Incense In The Wind

Radiating Incense In The Wind - a painting by Hai Linh Le

Sunday 29 December 2019

Sifcon Golden Buddha Sandalwood




Another cheap as chips good value everyday incense from Sifcon bought in my local hardware shop. This is rather flowery for a supposed sandalwood - there's nothing woody or musky here, and the scent is impelled by chemicals, so it smells rather cheap and false, but it's a decent scent, not offensive, and will quickly cover up bad smells and cheer up a room.

Date: Dec 2019    Score: 20
***

Sifcon International

Sandalwood

(Wonder Incense) New Moon Aromas Pagan Spell




This is a pleasantly fragrant masala incense. A careful blend of masala ingredients and essential oils create a heady, musky scent, softened by sweet sandalwood. It is fairly modern and easy to like. A very good everyday incense that I would be quite happy to buy again.


Date: Dec 2019    Score:  37 


 


New Moon Aromas is possibly made for Wonder Imports by Fair Trade Incense, though that is just speculation. [Navan Shah from Wonder Incense has been in touch to tell me they have their own manufacturing premises in India.] 

The sticks consist of a very firm and dry wood paste machine-extruded on a machine cut bamboo stick. There is a masala or finishing powder on the paste along with a sharp what appears to be a solvent based fragrant oil. The scent on the stick is quite medicinal, like TCP - it is crisp, clean, acidic, with a menthol coolness. There are also floral notes supported by slightly musky sandalwood. The burn is modest, slightly smoky, likable, leaning on the wood paste so there is a generic burning wood aspect, though there are also mildly pleasant floral and musk tones. 

I'm not liking this as much as I did previously. Indeed, I am wondering at how different my response has been over the past two days to this Pagan Spell considering how much I liked it when I initially burned it just a month ago. The incense wouldn't have changed in such a short time. I suppose the atmospherics in the room have altered, and the dynamics of the moment of burning: what I burned just before, my own state of mind and state of health, etc. I think my attitude to the incense has changed also - previously I was perhaps inclined to be positive toward the incense, seeing it as a masala, and seeking out the positive aspects in a non-critical manner. Indeed, my previous review is slight, off-hand, superficial. This time I have examined the incense more closely as my curiosity has been aroused by encountering over the past week or so, a number of incenses which are masala, but where the majority of the scent has been carried by a fragrant oil with a solvent aroma, suggesting that the oil has been cut with a solvent such as diethyl phthalate (DEP) - something that I have discovered is common in Indian incense. Fair Trade Incense Works claim that 98% of Indian incense dilutes fragrant oil with DEP, also known as agarbatti oil. A Chinese study concluded that DEP in incense was harmful to the health, though this has been disputed in The Daily Guardian by the chairman of the Khadi & Village Industries Commission, a government body. The closer examination has revealed flaws I hadn't detected previously. Of course, what is needed is another review in a month's time when circumstances have changed. Meanwhile, I have lowered the score. 


Date: Jan 2022   Score:  28 


 



Well, more than a month later. This is over a year later.  The scent on the stick has a sharp, volatile edge, carrying a sense of cat's pee, sandalwood, vanilla, leather, teak oil, pulses, old dry pease pudding. It's fairly neutral, leaning toward unattractive, though moderately interesting.  The scent on the burn is smoky, dry wood burning, modestly pleasant, uninteresting. I can see how I might have felt this was a decent everyday scent, perhaps somewhere in the lower 30s, though I am more in agreement with my second review, that this is actually a modest everyday incense. I can only assume that I put it in the high 30s because when the pack was first opened the perfume was still fresh, and that the perfume had dried out a month later.  Now and again, as this burns, I get more awareness of the perfume than the burning wood. It is an incense that is best burned at a distance and appreciated on the wind. I don't dislike it, and at times even like it quite warmly.  I think this is fairly borderline between average and decent everyday incense. I'm pushing it up to 30, which is bottom end decent everyday incense, and putting the last few sticks in the outhouse as a treat for the cats.


