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Sunday, 29 January 2023

Haria Jasmine Premium Dhoop Sticks

 


Haria Dhoop Sticks bought from Popat Stores for 50p.  Haria are based in Mumbai, and were founded in 1968 by Dhirubhai. His son, Dipesh, continues the business - and he can be seen in this video making incense, and explaining how halmaddi is used as a binder not a fragrant ingredient. 

Dhoops are a more traditional way of making incense, which doesn't involve using a bamboo stick. It is the method that was exported through Asia, and is the main method by which Tibetan and Japanese incense is made. This is a thick dhoop, and as is common with such dhoops, it produces a lot of smoke. The smoke is not smoky or harsh or oily as many wet dhoops are, and while the scent is firm it is not assertive or rude. 

The scent, however, is carried by a fragrant oil. It is a jasmine scent, but is not profound or beautiful - it is simply a jasmine scent, with an awareness of the scent not being fresh or natural. It's a rather plain fragrance, just smelling of bottled jasmine. It doesn't do much, but it's not offensive, and quickly fills a room.  Floral scents, and particularly jasmine, while very popular, are not really my thing. So, on the whole, this has not done much for me. 


Date: Jan 2023    Score:  21
***

Best jasmine incense


Thursday, 26 January 2023

Shoyeido Magnifiscents Gems/Jewels Sampler




A Shoyeido sampler from Padma Store, Germany. Very short, thin dhoop sticks in a plastic holder to protect them. Shoyeido was established in Japan in 1705, and is one of the oldest incense companies in the world. They have several stores across Japan, and one in America - in Boulder, Colorado. Shoyeido has a good reputation among incense enthusiasts, especially American. 


The list

Shoyeido's dhoop sticks are wood based. Most Japanese incense is wood based  - mainly sandalwood and agarwood. The more expensive incenses are more likely to use agarwood, while the more everyday incenses will just use sandalwood. The ingredients in Japanese dhoops are similar to Indian incense - there are binders and burners, such as the bark of the Machillus Tree (or Tabunoki), which is called tabuko in Japan and makko in both Japan and India, and spices, woods, resins, herbs, etc. Where Japanese incense mainly differs is that in India incense burning is a casual everyday multi-use activity by the majority of the population, while in Japan it is a more occasional and more considered activity, and only used by around 40% of the population. The Japanese incense market is worth around $20 million a year, while the Indian incense market is worth nearly $1 billion a year. Given that the population of India is considerably larger than that of Japan  (India 1.4 billion - Japan 125 million), with a smaller available proportion of the population (40%) it can be seen that Japanese incense makers need to focus on quality rather than quantity in order to make a decent profit. The Japanese incense buyer is looking for and expecting quality, and is prepared to pay a higher price for it.  As such the ingredients for Japanese incense are better quality and more expensive, and there are fewer cheaper ingredients or shortcuts used. Indian incense is often cheap and functional - the joss stick format of a bamboo stick to hold the fragrant ingredients enables incense to be robust and easily used; it is convenient and useful with the bamboo holding the incense together and also proving a useful holder which can be placed casually around the house in plant pots or convenient holes without the need for a special incense holder. With so much casual, everyday Indian incense there is some uncertainty when purchasing as to if the incense will be good or poor quality. However, with Japanese incense there is more confidence that the product will be good quality, and created with a more considered appreciation of the fragrance than most everyday Indian incense. 

These are delicate and deliciously scented sticks - more refined and attractive than my prior experience of Shoyeido, which was the lower end everyday Daigen-Koh - a rather harsh, Tibet-like incense. These are Shoyeido's Jewel or Gem series - originally four scents, but now increased to eight.  They are available from Shoyeido's American website and store; though I can't find it offered for sale on the Japanese site.  

 "Original Gems"


Diamond contains sandalwood, frankincense, cinnamon, ginger lily, and patchouli, and represents "Power". The stick is a greyish brown or tan colour, fairly neutral. The scent on the stick is delicate and perfumed - quite sweet (which always attracts me) with an awareness of vanilla and a warm spice more like cumin than cinnamon. I'm not really getting the scent of the named fragrance ingredients. 

