Incense in The Wind
Hunting incense across the globe since 2013
Still discovering. Still learning.
Incense In The Wind
Wednesday, 18 February 2026
BIC Little Angels
Tuesday, 17 February 2026
Monsoon (Good Incense/Bhagwan) Floral Bouquet
This is a perfumed-masala stick in the flora style. It consists of what appears to be a charcoal paste, machine-extruded onto a plain, machine-cut, bamboo splint which has a red tip. The paste would likely have a variety of ingredients other than just binders and combustibles - it may have some of the stick's fragrances and fixatives. However, the bulk of the scent appear to come from fragrances added after the stick was extruded. The cold throw scent on the stick is ripe with fragrance oils, rich with diamond sharp aldehydes, and heavy with damp old leather, possibly from benzoin and/or patchouli. There is a coating of brown powder which was traditionally called melnoorva - mainly used to prevent sticks from gluing together while drying, though these days is mainly known as "masala powder" - which is generally perfumed, and is often used to give the stick a masala appearance. Rose, vanilla, aldehyde, and damp leather are the prominent notes, and it is compelling and attractive fragrance.
The scent on the burn is softer than I expected after the weight of the oils on the stick. And is quite clean - moderately smoky, but that's because I have it a little close to me - around 2-3 foot away - because the fragrance has a gentle start, and I'm impatient to get going. The accord is similar to that on the stick, which is common with incense sticks where much of the fragrance has been applied externally, so is readily available. There is a great balance between the heavier, somewhat darker tones - vanilla, leather, soft, old tobacco, and musk; with the bright florals and dazzling aldehydes - it's like beauty and the beast dancing together, spinning away, throwing off young, girly, and scintillating rays of diamond sharp jasmines and rose, with the musky, authoritative tones of aged and mouldy leather. A great combination. I love this.
Om Sai Om Brand White Musk Dhoop Sticks
There is a reluctance to catch and some black smoke when lighting. Black smoke is caused by incomplete combustion, and DEP can cause this as it slow to ignite, and while it doesn't produce black smoke itself, it will inhibit the fragrance oils from fully burning; but black smoke is also caused by thicker sticks, as it takes longer to achieve smouldering heat, and until that smouldering heat is reached, the oils won't burn completely. Black smoke on lighting is not necessarily due to poor ingredients - it can be due to inappropriate formulation where the ingredients are not balanced, or where it hasn't been dried completely. This stick is well dry, the scent is not harsh and is well balanced, with a pleasant after-burn scent that lasts well into the next day, so I'm assuming the black smoke is due to thickness and use of DEP.
Monday, 16 February 2026
Gonesh No. 10 Perfumes of Herbs & Flowers
Essentially this is well made, decent quality incense with a pleasant and attractive scent, though too familiar as an everyday home fragrance to spark much interest. But it is likeable, and I'm quite happy to burn these sticks around the house. They are well behaved, and, though the scent (as most perfumed incense does) fades rather than lingers, it does sweetly inform the room with an acceptable and inoffensive fragrance.
This was part of a Variety pack, commonly available in America, though also available on UK Amazon for just under £12 including delivery.
Sunday, 15 February 2026
Gonesh No. 2 Perfumed with Oils & Spices
Does perfumed-masala style incense sometimes smell false or chemical? Yes.
Does masala style incense sometimes smell false or chemical? Yes, but less frequently.
Does perfumed-incense have a wide range of fragrances? Yes.
Does perfumed-masala style incense have a wide range of fragrances? Yes, but somewhat less than straight perfumed-incense.
Does masala style incense have a wide range of fragrances? Certainly a decent range, though the masala incense customer base prefers more traditional scents, so there will be more wood, floral, and wood-floral scents than the often more sophisticated or modern and fun scents that are commonly offered in perfumed-incense, especially the perfumed-incense that is sold to the Western market, such as by Wild Berry, Juicy Jay, Hem, and Gonesh.
Who are Gonesh?
