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Sunday, 28 October 2018

Aasha Aromatics Vanilla Orange




Perfumed incense is the most popular incense in India, and is what most people burn everyday at home or in the temples.  Aasha Aromatics are an independent incense maker in Ahmedabad, the former capital of the ancient Indian state of Gujarat which has a history stretching back to the Indus Valley Civilisation, one of the original three cradles of civilisation. The company was founded forty years ago, and is owned and run by Vikram. They put together interesting flavour combinations, including this sweet and pleasant Vanilla Orange. 



There's a pleasant sweet fruity tang straight from the packet underpinned by pine and some acidic solvent. The perfume is fragile, so when first lit the flame evaporates the scent and what you get is mostly smoke. After allowing the stick to settle to its own burning heat, the scent emerges. Gently at first, then a little more assertive. There is more awareness of vanilla as it burns. Straight from the stick the scent is mostly the high acidic notes, but when being burned the vanilla is allowed to display itself. This is a pleasant, sweet, perfumed incense. Ideal for everyday use. 

I imported this from India, and it's available in my eBay shop:  IncenseInTheWind.


Date: Oct 2018   Score: 27
***

Available in my eBay shop:
  IncenseInTheWind.

Aasha Aromatics

Vanilla

Saturday, 27 October 2018

Aasha Aromatics Dragons Blood




Perfumed incense is the most popular incense in India, and is what most Indians burn everyday at home or in the temples.  Aasha Aromatics are an independent incense maker in Ahmedabad, the former capital of the ancient Indian state of Gujarat which has a history stretching back to the Indus Valley Civilisation, one of the original three cradles of civilisation. The company was founded forty years ago, and is owned and run by Vikram. They put together decent everyday incense packs of some of the most popular scents, including this Dragon's Blood



Dragon's Blood has a great name, and a compelling appearance of dusky red. It has a long history as an incense, a medicine, and various other uses. It is a legendary and almost mythical substance, with some uncertainty as to the exact original ancient source.  It comes from a variety of plants - anciently it mainly came from either dracaena cinnabari, the dragon blood tree, or dracaena draco, the Canary Islands dragon tree - which is depicted in Bosch's painting, The Garden of Earthly Delights; modern dragon's blood mostly comes from the fruit of daemonorops draco, the dragon's blood palm, which grows in Southeast Asia. This Dragon's Blood is imported from India, though is likely to have been harvested in Vietnam or the Philippines.

Thomas Kinkele, the German author of  Incense And Incense Rituals, says of dragon's blood:
"dark/tart somewhat gum-like burnt smelling fragrance ... indecisiveness and timidity are transformed with an intense burst of fire into strength and courage".

As with most other Dragon's Blood I have burned I find this quite minerally and flinty, though it also has a warming hint of musk. A little dry for my taste, and betraying its solvent origin, it is however, proving to be a popular purchase in my eBay shop:  IncenseInTheWind, and  I find it to be a reasonable everyday incense. 


Date: Oct 2018   Score: 25
***

Available in my eBay shop:
  IncenseInTheWind.


Aasha Aromatics


Dragon's blood

Aasha Aromatics Oudh




Perfumed incense is the most popular incense in India, and is what most Indians burn everyday at home or in the temples.  Aasha Aromatics are an independent incense maker in Ahmedabad, the former capital of the ancient Indian state of Gujarat which has a history stretching back to the Indus Valley Civilisation, one of the original three cradles of civilisation. The company was founded forty years ago, and is owned and run by Vikram. They put together decent everyday incense packs of some of the most popular scents, including this Oudh (agarwood). 




Agarwood (or oud), also known as aloeswood, and as agura in Sanskrit, is a traditional fragrance made from tree resin. It comes from the infected heartwood of a small range of now endangered trees - the Aquilaria trees, large evergreens native to southeast Asia. The trees occasionally become infected with mould and produce an aromatic resin in response. As the infection develops, a rich, dark resin grows inside the heartwood. Agar was once such a common incense ingredient that in India the word "agar" is used for "incense". Also known as "oud", the perfume made from the heartwood is so beautiful, and now so rare, that the fragrant wood is the most expensive in the world - averaging 18,000 euros for one kilo. Good articles at Fragrantica: Agarwood (Oud), and Why is oud so popular?

