why does it sell so well? That is partly down to the aroma, which is divine. And partly down to its reputation. People talk in hushed whispers about how great it is. So people are curious and buy it, and so it goes on. Chinese whispers down the market place. But, deservedly so. This is an incense that stands head and shoulders above all others.

When you take the sticks out of the packet you'll notice that the appearance is different to most other incense sticks you've seen. It's not black and shiny or black and powdery. It's a soft brown. And that soft brown appearance is made up of a very fine powder. like flower pollen. Rub it with your fingers and the powder will come off. This is not a perfume dipped incense, this is a traditional masala incense. The core of the stick is made the same way as other Indian incense sticks (or agarbattit) - there is a sandalwood and charcoal paste which is rolled by hand onto a bamboo stick.

The majority of other incense sticks are then dipped into a perfume solvent. Sometimes the perfume solvent will be made from natural ingredients, but usually it is made from chemicals - synthetic perfumes blended to make the aroma you'll experience when burning. Some of these perfume dipped incenses are delightful - the perfumes being as well made, refined and enchanting as the ones you buy in a bottle to dab behind your ear. But they can also be rather cheap and nasty. The bulk of Indian perfume dipped incense falls somewhere in the middle. It's OK, but it doesn't excite.

Satya Nag Champa is not perfume dipped. The perfume comes from fragrant ingredients, various herbs, flowers and resins, which are crushed and blended into a fine powder. The bamboo stick with its damp sandalwood paste is rolled in the powder, and it's that powder which is like the fine brown pollen that rubs off on your fingers.

The scent is very gentle and refined, but it has a big impact. It's warm, evocative, mystical, dreamy, and very sensual. There's sandalwood - those warm woody notes, like fresh cut trees, and this is over-scored with sharp-sweet balsamic vinegar, hints of heady jasmine flowers, warm lamb's wool, some fresh perspiration, evocative lime, and more. It's soothing yet stimulating at the same time. It's a scent that gets you excited that such a scent could exist. You'll want to rave about it, and share it with your friends. And that's why it's the world's best seller.

There's been talk over the years about how the scent has diminished since the good old days of the 70s. It is speculated that this is because halmaddi, a tree resin like amber and frankincense, which is used in traditional Indian incense as a binder, is no longer used in Satya Nag Champa. This is certainly quite possible. I have a reaction to halmaddi. It gives me a headache. It makes my eyes smart, and it pricks the soft palate at the back of my mouth. When I burn Satya Nag Champa none of that happens. I get the aroma of lamb's wool and sweat notes of halmaddi, but I don't get the negative reaction. Either halmaddi is used in very small proportions, or a substitute is used which smells like it, but doesn't give customers a headache.

I adored this incense when I discovered it over two years ago, and I still love it today. 


Date: May 2015  Score: 50



The Mother's India Fragrances Shanti Nag Champa



Mother's Fragrances was established in 1975 in South India by Westerners to make and sell traditional masala incense to Western markets.  They are imported into the UK by Greater Goods. I acquired this sampler of the India Fragrances range, which is headier and more intense than the regular Mother's Fragrances range, a little while ago. As with a number of masala incense makers, there is a potency that I find a little too strong, which I associate with halmaddi, a tree resin used as a binder and fixative in traditional Indian incense. It pricks at the soft palate at the back of my mouth. I burned one stick when I got the sampler, then put it to one side. I do like the aroma, it is sweet, heady, with pangs of sandalwood, and sharp-sweet notes of balsamic vinegar, and it is sensual and refined. But I find it more of an incense to be used when I am not in the same room so I can appreciate the way it has left a lingering church incense aroma.


There's a pleasant cedar wood spice on the stick - reminds me of pencil wood shavings at school. This is supported by pepper, and honey, and hints of balsamic vinegar. Quite pleasant, but not thrilling. When burning, the smoke is fairly harsh and dry. Indeed, I found it too harsh and irritating and it caught unpleasantly in my throat causing me to cough, and it stung my eyes. Interestingly I had a similar eye stinging response to the Aargee Imperial Bharat Mata, which is also made from halmaddi. The company do say that this range is a little strong for Western tastes, and they have a milder range, the Mother's Fragrances, which are designed for domestic use.

The aroma on burning is sandalwood and nag champa, with touches of lotus, nutmeg and cinnamon. While the smoke itself is dry and harsh, the base aroma  is earthy and damp, rising through rough and ragged mid-tones, to the dry, peppery high notes of wood and spice. The experience is just a little too intense for me - I have a headache, my eyes and nose sting, and the back of my throat is sore, and I keep coughing. The aroma is pleasant and interesting, but not worth the side-effects. I will see how I get on with the other aromas in the series, and I will return to the second sample a little later, but for now I am thinking that I may be more suited to the Western blends. I will note that positive reviews I read do stress the soft nature of the incense paste on the stick, and my sticks, though well sealed in plastic bags (which are a little difficult to get into), are quite hard - probably the hardest and most brittle masala sticks I've encountered. You'd think this was a perfume dipped stick from looking at them. The charcoal base is showing through on a thin coating of dull beige masala powder that clings firmly to the stick, and is very difficult to scratch off. Perhaps I have got a dried out batch?