Though very thin, on the burn it produces a little more of a dry smoky scent compared to fragrance than I was expecting - I assume this is due to fewer fragrant ingredients in proportion to the binders and burners. The scent on the stick is lovely. The scent on the burn is a little thin and ordinary, with little real awareness of the stated fragrant ingredients. Though small, it does gently inform the room - just warming it up in a subtle, understated manner with that vanilla and cumin/cinnamon.  I think subtle as well as warm and sweetly pleasant are the key words here. Prices are generally around $/£5 to $/£9 for 9g (30 sticks): Sunnyside $5; Amazon £8Violey €8.   Score: 26 


 

Ruby contains cinnamon, sandalwood, and patchouli, and represents "Strength".  The stick colour is a dusky sandy rose. The scent is kinda rose like, though that might be suggestive due to the colour. I'm getting rose, butcher's blood, and warm mineral with a touch of school rubber. It's an OK scent, though nothing special - I'd be just as happy smelling a freshly sharpened pencil. Well, actually I'd be happier - I LOVE the smell of a freshly sharpened pencil! 

As with the Diamond, the scent on the burn is a tad smoky, suggesting that the formulation is budget minded, and perhaps more intended for casual burning than for ko-do - the "way of scent". But the scent does make itself felt more than the Diamond. It's a warm scent, warmer and less sweet than Diamond. Delicate and pleasant spice - like a milky cinnamon. I liked this a little more than the Diamond, though it was hard to get to grips with the scent on such a thin, short stick - it was over before it had hardly begun; pause for thought and the stick has burned away. The sampler feels more like a tease than a proper sampler.  Score: 31 

 

 
Emerald contains sandalwood, cinnamon, clove. The colour of the stick is a clay green, and the scent is very spicy - rather more spicy than just cinnamon and clove, this smells like chip shop curry. There's also a touch of mint and something floral, hovering between rose and jasmine. It's a curiously pleasant scent. 

The curry aroma remains when the stick is lit up, though there are some intriguing tangerine fruit notes mingled in. Some mild herby nettles, perhaps some marijuana.  It's more of an interesting scent than a pleasing or aesthetic one - however, I tend to like interesting scents. The scent is kind of a warm grey, loose watery brown colour (if you think of scents in colours, as I often do), and is generally neutral - not comforting or uplifting, just sort of there. Score: 27 

 

 
Amethyst is the last of the "original" set of the Jewel series, and represents "Balance". It contains sandalwood, cinnamon, and spikenard (Nardostachys jatamansi - a plant in the honeysuckle family). It has a sweet musky scent on the stick, white chocolate, tea and herbs also, but mostly it is sweet, musky, sensual, and earthy from the spikenard essential oil. As far as I'm aware, this is my first experience of spikenard, and I love it. This is a precious, ancient, sacred, and adored oil. I've just ordered some! It could replace patchouli as my favourite essential oil to wear.  

Added: The company produce an Amethyst Gift Set in which they say that the ingredients are "sandalwood, cinnamon, and saussurea".  Saussurea, also called snow lotus, is a plant that grows in the Himalayas along the India-Tibet border. Costus root, which was traded with the Romans, was believed to come from that plant, but is now believed to come from Dolomiaea costus, which grows in South Asia and China, and is made into an essential oil. A search for "saussurea oil" will result in costus root oil. The spikenard oil I ordered has arrived, and it does have a musky earthy scent reminiscent of patchouli - the oil I have is not as sweet as the scent on the Amethyst, and is more earthy and grassy, though does appear to be the same. Costus root oil is reported as also being musky, but more woody and animal like, and is compared to wet dog. I'm not that curious as to buy any! 