Date: July 2023    Score:  30   

Monday 23 December 2019

Satya (BNG) Myrrh



Lovely.  Sensual woody scent. Deep and delicious. I really like this. 


The new Satya BNG logo, created in 2018

This is a clean and beautiful scent, just lightly informed by halmaddi. It creates a warm, woody scent that feels completely natural and evokes memories of classic incense from the Seventies.

Date: Dec 2019   Score: 41


Myrrh scent test


We compared two myrrh scented masala incenses, the leading masala manufacturer Satya and the legendary cult importer Paul Eagle of the Happy Hari brand, one thin Japanese dhoop by the most popular brand Morning Star, with some resin, which I suspect is not the best quality. 

Unfortunately Paul Eagle's King of Myrrh is not one of his best imports. It has been a while since I last burned any, and I thought that it had dried out because there was so little scent, but looking back at my 2017 review, which I did the year after Paul had given it to me to review, I note that I had the same feeling back then. Perhaps it was a poor batch, or had been poorly stored, and Paul hadn't noticed when he gave it to me. It has an initial fruit aroma, I felt it to be quite orangey. Then some mild sandalwood, and eventually some myrrh-like scents do emerge. This was not placed first or last by the three of us.

The Morning Star Myrrh was liked and disliked - and over the test was sometimes placed first and sometimes placed last. As with Paul's King of Myrrh it was regarded to have few actual myrrh scents, being mostly fruit and woods. Well, myrrh does has fruity and woody components to its scent, which myrrh has, however, generally the fruits are lemony, and the woods a little, well, more musky and sensual. And the combination of the components produce that "churchy" aroma, which we found somewhat lacking in the Morning Star Myrrh.  However, at times it came back in favour as the scents were compared. It can be difficult to be consistent with appreciation of something as elusive and emotionally engaging as scent. 

The Scenter's Tree Resin Myrrh also had a mixed reaction as it burned, but was more consistently the one that was less appreciated yet was the truest to myrrh, having lemony balsamic notes and some of those "churchy" aromas - but it could also be a bit acrid and smoky. 

The one most consistently liked by all three of us, and acknowledged to be the one most appreciated was Satya's Myrrh. Sweet, dreamy, lemony, balsamic, woody, and very evocative of church incense. An assured winner. 

Date: Sept 2021  Score: 42 


Satya (Shrinivas Sugandhalaya)


Myrrh



Saturday 21 December 2019

(Wonder Incense) New Moon Aromas Mandala

  


Having a clear out of one of my drawers, and I come upon this. A machine extruded 8 inch stick with 6 inches of fine powder-covered firm brown crumbly paste. The aroma on the stick is pleasantly warm, with a woody base, somewhat mineral and neutral midrange, and little in the way of top notes. Very low volatility. 

When lit it burns eagerly, producing some black smoke, and when the flame is blown out it produces a soft silvery grey smoke. The scent feels a little old, and is mostly neutral, a little cold, with metallic, wood, and mineral notes. It's an OK scent, though not that exciting.  It has not survived since 2019, which underlines that this is a perfumed incense rather than a masala style. This is acceptable rather than decent, and rating as it is now, I would put it at 25. Clearly it is better fresh, though I somehow doubt that even fresh I would today rate this as high as 37.  I will compromise and list this at 30 on my Top of The Dhoops chart


Date: Sept 2023   Score: 25






This is a pleasant, slightly sweet, slightly musky, edging to patchouli,  traditional masala incense. There is a wood based core coated with a soft brown  powder and dipped in a fragrant solution. The solution is quite volatile and smells sharply of pine toilet cleaner on the stick, but when burned works in harmony with the rest of the ingredients to produce a very decent, though unexciting, scent. It's not too sharp or overpowering, so works well as an everyday scent, and that's what  I have been doing with this. It creates a pleasing scent that lingers and informs a room. While not excited enough to go seek it out, I'd be quite happy to buy these again.