I have found Gonesh to be a decent perfumed-incense company. I like and enjoy their scents. They are an American company who have been making incense since at least 1923 when they took over The Hindu Incense Company based in Chicago, and made incense cones and burners. It was in the Sixties that they introduced incense sticks, and changed their name from the Hindu Incense Company to Gonesh. They have decent sales in the home fragrance and lifestyle market, and are generally regarded as accessible and vibrant, though not as an authentic or traditional incense maker.
Gonesh say: "A mysterious blend of perfume oils and spices to create a soothing aromatic experience. A light floral fragrance wafting over deep woodsy notes spiced throughout with the scents of the orient."
Scent on the Stick (Cold Throw)
The scent on the burn echoes the cold throw scent on the stick. I like when an incense does that. And it tends to happen more often with perfumed-incense than either perfumed-masala or masala-style incense. This is not a sign of quality - traditional, high quality masala incense has the fragrant ingredients folded into the paste, so they are not fully revealed until the stick is lit and burned; but it is useful as what I am expecting from the cold throw is delivered in the hot throw. It is not uncommon that stuff I like is not a qualifier for "high-end", but is simply useful, fun, attractive, or likeable. I don't think I am someone for whom the term "high-end" draws me like a acolyte moth to a golden diamond encrusted flame. Terms like "character", "interesting", "authentic", "original", "fun", "unique" are what attract my attention.
This was part of a Variety pack, commonly available in America, though also available on UK Amazon for just under £12 including delivery.
Saturday, 14 February 2026
Gonesh No. 4 Perfumes of Orchards & Vines
I've always tended to "have a soft spot" for bold modern fragrances in my incense. For me it is part of the variety and fun. This is not a serious incense, but it is decent quality. Comparable with the better perfumed-incense makers in India like HEM and Moksh. And I don't think I would argue if someone said that Gonesh are better quality.
This was part of a Variety pack, commonly available in America, though also available on UK Amazon for just under £12 including delivery.
Pure Incense Sambrani
Sambrani is a slightly tricky name. Historically it would refer to benzoin resin, or even frankincense or other fragrant tree resins. Today, however, the word more often refers to what Thomas Kinkele describes as Calcutta block benzoin - better known as loban or sambrani. These are inexpensive blends of benzoin with other resins, usually sold in charcoal cups.
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| Typical sambrani charcoal cup |
And that's fine. Though, as I said in relation to Temple of Incense Benzoin Absolute, benzoin is such a common resin in Indian incense that it's hard to work up an enthusiasm for it. It's usually used as a fixative, or to add some sweetness to a fragrance blend. And when it is used as a single fragrance incense stick it can be rather linear and dull, with a somewhat boring and sometimes satiating focus on little more than a vanilla sweetness. Ho hum. But, fair enough, that vanilla sweetness can be an instant, albeit short-term, appeal.
The base reminds me of some Pondicherry style incense where distillation residue may be used - imparting a dry, peppery character. Whether that’s actually the case here is impossible to know, but the effect is similar. And the sweet benzoin notes on top of the base struggles to compete, and when it does win out, the scent is too simple to hold the interest of someone who is perhaps easily bored, and/or has burned quite a few Indian incenses with a similar profile.
This isn’t a bad incense. It has an appealing sweetness and will probably please anyone looking for a straightforward benzoin fragrance.
But it lacks depth and development, and compared to more complex Pure Incense offerings it feels a bit ordinary.
*Easy to enjoy initially
*Traditional benzoin profile
Cons
*Linear scent
*Slightly harsh burn
*Limited depth
Friday, 13 February 2026
Temple of Incense Benzoin Absolute
This Benzoin Absolute is the last (I think) of the samples I got from Temple of Incense (ToI) back in 2021. I am determined this year to really reduce my backlog. But as I write this I suspect I have another batch of ToI samples somewhere in my collection; well, at least none are cluttering my desk at the moment. My immediate goal is to clear the incense on my desk so I can get on to explore some decent quality Chinese incense, and do a two-way incense blind test with Irene from Rauchfahne.
Because benzoin is common in Indian incense, and can be rather linear and dull due to the somewhat boring focus on vanilla sweetness, it can be difficult to work up excitement for a single-fragrance benzoin stick.