Would I buy this one again? I very much doubt it. It's too heavy going for me personally. I am developing a headache, even though I have placed the stick on the other side of the room, and after ten minutes have had to remove the incense from the room altogether. I will try the rest of the India Fragrances range, but I feel I am more suited to the milder more Western orientated Mother's Fragrances range and will give those a try.

Date: May 2015   Score: 32
***

The Mother's India Fragrances

Nag Champa

Nandita Organic Nag Champa



In my incense box I came upon this small sample box of Nandita's Nag Champa. It's a masala stick - the handrolled charcoal paste is then rolled in a fine powder of incense ingredients. It's possible that it may then also be dipped in essential oils as the powder remains firm on the stick. The scent is gentle yet sweet and succulent - encouraging further exploration.

Nandita  make my favourite incense, Nandita Wood Spice, and there is something of those gentle, warm woody notes here, though not so clear, and not so evocative.  There are prickly, damp wool notes, which suggests that halmaddi is part of the ingredients. I'm not getting many floral notes. On the whole this is a warm, evocative, woody, and very pleasant scent. - it is like a gentle blend of sandalwood and halmaddi. It is very nice, and I'd be happy to buy it, though not excited enough to go seek it out.


Date: May 2015 Score: 33
***

Nag Champa


Nandita of Mumbai


Nag Champa


An essence from the flower of the champak tree
 is a key ingredient in Nag Champa

Nag Champa is not a brand name, it is a scent which belongs to the champa group of floral Indian incense, in this instance using the scent from the flower of the magnolia champaca, or champak tree, from where it gets the "Champa" part of the name. The "Nag" part comes from an Indian name for the flower. In Sanskrit, "naga" means snake or cobra, and some part of the plant is supposed to resemble a snake. As well as essence of champaca, Nag Champa contains sandalwood as a base ingredient, and individual makers will then add other ingredients. In traditional masala incense, the tree resin halmaddi may be used as a fragrance fixative.

Nag Champa is associated with Satya's Nag Champa in a blue box - it is the world's best selling and most popular incense. Most incense manufacturers will have a Nag Champa as part of their range, but the quality will vary considerably, as will the actual aroma. Some incense enthusiasts feel that the halmaddi resin is an essential ingredient in Nag Champa, though this is not the case. Halmaddi is a traditional fixative in Indian incense manufacture, and will aid the aromatic qualities of the incense in which it is used, in the same way as other fixatives, such as gum Arabic, DEP, or - less commonly -  vanilla (famously used by HMS). Enthusiasts may prefer Nag Champa made with halmaddi, but it is not an essential or distinctive ingredient, any more than it would be in Mogra (jasmine) or Chandan (sandalwood) fragrances.

Champa when used alone appears to refer to plumeria or frangipani, a fragrant flowering shrub, rather than the champaca of Nag Champa, which is a plant in the magnolia family, so I assume the Nag part of the name signifies that it is champaca rather than frangipani.


Reviews


* = Review over five years old so may not be reliable


B.G Pooja Store Nag Champa (M)
Aug 2023 - Score: 48=


Vijayshree Golden Nag Champa Masala Cones 
April 2018* - Score: 41


Elbenzauber Nag Champa (M)
Feb 2024 - Score: 40 


Satya Sai Baba Nag Champa Agarbatti
Sec 2022 - Score: 40


Happy Hari's Nag Champa Gold
Dec 2017* - Score: 38


  
Shekhar's Nag Champa 
Nov 2022 - Score: 38


Satya Sai Baba 
Nag Champa Dhoop Cones
Dec 2021 - Score: 37↑



Tulasi Nag Champa Incense Sticks
April 2023 - Score: 35 


The Indian Connection Nag Champa Gold
Dec 2017* - Score: 35



Goloka Nagchampa
Score: 35


 
Shanthimalai Nag Champa 
Score: 35






 Nitiraj Red Nag Champa
Score: 33


Nandita Organic Nag Champa
 Score: 33

  
Ullas Black Nagchampa (M)
Feb 2024 - Score: 33

  
Gonesh Extra Rich Nag Champa (P)
May 2024 - Score: 33


 
Score: 32 


Number of scents: 27
Top score: 48
Low score: 18 
Average top five: 41 
Total score: 31

***



Best Scents


Champa