Though a little sharp, the scent on the burn is the closest to the scent on the stick of the four samples I have burned so far. The scent is dominated by the spikenard, and I'll certainly be on the lookout for other incense that uses spikenard. What a yummy oil it is! The company do say it is one of their more popular incenses, and I can see why. I'd like to experience it with a decent sized incense stick - these little thin sticks are just a little too lacking in an enveloping experience - it's easy to forget the incense is there it makes such a small impact. If the breeze is in the wrong direction, then the scent is gone. Great for those who enjoy an understated and subtle scent experience, but personally I prefer a bit more oomph. At least with a proper packet I could light up two or three longer sticks and settle down to enjoy the view. Hmm, warm, musky, sweet, sensual. Really, my kind of scent. Be nice if the Shoyeido Amethyst blend did a bit more, and if there were other scents to cut in or counter balance, but, hey, spikenard is groovy!  Score: 39


 
Burning the Ruby


"New Gems"

 

Mystic Jade contains sandalwood, myrrh, clove, and spices, and represents "Peace".  The dusky brown grey stick smells of coriander, turmeric, school rubber, and far distant wood and vague resin. It's quite attractive, but again in a fairly neutral manner. The scent is fairly woody ash on the burn - not actually unpleasant, there are those spices to keep it interesting and moderately attractive, but rather more like a cheap Indian bamboo core joss stick than I thought I would be smelling. I think there's not quite enough fragrant ingredients here to overcome the tabuko / makko powder smell. This is definitely my least favourite so far, and I really don't want to spend more time on it, small though it is.  Score: 20 



 



Obsidian contains frankincense, aromatic ginger (or is it ginger lily?), sandalwood, and spices, and represents "Hope".  Chocolate is what my senses tell me first when approaching the stick, and it's hard to move away from that, though fragrant wood resin does start to emerge, which I could associate with frankincense, though there's also cardboard, pencil shavings and school rubber. Likeable, but not in any compelling or inviting manner. The scent on the burn is again dark and warm like chocolate, though not exactly chocolate - it's fairly woody with warm spices. Quite gentle and gently attractive without being desirable. It's a scent I'm happy to have in my home, but not one that lifts me up or excites me. It's a scent I feel I can grasp quite quickly and has little more to offer.  Score: 26 


 


Blue Topaz contains green tea, sandalwood, clove, vanilla, and spices, and represents "Joy". This is a little more compellingly attractive on the stick than the previous two new Gems. Spice is the prominent aroma, and there is that curry association with the spices, though this is fairly sweet with an awareness of vanilla. And I can convince myself there is some green tea elements in the scent. Burning greenery is the main initial note on the burn. Tea is now at the forefront, and something mineral and marine. It's an interesting and fairly compelling aroma, though not necessarily attractive in an aesthetic sense. Some marijuana is now settling in the scent, though not pure high quality grass, this is more like - um - fake marijuana, like someone's put together dried nettles.  Ah, the vanilla is coming back in. I kinda like this scent. It's a little random and awkward, but I like the way it contrasts the sweet vanilla with the almost acrid burning greenery of the tea.   Score: 30  


 

Rose Crystal represents "Love". The ingredients description from the American Shoyeido website is a little unclear - in one place it says "Silky sandalwood, creamy resins, herbs, and spikenard", and in another it says "Benzoin, sandalwood".  A light coloured sandy brown stick which has some creamy pale sandalwood scent with possibly some mineral vanilla qualities than could come from the benzoin. I'm not getting any spikenard from the stick. The scent on the burn is similar to that on the stick - mostly wood and vanilla, though some pungent notes of burning herbs also comes through. I'm not getting any awareness of the spikenard at all.  This is a fairy simple scent, as most of the "New Gems" appear to be. The new Gem range is dryer, more inclined toward bitter or pungent burning herbs, less attractive, less sweet, less compelling, and less interesting than the original Gems. This one reminds me of Tibet incense, which is not to my taste. But it is acceptable.  Score: 22


It's kinda fun to work through a sampler, even when there's not much to burn. I don't think I've really got a handle on the scents because of the size of the samples, but enough to sort of point me in the right direction. The scents are largely pleasant though not heavenly or exciting.  Though there is supposed to be sandalwood in the mix, I really didn't get much of that in the sample - what I did get was the spices and herbs. While most scents were pleasant, a few were lower end, such as Mystic Jade and Obsidian, while Amethyst was very enjoyable, and I might get a full packet of that scent to get closer to it. 