This is a sweet and seductive scent- it does hold some of the precious qualities of agarwood, it has that rich languorous sexual quality which makes it so seductive. I like this. It's not a top notch agarwood, and the solvent nature of the scent is quite apparent,  but it's pretty decent for an everyday incense, and is one that could be used to prepare the house for a romantic/erotic evening.


Date: Oct 2018   Score: 30
***


Aasha Aromatics

Thursday, 25 October 2018

Yadalam Vaastu Rose Thick Dhoop (out of business)




This is a gently spicy and woody rose incense, with herbal, almost Tibetan, notes. This relates closely to some Japanese incense as well.  The base is sweet, gentle, creamy sandalwood, then lifts to a herbal patchouli aroma with hints of cannabis, particularly joints rolled with grass rather than resin.  There is something pleasantly earthy and "real" about this. It's not really a rose or even a floral aroma - it is too woody, earthen, rugged, and herbal for that. Hmm - there's a suggestion of sexy musk as well. I like this. Forget the Rose title, this is a grunting and rutting earth pig of an incense. Gentle, soft, and calming, but fantastically earthy in a rich, sexy, freshly picked mushroom sort of way. I like this.

Date: Oct 2018 Score: 37*

[*Score is over five years old so may not be reliable]

Yadalam Vaastu Loban Thick Dhoop (out of business)




Loban (or sambrini) is a ritual incense - it is the resin from the storax or snowbell tree, and is burned for its cleansing power rather than the aesthetic qualities of the aroma, which tends to be neutral and mineral. However, some incense which contain loban/sambrini (or are named after it) can be attractive depending on what other ingredients are blended in. This has some gentle sandalwood with some mild and earthy patchouli in the blend. It's an attractive if rather soft and subdued scent. There is some loban in the scent - that mineral quality, plus some woody notes. It's quite restful, though it lacks impact so is more of a background cleansing and warming scent than anything more significant.

The dhoops were made by Yadalam (Sree Yadalam Dhoops Industries) of Bangalore, under their Gomaathaa trademark. Gomaatha is the Indian name for the cow as the holy mother. The company went bankrupt last year (2012), with the Central Bank of India selling off  some of the companies assets. However, as of 2018, they appear to still be trading.  They are available from Just Aromatherapy for £1.05 a pack.


Date: Oct 2018  Score: 32*

[*Score is over five years old so may not be reliable]

Yadalam Gomaathaa Dhoop Bathi (out of business)




I got this pack of mini dhoops free inside a box of Vaastu Champa Dhoop which I reviewed in July 2013. I am revisiting them now as I have recently reviewed Padmini Perfumed Dhoop Sticks which are very similar. Indeed, the Padmini are a clone of the BIC Panchavati Dhoop Sticks which have been one of my favourite incenses since 2013. So I have been looking at all three together, plus some other dhoops, including Japanese dhoops, such as Nippon Kodo Mainichi-koh Sandalwood. Dhoops are one of the oldest forms of incense - they were developed by priests in India, and the method passed to other Asian countries, including Tibet, China and Japan. Around 1900 two businessmen in Southern India developed the bamboo stick method of incense making, which has since become the standard incense method in India.

Some mini Indian dhoop

While these Gomaathaa are very similar to the Padmini and Panchavati, and are a clear copy - even though the packet design is different, they are not of the same quality. There is the same blend of sweet sandalwood and delicate jasmine, but whereas the Padmini and Panchavati are elegant and refined, reminiscent of a woman's perfume, the Gomaathaa are a little smoky and crude in comparison. By themselves these little dhoop are delightful, but when compared to the other two, they are clearly inferior.