Scent on the Stick
This Benzoin Absolute comes as a simple, extruded paste stick. The cold throw scent has the expected vanilla sweetness, though there's some fresh cologne here as well which add balsamic, floral, and fruit notes. A small amount of crisp volatility is a little off-putting, but that is not uncommon with perfumed sticks. Overall, the scent is pleasant but unexciting, typical of perfumed-incense formulations.
Value
At £10 for a pack of 20 sticks, the price is relatively high for what you receive. Comparable quality incense can be bought elsewhere - such as sourced direct from VNS in India, costing 100 rupees (~85p) or less for 20g - a significant value advantage over ToI. But it's each to their own, and some folks do feel more comfortable buying close to home.
Pros
*Pleasant vanilla sweetness with subtle balsamic, floral, and fruity nuances.
*Soft, warm, musky burn with woody notes that balance the sweetness.
*Reliable everyday room fragrance, non-intrusive and familiar.
Cons
*Linear and unexciting; lacks complexity.
*Slightly off-putting crisp volatility on the stick.
*High price (£10/20 sticks) compared to alternatives like VNS in India.
Conclusion
Temple of Incense Benzoin Absolute is pleasant, approachable, and reliable, but unremarkable. It is well-suited for casual use as a room fragrance, yet it lacks complexity or uniqueness for those looking for something more. While the quality is respectable, the price-to-value ratio is not compelling.
Temple of Incense Amber Supreme
Amber is a constructed scent. The general public impression is that it comes from the fossilised tree resin, and while it is possible to do this, it is an expensive process which produces a weak result. So, the amber scent found in perfume and incense is almost always a constructed scent. Each incense house will have their own blend of oils used to create the amber scent - benzoin and patchouli are common ingredients.
The stick is hand rolled from a reasonably generous amount of charcoal paste which has been thinly coated with the brown powder known traditionally as melnoorva and more recently and now commonly as masala powder. The powder was traditionally used to prevent the sticks from gluing together as they dried, and at some point the powder was fragranced, which was appealing to customers. These days the powder is mainly used as a cold throw scent, and to give the signal that the incense is a masala stick. The scent on the stick, the cold throw, is, as expected, sweet with vanilla and softly musky and warm with patchouli. There's baked cookies and delicate florals in the mix, and the whole accord is very commercial and inviting. It has instant and broad appeal. It is, also, a somewhat familiar and predictable scent. Burn a few Indian incenses, and this accord will be recognised - especially if buying incenses made in Pune. However, I still find it attractive. I would wish it to be a bit bolder and to do something more interesting with the scent profile, but I think we all like a doughnut or Krispy Kreme now and again.
The scent on the burn is attractive and familiar. Sandalwood, vanilla, soft florals, very gentle musk, lambs wool, caramel. The description on the ToI website is "The scent is smooth and rich, with a soft, comforting warmth that can feel both sensual and grounding. Amber Supreme’s aroma is complex and multifaceted, sometimes tinged with light, vanilla-like sweetness." And that seems fair enough, though complex and multifaceted are not words I would use to describe something as ordinary and familiar and vague as vanilla ice-cream. If you threw some coriander, sage, raspberry, and Persian Rose into the mix then it would be complex, multifaceted, and somewhat less boring, but also it wouldn't be quite so comforting and commercial. £18 for 20 sticks.
Pure Incense
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| Pure Incense Connoisseur Nepal Musk (M) July 2017 - Score: 46* |
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| Pure Incense The Classic Range Frankincense (M) March 2021 - Score: 30 |
Top score: 47
Padma Store Happy Hari King of Amber
Scent on the stick is the same as ToI Amber: "an attractive warm, sweet, musky-floral scent" with "hints of chocolate and vanilla". I may be getting some table polish and a faint touch of petrol, but that could be illusionary. Essentially this is the same scent.
As with the ToI Amber, on first lighting it is the top notes that I first become aware of - sweet, delicate florals with a touch of fruit. There is some violet and a sweet moment of strawberry puree, but this is fleeting. As with the ToI Amber, the scent is surprisingly light for such a thick stick. Details of the scent profile are faint, some fruit, and then a smoky patchouli. Almost the same as Toi Amber, though perhaps a little more smoky and woody, and a little less floral/fruity.