I don't like that the sticks are in a plastic box. The more natural the ingredients, the more natural I expect the packaging to be.  There's no recycling information, which is a bummer. The price is a tad much for what you get (six very thin, short sticks, none containing expensive ingredients, mostly faint hints of herbs and spices) - $2.95 in the US,  and 3.95 euros here in Europe, but that does work out a reasonably priced way of discovering the scents in the range. I preferred the original scents. 

My score is for the sampler as a whole rather than the individual scents. 


Date: Jan 2023    Score:  26 



Tuesday, 24 January 2023

NYTEC Mausum Patchouli Incense Sticks

 


Not sure where this came from - I'm reviewing it now as part of my concerted effort to clear out my backlog and consign some sticks to the outhouse, and this seems a likely contender. This is a UK own label everyday perfumed-charcoal incense, imported and distributed by the UK based NYTEC Indian goods wholesalers who trade under the brand name Mausum.  It is available in several UK outlets specialising in Indian goods, such as BazaarFoods and IndianGroceryStore, for around 75p a standard box of 20 sticks, and I note that a number of them also sell Heera incense, so I may have picked it up in an Indian corner shop (for 70p) when I bought a bunch of Heera incense after a reader recommended that brand. 

There's no indication of who made these sticks, it merely says "Product of India". The sticks are neatly machine-extruded onto a plain hand cut bamboo splint. The perfume they have been dipped into is an acceptable synthetic patchouli scent. It's not deep, it's not sexy, it doesn't go anywhere. But it's not offensive. And it does approximate patchouli quite well. If someone is looking for a cheap synthetic patchouli everyday room freshener, this will do.  I don't have a problem with it, though it's just a little too everyday room freshener for use in the house, so this will join the (now quite large) pile in the outhouse, where it will keep the cats company. 

[Note: I've just noticed I've reviewed this twice, so I'm merging the reviews] 


Date: Nov 2023   Score: 27 




First review

Another bargain basement machine-extruded perfumed incense from Mausum. These sticks are available in various corner shops or Indian goods shops online, such as IndianGroceryStore.co.uk, for under a £1 for 20 sticks. 

The aroma on the stick is chemical and volatile, though has some herby warmth pleasantly hinting at a musky sweet patchouli. 

The scent on the burn is quite attractive, and I'm pleasantly surprised. These are decently made sticks, and the perfume, though chemically based, is warm, musky, clean, sweet, and attractive. I'm liking this, and am quite happy to burn in the house as a decent quality everyday incense.  


Date: Jan 2023    Score: 31 
***



Patchouli


NYTEC Mausum Meditation Incense Sticks

 


Bargain basement perfumed-charcoal incense sticks imported and branded by NYTEC, an Indian-goods distributor on the outskirts of London, formed in 2003 who operate under the name Mausum. These sticks are available in various corner shops or Indian goods shops online, such as IndianGroceryStore.co.uk, for under a £1 for 20 sticks. 

The scent on the stick is chemical. There's a floral element - rose or jasmine, and it's quite familiar, I'm sure I've had this incense scent before. 

The burn is quite warm, and again quite familiar. It's a modern scent, quite clean, floral, sweet, acceptable. It's a lower end everyday incense that could be used to simply freshen up the house with a light, playful perfume. 


Date: Jan 2023    Score: 23 
***



Balaji Sandalwood

 



Below average everyday bargain basement perfumed charcoal incense. Available for 35p from Popat Stores. Machine extruded. Cheap and nasty perfume from DEP or agarbatti oil.  Clears the lungs when sniffing on the stick. Some teenagers could use this to get high instead of sniffing glue

There is a faint approximation of sandalwood on the burn, though on the whole this is not an aesthetic incense. It will put a vaguely acceptable synthetic scent into the room to clean it up, but it's not a scent to be proud of. Best used in toilets and other places where the need is to simply cover up a bad smell.  