Date: Oct 2018   Score: 32*


My original 2013 review:
The mini dhoops - Gomaathaa Global - are less than 6cms. The aroma on the dhoop is reminiscent of tobacco: it's warm, spicy, and compelling. On burning, the fragrance is very light with a mild sandalwood base and some lotus and jasmine top notes with hints of tobacco. Soft, but pleasant. Grassy, herby aroma, sometimes close to cannabis in dried leaf form. Also rose petal perfume. Some sense of musk and warm sandalwood. A complex, fresh and attractive blend. The aroma of burning herbs is particularly fresh and attractive - especially first thing in the morning. Invigorating, awakening, cleansing, stimulating.
Date: July 2013   Score: 32*

[*Score is over five years old so may not be reliable] 

***

Yadalam / Gomaathaa
(out of business)




Sunday, 21 October 2018

Nippon Kodo Mainichi-koh / Viva Sandalwood

Fourth review - scroll down for earlier

Mainichi-koh, which means "everyday incense" was introduced in 1912, and is Nippon Kodo's best-selling incense, and the best-selling incense in Japan. It is a delicate sandalwood with almond and floral notes. Quite gentle and pleasant. For me, I find it hard to escape from the scorching wood smell which I find common to East Asian incense - it's the smell you get when an electric saw has cut through a board. I like that scent, but find it quite limited, and at times with cruder examples I find it a little objectionable. Here, I find it acceptable and likeable, but on a modest level. "Everyday", seems an appropriate name. There's nothing special here, though because the smell is quite modest and quite clean and quite simple, it's acceptable as a modest everyday room freshener. 


Date: Nov 2024   Score: 25
Average of four reviews: 25


Third review

After going though a Shoyeido Magnifiscents Gems/Jewels Sampler I'm revisiting all my Japanese incense reviews.  On the whole I'm no more impressed now than I was first time round.  It's slightly harsh and dry and spicy in the manner of a Tibetan incense - more kind of worthy than aesthetic. And the sticks are very mild so they don't make much of an impression on the room or the mind. The sticks do look pretty as they burn.  

Occasionally, as I waft the smoke in my direction, I get the hint of something more than just garden greenery burning, sometimes there's a hint of something floral, and maybe even something sweet. But it's very vague and then it goes.  Marking the score down. 


Date: Feb 2023   Score: 23 
Average of four reviews: 25


Second review

Modest and slightly smoky sandalwood incense from Nippon Kodo. It's a a fairly basic sandalwood scent, a little damp and heavy, and there's little distinctiveness about it. There's burning wood, a bit ashy, and little of the sweet creaminess or musty sexiness I get from the sandalwood incenses I enjoy. Not sure where I got this from, and perhaps it's old. I was doing a bit of a tidy up when I found it in a packet of incenses I got from Padma Store last year. But there's only a few sticks left, and I don't recall previously burning it. Perhaps it dropped in there by mistake. Ho hum.  Not my thing anyway. I had a look online, and some folks like it. It's a top seller as well.  Each to their own.  

Viva is the same incense as Mainichi-koh, though they come in different packaging.


Date: Feb 2023   Score: 23 
Average of four reviews: 25


First review (with upside down lid)

Nippon Kodo are one of the main Japanese incense producers, with a claim that the company has been producing incense for over 400 years.  Mainichi-koh is their best known and best selling product. It is a sandalwood incense, though it is rather more herbal than woody, and is rather sharper than the soft, dreamy, musky, sweet scent that I associate with sandalwood. This is much more like patchouli or cannabis - kinda similar, but more herbal than woody. The herbal quality is not to my liking - it feels too crude and rootsy, like Tibetan incense. There is wood here, though closer to cedarwood than sandalwood.

The box and packaging are attractive. There are 300 thin green coloured dhoop sticks which need a special holder with small holes, or they can be placed in sand or very soft earth. The name Mainichi-koh roughly translates as "everyday incense". Dhoop is a dried paste formed from a mix of fragrant ingredients, binders and combustible material, such as wood powder - it is the older form of Indian incense that was passed on to other Asian countries while India went on to wrap incense paste around bamboo sticks, which has become the most common method of burning incense. India still makes dhoop - though mostly it is fat sticks, particularly fat wet sticks, but they also make thin dry sticks, like Padmini and Panchavati. Those are among my favourite incenses.

