Incense In The Wind

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Wednesday, 9 November 2022

Rasbihari Lal & Sons Super Narasimha

Second review - scroll down for earlier

 
Very attractive creamy sandalwood and caramel and vanillin and musk scent on the stick. Aroma on the burn is similar as on the stick, though as is often the case where the stick has been dipped in perfume, the clarity and beauty and strength is somewhat less. It feels as though not quite enough scent has been enfolded into the paste, though it has been concentrated on the surface - dipped/poured on the finished stick, or embedded in the masala/melnoorva powder. 

When I reviewed this in 2022 I thought the stick had been machine extruded, and then rolled in the masala/melnoorva powder. Today I am not sure. But this is also a different sample, so might have been made in a different manner. Though I think the manufacture process is the same - and looking again, I would tend to lean more toward machine-extruding for the charcoal paste, followed by a finish by hand-rolling in the woody masala/melnoorva powder. 

While Rasbihari Lal & Sons is a shop rather than an incense house, and they are likely to source their incense from local makers in and around Vrindavan in the same way as other traders in the town, such as Vrindavan Bazaar; I suspect they may use different makers. I think it would be interesting to purchase incense from Vrindavan Bazaar or Hare Krishna Exports which has the same name to see if they are selling the same sticks, such as happens in Pushkar

I like this. I like the scent on the stick way more than the scent on the burn, but that's not to diminish the attraction of the scent on the stick. It's a pleasant scent. Just lacks the creaminess and beauty of the promise on the stick. Anyway, I like this more than I did in 2022. 


Date: Aug 2025   Score: 32



First review

Sample from Padma Store. Rasbihari Lal & Sons is a Hindu shop in Vrindavan, the birthplace of Krishna. The business was founded in 1978, and sells a range of Krishna related products as well as incense, predominantly unbranded incense which is what we know as Rasbihari Lal incense, which appears to only be sold outside of India by Padma Store, though can be bought directly from the online website Rasbihari Lal. Prices are around $5-$17 (£4-£15) with shipping starting at around $30, then - unfortunately and somewhat off-puttingly - increasing rather than decreasing when you increase the order (when it went up to $57 for around 10 items, I decided not to proceed!). Padma Store sells much of the same incense (though not the complete range, which appears to include several different makers) at around the same price, and with lower shipping costs.  

The sticks are a machine-dipped charcoal-masala on a plain machine-cut bamboo splint, coated in a pleasant woody melnoorva to prevent the moist sticks from gluing together when laid out to dry. The scent is sweet, musky, vanilla, Love Hearts, lemony,  warm woolly - perhaps indicating halmaddi. Overall, quite delicious, and my sort of thing. It's quite uplifting, light, and joyful, yet reassuring and comforting, and with an overall awareness of sensuality and sexuality. Good stuff. 

It's quite an assertive incense on the burn, with fairly rough, crude notes of the dried plants that are the base of the fragrance masala - it holds little of the delicate joyful scent on the stick - which seems oil and/or resin based, and is more like dried leaves burning in the garden. That's not to say it is unpleasant, but is certainly not what I expected, and is certainly not my favourite style of incense, though there are those who like the earthy authenticity of Tibetan incense who would enjoy this. I don't think I will put in an order with Rasbihari Lal, based on this one sample, though I am curious enough to try the sample pack offered by Padma Store. 

The name Super Narasimha suggests it is based on a decent grade essential oil, as "super" is a descriptor often used of oils that are somewhere between basic "fragrant" and "absolute"; however, Narasimha is one of the incarnations of the Hindu god Vishnu. Unclear here is if the "Super" is referring to the quality of the incense, or is a mark of respect for the god.  

It's unclear if the incense is intended to be used for aesthetic purposes, or for ritual or spiritual purposes. The scent on the stick is clearly commercial, and is intended to appeal aesthetically - though that doesn't rule out a religious/spiritual purpose. The scent on the burn, though, is more in line with the therapeutic and/or ritual nature of Tibetan incense, where it is the healing and/or spiritual nature of the ingredients that matters rather than the purely aesthetic quality of the scent. There may be elements of both in this stick. I will include it in my main list rather than place it in my separate Ritual/Spiritual list.


Date: Nov 2022 Score: 25
***

Rasbihari Lal & Sons


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