Functional rather than attractive. To be fair, it's not offensive.  But there are better everyday incenses available. 

Date: Jan 2023   Score: 20

***

Balaji Agarbatti Company


B.G Pooja Store Natural Bathi

 


One of our readers, Eugene Andrushchenko (a Ukrainian forced out of his country by the Russian invasion, but hoping to go back one day and re-establish his incense business), has recently come back from an incense gathering trip to India, during which, while they were in Tiruvannamalai, they picked up three packets of masala incense from a pooja store near the impressive Raja Gopuram (gateway entrance) of Arunachalesvara Temple. The store, B.G, was opened in 2004, and sells its own B.G branded incense along with other common brands, such as Satya, Hari Om, and Vijayshree. Eugene sent us some generous samples of the three B.G scents he had picked up. 

We're taking a look at the Natural Bathi, which reminds me of incense from The Mother's, and other incense producers in and around  Pondicherry and Auroville, around 2 hours drive away, such as Cottage Industries, One Aromatics, etc. 
 

Packet of Natural Bathi in the
B.G store in Tiruvannamalai


The sticks are made from a modest amount of a charcoal (possibly coconut charcoal) paste-mix neatly hand rolled around a plain bamboo splint. A pink coloured and fragrant noorva powder covers the charcoal paste. There is a fresh scent on the stick, a little sharp, indicating a fragrance oil of some sort. It's floral with wood notes. Roses. Pine. Some shoe polish.

I was curious about the shoe polish, as I've had that smell before. It appears that shoe polish may contain turps and/or naptha (the liquid form of napthalene - which is used for mothballs, and may give you a headache if you smell it too much). Naptha is an aromatic compound. And turps (which comes from wood) contains terpenes, which are also aromatic compounds. Aromatic compounds can be intoxicating and addictive. Tree resins, such as frankincense, myrrh, and halmaddi, contain terpenes.  So, aromatic compounds can be therapeutic, medicinal, and attractive, as well as intoxicating, addictive, and harmful. Such is the complex and sometimes contradictory nature of incense. And some of this information may help explain why I sometimes get huge pleasure from burning some incense, yet irritation and headaches from burning others.  

On the burn I find the incense a little serious, and a little harsh. Something I generally find with incenses from Pondicherry and Auroville. I don't react well to incense from this area - my eyes sting, I get a headache, and I can feel the incense in my mouth and lungs like an alien agent. Is there a local ingredient common to these producers, which is causing this reaction? My assumption has been that it is a reaction to halmaddi - though I've had other incenses with halmaddi which do not cause this reaction.  

Anyway. I have returned to these sticks several times. I find they are more attractive, less sharp and volatile, when they have been out of the packet for a while and allowed to settle (or to let the volatile fumes evaporate). At that point there is a fruit quality on the stick, rather like cherries, along with some vanilla. There is still the roses, though now it has a distinct and pleasant sweetness, with an attractive, inviting, almost natural sweet floral fragrance. When fresh out of the packet it is sharp, chemical, and artificial, after resting, it is gentle, sweet, inviting, and natural. 

On the burn, after resting, I still find it a little serious, and, though it is a tad less harsh than when straight of of the packet, it is a little more smoky, with more evidence of the core materials rather than the fragrant ingredients. There is a mineral coolness in the middle, which is pleasant, and some woody musk underneath which gives it some weight. 

Overall it's an OK incense, and while I may find it too harsh and serious, others may like that cool austerity. There remains in the room an attractive musky sweetness underpinning a sort of Love Hearts sweetness with touches of rose. But it is faint, and it doesn't linger - what tends to linger is burnt wood and ash. My feeling is that the formulation has diluted fragrant oil with a little too much DEP or agarbatti oil.  I'm classing this as a perfumed masala. 