I know little about the company. I reviewed New Moon Aromas Black Rose a few months ago (September 2019), and looked for info at that time, finding a website  (newmoonaromas.net) which is  not fully active, and a number of UK internet shops, including the wholesale site Wonder Incense, listing them. They can be bought for less than £2 a box on Amazon. But they don't appear to be available outside the UK, so New Moon Aromas is presumably a British distributor importing from India.  [Navan Shah from Wonder Incense has been in touch to tell me they make New Moon Aromas, and they have their own manufacturing premises in India.]


Date: Dec 2019    Score:  37

***

 
New Moon Aromas


Sunday 15 December 2019

Satya (BNG) Dragon's Blood




This is a modest Satya incense. It has a dragon's blood minerally aroma. Mostly neutral, with some sense of a traditional masala incense. Works fine as a cleansing background incense. Not great, but OK.


Date: Dec 2019   Score: 28
***
Satya (Shrinivas Sugandhalaya)

Dragon's blood

Tuesday 3 December 2019

Satya (BNG - 2016) Patchouli




This is lovely. Proper traditional masala incense, but not too heavy on the halmaddi. It has a gentle woody sweetness. An oily muskiness. It's gorgeous and sexy, but not overbearing. Nice one. Use it as an aphrodisiac.

Made by Balkrishna Setty, the brother who has the original Satya factory in Bangalore, and uses the original Satya production methods and recipes,

Date: Dec 2019   Score: 40
***
Satya (Shrinivas Sugandhalaya)



Sunday 1 December 2019

Nandita Organic Patchouli




I like Nandita, and I like patchouli so I am inclined to like this. But I have an issue with the claim to be organic and "ozone friendly". This feels like a claim created to make Westerners buy the incense without giving serious regard to what is being said. The incense stick is composed largely of charcoal, which does harm the ozone layer. Goloka use roasted coconut shells in place of charcoal so it is possible. But what is used here is definitely charcoal - and cheap charcoal at that - you can smell it when it is burned, and if you crush it beneath your fingers it stains.  I am used to manufacturers of all sorts making extravagant claims for their products, but this one is a little underhand as it relates to damaging the planet. Be honest when it comes to stuff like that.

OK. This is a little sharp and cheap smelling - as I say, the smell of the charcoal base intrudes.  I had another of the company's "organic" range a few years ago - their Organic Nag Champa, and I wasn't impressed with that either. This is thin, prickly, sharp and not very satisfying. There isn't the sweet, slightly musky warmth I associate with patchouli.

Date: Dec 2019   Score: 27
***

Nandita of Mumbai


Patchouli

Ranga Rao Manmohak Oudh



This is delightful - a proper sweet and dreamy agarwood scent. The sticks are 9 inches with 7 1/2 inches of neatly hand-rolled black paste coated with a fine brown wood powder. The scent on the stick is fresh and volatile, despite being over three years old. It is rich and woodsy, and quite compelling, though with a touch of cool menthol and shoe polish. On lighting the flame burns brightly, with a modicum of black smoke, then, when blown out, the stick smoulders gently producing a pale grey ghost column of smoke. The burn lasts for around 70 minutes. The scent gently but firmly warms the room with a very reassuring and seductive agarwood. Quite a solid, clean scent. Very yummy. Quite divine. Moved up a few points into Heavenly. This is gorgeous stuff. 


Date: Sept 2023    Score: 40 





Another brand by N.Ranga Rao & Sons, who have enlarged their operations under the umbrella of NR Group to cover marketing and manufacturing. Rao's most famous incense brands are Cycle and Flute. The group tends to prefer perfumed incense, though do offer some masala incense, such as this Manmohak brand Oudh.


It's a decent woody scent, quite traditional masala with some sense of the wooly scent of halmaddi. The scent on the stick is quite gorgeous, and does have the subtle, sweet, oily, musky tones of agarwood. And there is a cleansing aura in the room afterwards. A subtle vibration that underlies the sweet masala incense aroma. It's less impressive when being burned. Not to say that it is in anyway unpleasant or disappointing, merely that it simply does the job without creating any sense of wonder.

I like this. A very decent masala incense with an oudh awareness.

Date: Dec 2019 Score: 35

***



The best agarwood incense