Which to buy is down to personal preference in the dealer, the packaging, and the amount you want to buy. ToI sell their Amber in 20 stick packs costing £18, while Padma Store sell their King in 10g packs (three sticks) for 4.25 Eur (£3.66), which means they are stick for stick close in price, with the ToI costing slightly less. The Padma Store has a closer connection to Happy Hari because Ashok uses the same packaging and labels as the original Happy Hari. You pays your money you makes your choice.
Thursday, 12 February 2026
Temple of Incense Amber
Just before he died, Paul sold details of his sources to Cory Topul of Absolute Bliss in return for 10% of future profits. Because Paul was not the most trustworthy of characters, Cory would send me various incenses he wanted me to check against original Happy Hari incense I still had, or had a memory of. Just before he died, Cory sold a big bunch of Happy Hari incense to Ashok of Padma Store. In Ashok's Happy Hari line is King of Amber. Which is pretty much the same as this ToI Amber. And which is close to, though somewhat different to, the original Happy Hari King of Amber.
I've heard the rumour that as well as selling his sources to Cory, Paul also sold them (or gave them) to the ToI girls. It wouldn't surprise me. Paul was something of a bounder. But from the messages that Cory shared with me in which the set up was that Cory would be paying money to Paul (and/or Paul's family - there's some confusion in the messages) based on future business, it seems unlikely that Paul would be deliberately cheating Cory as the percentage on future business would then not be paid. It is possible that the agreements were territorial, but there was nothing about that in the messages that Cory shared with me. I know that Cory was uncertain about some of the sources that Paul had given him, and that he had found some sources himself that he felt were better quality.
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| ToI Amber with the two Kings |
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| Top: ToI Amber; middle: Padma King of Amber; bottom: Happy Hari King of Amber |
Comparing the three sticks side by side, the ToI and the Padma Store/Absolute Bliss are the same length and thickness and colour and have the same scent. The Happy Hari original is slightly longer, thinner, and has a different scent. I find it highly likely that ToI and Absolute Bliss are from the same maker (nothing can be certain, for incense makers can very accurately copy a popular incense, but these two sticks are remarkably similar); while the Happy Hari original is possibly from the same source with understandable variations by the maker over time (a new extruding machine, an updated fragrance formula), though equally may be from a different maker, so this is much less certain.
I did say to myself last year that I wouldn't get involved in trying to identify sources for white label traders such as ToI; but it is mildly interesting, and I can't help be curious, especially as so many popular Western incense brands appear to be using the same sources, especially HMS in Pune, so we can end up buying the same incense but under several different brand names. There are several reasons why we buy from a particular trader, so it's not always down to which is the cheapest, but it can be useful to know if the incenses are essentially the same (or exactly the same) so we can avoid buying the same incense if we don't want to (or, conversely, buy them in order to compare, if we want to).
For such a thick stick the smoke and scent is reasonably modest and gentle, though it can disperse over a large area and inform the whole house by the time the stick is finished. The scent on the burn is initially lighter and more floral than on the stick, also drier, suggesting that the heavier and sweeter musk/patchouli notes are not making themselves felt, which is odd because I tend to find that base notes are more noticeable on thick sticks. However, gradually the base comes in - at first gently blending and dancing with the floral, then eventually taking over so the sweet patchouli-musk is the prominent fragrance. I kinda like it best when the musk and the florals dance together, and there is a brief moment when I think I can pick up the violets and lemon that I noted on the Happy Hari original back in 2017.
Amber is a conjured scent, often composed of individual house blends of benzoin/vanilla, patchouli oil, sandalwood oil, and perhaps some floral oils. This blend has "absolute and essential oils of amber, vetiver, labdanum, amyris and a drop of patchouli", which sounds quite base heavy, though aspects of it will create lighter top notes. The amyris, which is often used as a cheaper form of sandalwood, could be blending with the labdanum to give hints of the violets and lemon; while the patchouli and "amber" (probably a benzoin mix), might be giving the soft cocoa notes. On the whole the accord walks a fairly pleasant but unremarkable line. Likeable, but somewhat overly familiar and predictable.
