Date: Jan 2023    Score: 27

Monday, 23 January 2023

Geeta Vansh Premium Incense Sticks

 


Picked this up in a Southampton Indian corner store. It's a machine extruded perfumed incense. Scent is sweet and floral, reasonably pleasant and modern on the stick. It's a little weak and ill-defined on the burn, with a little too much of the core material coming through, though still retains some aspects of the sweet and pleasant scent from the stick. There's some resemblance with some foil-wrapped incenses like the Mystic Incense Baby Powder, and Pink Sugar, and HEM's Baby Powder, and Tree of Life's Shalimar. They're all in the same area - sweet, light, delicate, powdery, and fun. This is probably the weakest of the bunch - perhaps due to not quite enough perfume, or a formulation which allows too much of the core burning and binding material to come through. 

It's likeable, but fairly modest. Phocea likes it a lot. 

Geeta Agarbatti is the main brand of Shahani Industries, a Jaipur incense company founded by Ramesh Shahani in approx. 2015.  Vansh is one of the names of Lord Vishnu


Date: Jan 2023    Score:  22

***


Vedavyasa Parimala Works Sree Chamundeshwari Sambirani Instant Sticks

 


I like sambrani - it is a fragrant tree resin, like frankincense, myrrh, dragon's blood, etc. It is also known as benzoin and as loban (among other names).  It has a number of uses, including medicinal, as well as being a fragrance ingredient due to its fixing quality and sweet vanilla scent. It is particularly popular in India where it is burned as a single ingredient as part of a cleansing ritual. Typically when burned as part of a cleansing ritual, it will either be in a sambrani cup, such as Raj Guru Vandana Sambrani Cup, or a thick dhoop, such as Ambica Pooja Sambrani. These Chamundeshwari Sambirani Instant Sticks are thick dhoop - very dry.  

Vedavyasa Parimala Works are a little known Indian incense company, though they have been producing incense in Trichy, India for nearly 50 years, and some of their products are on sale in America.  These Sambirani dhoops are available from Popat Stores (UK) for £1.  The title, Sree Chamundeshwari refers to the Hindu goddess Chamunda, who is a goddess of war and disease. Seems an odd choice, but each to their own. 

I often read that benzoin/sambrani has a sweet vanilla scent, though that tends not to be my experience. I usually find it has a cool mineral scent, sometimes pine or medicinal. These dhoops are medicinal smelling - like Band-Aid or TCP, on the stick, though the scent on the burn is typically - for me -  cool, grey mineral, though other notes come through - the TCP/antiseptic, some sweet berries, petrol, rubber, and wood. It is a cleansing, calming scent. Though, as I often find with thick dhoops and sambrani cups, it is incredibly smoky. I can't burn such dhoops for long in the house. They are best kept for the outhouse or the garden. 

It's a likeable scent, though not especially heavenly and the smoke quickly becomes intrusive, so this - for me - is not a high scoring incense. Despite health claims for inhaling benzoin smoke, due to the amount of charcoal used in these dhoops, they are best used outdoors or in a well ventilated room. Inhaling too much charcoal smoke can lead to death

Though the scent has aesthetic qualities, due to the amount of smoke I am classing this as a ritual incense.  Kinkele says that loban/benzoin has an "enveloping, soothing, protective cloak inviting us to relax and dream", which is rather nice. 



Friday, 20 January 2023

ScentedAndMore Unboxed Coconut Incense Cones

 



Little plastic bag of ten unbranded cones available from ScentedAndMore for £1.50. The cones are a decent size and weight and burn at a moderate speed. 

I like the smell of coconut, but it doesn't really work for me as an incense scent (my highest score appears to be 28). There is certainly an awareness of coconut on the cone and in the burn, but it smells artificial. There is a burnt hair smell going on. And some burnt coffee.  Not for me. It's not actually repulsive or offensive, but it's close to it.  Others may like it - each to their own. 