I'm not quite getting on with these Japanese sticks/dhoop due to their harshness and crude herbal manner. But, given their wide popularity, I will give them another go soon.


Date: Oct 2018   Score: 27
Average of four reviews: 25
***




Sandalwood

Thursday, 18 October 2018

Padmini Perfumed Dhoop Sticks




This is Padmini's most popular product - small dhoop sticks which can be burned using a small metal holder in the box. Dhoop, as far as I'm aware from my researches, is the older form of incense making which later spread to other Asian countries where it remains as the principle incense making process.  Dhoop incense doesn't use a bamboo stick. The wood paste, binders and fragrant ingredients are mixed together as a masala and allowed to dry, though some dhoops contain ingredients such as honey and ghee which keep them moist - these are known as wet dhoop, and such dhoops were traditionally made in the North of India.

Incense made with bamboo sticks was originally a Mysore tradition, that, under two Mysore businessmen, T.L. Upadyaya and Attar Khasim Saheb, became an organised industry which introduced the use of a central bamboo stick around 1900 as a way to simplify and speed up production. Mysore incense with a bamboo stick core  was exhibited at the British Empire Exhibition of 1924, and distributed as gifts to influential people in the West. As such, incense with bamboo sticks became the most prominent form of incense in India, largely, though not completely, replacing the older dhoop style. Mysore incense  has recently  been granted geographical indication status by the Indian government after an application in 2005 by the All India Agarbathi Manufacturers Association.

Anyway,  while I'm not so keen on wet dhoops, which tend to be too smoky for me, I do like dry dhoops. This is very similar to the BIC Panchavati Dhoop Sticks which have been one of my top favourite incenses for some years now. I always have a stock of Panchavati as they are so delicious. The scent and the packaging are very similar, so either the Panchavati is a copy of the Padmini, or vice versa. Both companies have been around since the Sixties, but I couldn't find any definitive date for which one started production on little dhoops first.



There are others who make small dhoops in a packet with metal holder, including Gomaathaa by Yadalam who make the Vasstu range of dhoops.

These Padmini are like Panchavati in that they have a pleasant creamy base of sandalwood, topped by light, floral, jasmine notes. I really like them. Burning them side by side with Panchavati indicates some differences, but nothing hugely significant  - if you like the one, you'll like the other. I incline more to the Panchavati as they seem more balanced, more natural, and the scents intertwine more successfully. But that could be a personal bias as I've been burning Panchavati for years, and so have a positive familiarity with it. The Padmini, for me, has some meaty notes, like pork sausage; it is rougher, dirtier, perhaps sexier in a crude way. More woody, stronger, and less exotic than the Panchavati. There are burning notes, and deeper layers of oily musk. They are interesting, and I am certainly drawn to them. The floral notes are quite sweet, though incline more toward rose than jasmine. For me, the woody, musky notes don't blend as well with the floral notes as the Panchavati, so those extremes are taken by the nose separately, unlike with the Panchavati where they mingle delightfully.

This is an incense I like, and will happily burn again, though at the moment I'm not quite seeing it as heavenly, and so will be placing it at the top of my Decent Everyday box, but just outside the Heavenly Collection

Date: Oct 2018   Score:  39

   


Been exploring dhoop sticks, and we're moving this up a tad. Moving it from Decent Stuff into Something Special. 


Date: Feb 2022   Score: 40

***

Padmini

Dhoop

Tuesday, 16 October 2018

Aasha Aromatics Rose Musk




The third of the Aasha Aromatics scents that I have imported into the UK to try out in my new eBay shop,  IncenseInTheWind. Again, this is a perfumed incense - the most popular type of incense in India; what most Indians burn everyday at home or in the temples. 

Aasha Aromatics are an independent incense maker in Ahmedabad, the former capital of the ancient Indian state of Gujarat which has a history stretching back to the Indus Valley Civilisation, one of the original three cradles of civilisation. The company was founded forty years ago, and is owned and run by Vikram.  They make both masala incense and perfumed incense.  I am considering bringing over the masala incense, but shall wait to see the result of sales of the perfumed incense first.