Date:  Jan 2023  Score: 10 


ScentedAndMore Unboxed Sandalwood Incense Cones

  



Little plastic bag of ten unbranded cones available from ScentedAndMore for £1.50. The cones are a decent size and weight and burn at a moderate speed, gently informing the room with a warm, earthy, woody, slightly sweet and herby scent. Decent everyday stuff. Nothing to get excited about, but inoffensive and reasonably pleasant. I wouldn't use it in the main part of the house, but will serve to brighten up the toilet and outhouse areas. 


Date: Jan 2023    Score: 19  

Nandita Mantra Meditation Premium Incense Cones

 

A "premium" dhoop cone from Nandita, a decent quality natural incense company who are widely distributed around the globe. There is a sharp tang to the scent on the cone, indicating that the incense aroma will be mainly carried by a fragrant or essential oil. There's an element of sandalwood in the aroma, as well as lemon juice, rose oil, rubber, and wood. It's actually more attractive than it sounds, though not quite dreamy. 

It burns fairly rapidly, pushing out gouts of smoke, and then its gone. The formulation is dry and light, which would account for it burning quickly.  I bought these from ScentedAndMore last year for £1.50, so they shouldn't be stale. The speed of burn does vary, but all are fairly rapid and smoky. There is a warmth to the scent, tipped with fresh nips of lemon and spice and some notes of chocolate. It is faintly sandalwood, though without distinction. 

It's an OK everyday incense, lending some warmth to the room, though not something I'd be looking to buy again (at least in cone form - it is usually sold in stick form).   Available (in stick form) from TheIncenseMan (£1.79);  TheIndianConnection (12 packs for £4.50); Kementari (€1.75); ExoticIncense ($2.00); MyIncenseStore - Australia ($2.99); SriPrarthana - India (Rs 117.00), etc. 


Date: Jan 2023  Score: 27

***

Nandita of Mumbai


Veer Madhur

 



A few years ago I became interested in the idea of importing incense into the UK from unknown incense companies. Veer (Viral Enterprises), a relatively new company, was the first one I tried. It was a bit of a disaster, because the incense packets were poor quality and were damaged in transit. I lost money on the enterprise. Added to which, the incense was simple everyday perfumed charcoal. Nothing particularly desirable or interesting. Yesterday, while having a rummage in my incense piles for some One Aromatics incense because I had just taken deliver of some Berk incense from Germany (reviews later!) and I felt there was a similarity, I came upon this packet of Veer Madhur that Viral Enterprises had sent me as a sample.  So, let's light it up and see what it's like! 

It's a machine extruded charcoal paste (coconut charcoal?)  on a machine cut undyed bamboo stick. The charcoal has been perfume scented.  It has a very pleasant fruity scent on the stick. Quite orangey. It's a decent quality scent - clean, bright, fresh. It's so clean and fresh, it could be an essential oil, though I suspect it's more likely a perfume, as perfumes or fragrant oils are made with synthetic ingredients to help keep the cost down (among other reasons). 

The scent on the burn is clean, fresh and fruity with those orange tangs. I've had the pack (sealed) for nearly three years, and the perfume still works on the burn. The burn aroma is not as impressive as that on the stick (something I'm finding is fairly common for many types of incense), but it does provide a clean, uplifting, zingy scent that brightens the room bringing in light and freshness. 

A modest but pleasant everyday perfumed charcoal incense. 


Date: Jan 2023   Score: 29
***

Veer incense



Thursday, 19 January 2023

Ramakrishna's Natural Handmade Incense

 


There has been a slow bubble of Western interest in Ramakrishna's Natural Handmade Incense over the past few years, which is growing into something of a loud and excited buzz. Ramakrishna Yende has a stall in Mapusa Municipal Market, a local market which attracts tourists and travellers, at which he sells locally made incense and essential oils. At some point  Westerners buying his incense were so impressed they encouraged friends to seek out his stall and bring some home. By 2010, he set up a website to sell incense online. That website doesn't appear to be active, and international sales are mostly conducted  via GoaBay (lowest cost method), or on eBay at around $7 a pack with low cost shipping.  Additionally, it's sold in America by ExoticIncense at around $7 a pack plus shipping. ExoticIncense do reasonable international shipping.  

  
Ramakrishna's shop in Mapusa Market, Goa

With a combination of mentions on Reddit, and recommendations from some of my readers, plus the discovery in my hometown, Southampton, of a packet of Shekhar's Natural Handmade Incense which originates from the same market in Mapusa, Goa, I felt it was time I explored Ramakrishna's Natural Handmade Incense. I'm happy I did - it's good stuff. A little variable in terms of quality, with some packets not quite living up to the hype, but that's normal. Some of the sticks I feel are standard everyday masala incense, assisted by simple essential oils, though some have been very pleasing indeed, and are getting into my Top Drawer Wall of Fame. They are certainly worth getting at a reasonable price, even if only to satisfy your own curiosity.  I bought 24 packs via GoaBay - most of them were 88 rupees (88pence in the UK), though some were 176 rupees (£1.76 in the UK). Shipping was 2,210 rupees (£22.10). The fee was 400 rupees (£4), so the total came to just under £50 - around £2 per pack on average. Well worth doing. 


 
My Viking hoard from Goa


There is little difference between Shekhar and Ramakrishna - the incense appears to be made in the same manner with the same recipes, and packaged in the same way. They both sell from stalls in Mapusa Municipal Market in Goa.  It is possible that one of them is copying the other.  Or it is possible they have the same source, and that this is a common form of incense in Goa, or at least in Mapusa.  I have also bought some incense from Milo's Temple, and it appears that they could be from the same source. The scents, the style of manufacture, the packaging, and the printed labels are rather close to each other.  

I have recalled that Paul Eagle of Happy Hari, spoke about getting his incense originally from Rama, but when he put up his prices, Paul started asking around, and discovered that Rama was sourcing his incense elsewhere, and he found a retailer in Goa who knew Rama's sources, including in Mumbai. So Paul would buy from this retailer - whose name he kept to himself, until events and debts overtook him, and he gave Cory Topel of Absolute Bliss the name of his contact in exchange for 10% of Cory's business. 

 
Similarity in packaging seals and label 
designs between Milo, Ramakrishna, 
and Shekhar

 
Similarities between Milo and Ramakrishna,
and between Shekhar and Ramakrishna


I'm still working my way through my hoard of Ramakrishna's incense. The one that has caught our attention the most so far is Kasturi Drop. That's the first one that has stood out as possibly World Class - certainly Heavenly. But none have been poor. They've all been pretty much decent masala or essential oil incense, and I'm looking forward to trying the rest of them. 


Reviews 

 
Ramakrishna's Kasturi Drop
Jan 2023 - Score: 43




Ramakrishna's Black Current (M)
Aug 2023 - Score: 38


  
Ramakrishna's Sunset (M)
Feb 2024 - Score: 38 


Ramakrishna's Nag Champa
Dec 2022 - Score: 32

 
Ramakrishna's Orange
Dec 2022 - Score: 30

 
Ramakrishna's Mint
Jan 2023 - Score: 28


  
Ramakrishna's Vasundara
Jan 2023 - Score: 25


Scents: 8
Highest score: 43
Lowest score: 25
Average: 32

Conclusion: Small scale / cottage industry producer of  decent everyday natural incense. Quality is variable, but on the whole is a tad above average, and some scents can really engage the senses. There is a charm to the low level production - with the simple labels, and the crude, erratic quality of some formulations and rolling. The back story of the sticks being found on a market stall in Goa adds to the delight of the whole experience.
There is some question over who is responsible for the production and formulation - is it Ramakrishna Yende, the man who runs the market stall, or is it a local producer,  who also makes for Milos Temple and Shekhar?  For the time being I am listing this among the Best Incense Makers rather than Own Brand Distributors


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