Rose blended with musk is an interesting combination. I tend to think of rose fragrances as light and feminine, and musk incenses as dark and male, so there is a sort of Chinese yin and yang force being explored here. The sticks are gloriously sweet and heady on being taken out of the packet, and that always creates a frisson of excitement in anticipation of the burning. Though evocatively heady with the floral rose tones, it's all kept grounded by that strong dark masculine musk. 

This is a distinctive incense which will make its presence felt in a room. The combination of rose and musk is quite beguiling, but does border on the edge of reason - I can see that some may find it a little too assertive or rich. This would have a strong cleansing power on a room, and would re-energise tired places. I find the scent quite compelling both because of its power and its complexity, yet at times it does come quite close to being just a little sickly. Hmmm. Fascinating. 

I imported this myself from India, and it's available in my eBay shop:  IncenseInTheWind.


Date: Oct 2018   Score: 36
***

Aasha Aromatics



Aasha Aromatics Patchouli



Aasha Aromatics are an independent incense maker in Ahmedabad, the former capital of the ancient Indian state of Gujarat which has a history stretching back to the Indus Valley Civilisation, one of the original three cradles of civilisation. The company was founded forty years ago, and is owned and run by Vikram.  They make masala incense and perfumed incense. Perfumed incense is the most popular incense in India, and is what most Indians burn everyday at home or in the temples.  


The patchouli plant

Patchouli is a herb from the patchouli plant, which is in the mint family, and has been used as a perfume for hundreds of years, especially in India. It became particular popular in the West during the Sixties and Seventies, when it was strongly associated with the Flower child movement, and with travellers coming back from India.  When Madonna released her Like A Prayer album in 1989, she had each copy scented with patchouli in order to create a sensual feeling, and a flavour of the Sixties.




The sticks are highly perfumed and fragrant with quite sombre woody tones and a feeling of old leather armchairs and a sensual and earthy hint of an ancient garden. When lit there is an encouraging floral note, like a bunch of heady roses, then it settles down into a musky sweetness very reminiscent of patchouli from the Seventies.  This is solid everyday Patchouli  incense. Quite satisfying without being overwhelming.

I imported this myself from India, and it's it was [2023 edit] available in my eBay shop:  IncenseInTheWind.


Date: Oct 2018   Score: 30
***


Aasha Aromatics


Patchouli

Aasha Aromatics Cannabis Orange





Perfumed incense is the most popular incense in India, and is what most Indians burn everyday at home or in the temples.  Aasha Aromatics are an independent incense maker in Ahmedabad, the former capital of the ancient Indian state of Gujarat which has a history stretching back to the Indus Valley Civilisation, one of the original three cradles of civilisation. The company was founded forty years ago, and is owned and run by Vikram. They put together interesting flavour combinations, including this bold and lively Cannabis Orange. 



Straight from the packet the sweet and tangy perfume is bold, lively, fruity and uplifting. Great for first thing in the morning to wake up the house. While it is the orange that is most noticeable on the stick, it is the cannabis that comes to the fore when burning.  Cannabis is not that unusual an incense scent, others I have burned include the lower everyday/toiler cleaner scents Tulasi Cannabis (score 20), Emporium Dream Catcher Cannabis (score 20), and the rather more pleasant decent everyday scent Tree of Life Cannabis (score 33).  Cannabis has been seen as a trendy scent for the summer of 2018 when it was used as a men's fragrance ingredient. There is something intoxicatingly woody and herbal about the middle notes in this scent, which balances between the tangy fruit of the orange, and the secure base of sandalwood. It's a well constructed, intriguing, and very pleasant scent - fairly manly, I think, and quite sexy.

I imported this myself from India, and it's available in my eBay shop:  IncenseInTheWind.


Date: Oct 2018   Score: 35
***

Available in my eBay shop:
  IncenseInTheWind.

Aasha Aromatics