diff --git a/content/blog/nathan-and-sons-underbrush-remineralizing-gum-review.md b/content/blog/nathan-and-sons-underbrush-remineralizing-gum-review.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..fc56b6a --- /dev/null +++ b/content/blog/nathan-and-sons-underbrush-remineralizing-gum-review.md @@ -0,0 +1,94 @@ +--- +title: "Incense Gum? Reviewing the Viral Nathan and Sons Underbrush Remineralizing Gum" +description: "You know I had to try a chewing gum made from incense ingredients." +date: 2026-02-23 +tags: + - Incense + - Incense Review + - Other Review + - Food and Beverage +synopsis: "You know I had to try a chewing gum made from incense ingredients." +imageURL: "/img/nathan_and_sons_underbrush_remineralizing_gum/nathan-and-sons-underbrush-remineralizing-gum.webp" +imageAlt: "A tealight cup containing a melted puddle of gum on an MHP30 mini heater. Beside it are packages of the gum." +mastodon_id: "116122384966857793" +--- + +Maybe this is just my algorithm, but I just can't escape +[Nathan and Sons Underbrush Remineralizing Gum](https://nathanandsons.com/) on +[Instagram](https://www.instagram.com/nathan.and.sons/). In case your feed +isn't absolutely inundated with Underbrush content like mine, Underbrush is a +chewing gum brand that uses natural botanicals rather than the, well, +[plastic](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chewing_gum#Microplastics) that is +commonly used as a gum base. Instead, Underbrush contains chicle, mastic, +spruce, and acacia gum, myrrh and other natural ingredients. Are you beginning +to see why I'm interested in the stuff? Some of these ingredients might sound +more at home in an incense build than something you put in your mouth, but the +truth is that plant gums have been chewed for centuries. Hell, people died over mastic in antiquity, such was its acclaim as a herbal medicine, flavoring, +and chewing gum. Native Americans used spruce gum in this way, and frankincense +has also traditionally been used as a chewing gum. + +Naturally, I *had* to try a gum made, essentially, out of incense materials. The +price deterred me for a while, but my curiosity eventually won out. I elbowed +my way through the aggressive salesy cruft on the Nathan and Sons website and +put in an order for the berry variety (the only vegan option). + +[![A tealight cup containing a melted puddle of gum on an MHP30 mini heater. Beside it are packages of the gum.](/img/nathan_and_sons_underbrush_remineralizing_gum/nathan-and-sons-underbrush-remineralizing-gum.webp "Of course I put the stuff on my dusty wee heater.")](/img/nathan_and_sons_underbrush_remineralizing_gum/nathan-and-sons-underbrush-remineralizing-gum.webp) + +## Underbrush as intended: gum + +With a texture nigh-indistinguishable from any gum you might find on a +supermarket shelf, I found Underbrush pleasantly sweet with a mild berry flavor +as I began to chew. Unfortunately, this only lasts for, quite literally, +seconds before settling down into an ashtray meets lapsang-souchong smoky black +tea flavor. It's genuinely pretty shocking how quickly the flavor changes. I +can only assume that the lingering note comes from the myrrh. It really is +quite unfortunate that this is the only resin with any flavor left in it—myrrh +is [infamous](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Myrrh#Etymology) for its bitter +flavor[^1]. + +In the ads for this gum, they show the resins being heated in order to mix them +together, and I can't help but wonder whether that's the culprit here. With +plain old frankincense or mastic, the pronounced flavor of the resin lasts for +just about as long as you can be bothered to chew. As an incense maker, I am +well aware of how quickly heat can evaporate out all of those lovely aromatic +volatile compounds—even now I'm grinding some costus root twenty seconds at a +time, ensuring that the temperature of the material doesn't rise beyond 100°F +with an infrared thermometer. I don't really care about the berry flavor, but +it seems like abject sacrilege to have all of these nice, rare, and expensive +tree resins in a product with their flavor cooked out of them. + +After spending close to $40 for 36 pieces of gum, +[my disappointment is immeasurable.](https://knowyourmeme.com/memes/my-disappointment-is-immeasurable-and-my-day-is-ruined) +That said, I didn't buy the stuff just to chew it all anyway. If it's no good +as a gum, how will it fare as incense? + +## Underbrush as not intended: incense + +At 185°C the gum presents a candy-like sweetness and a fruity acidity with *maybe* +a tiny hint of mastic? Imagine a bag of skittles left in a hot car. The +fragrance didn't change at 250°, but at 300° a toasty note enters and the +acidity ramps up before it begins to darken in color and smell burned. + +Even as incense, the resins are practically nowhere to be found. What a shame. + +## Conclusion + +I'm not at all enamored with this stuff. While the gum circumvents the usual +issues inherent to chewing resin with its excellent texture, all of those +beautiful natural ingredients present little to no flavor. The added flavoring +disappears so quickly that it may as well not be there. I can't speak to +the health claims made by Nathan and Sons, but in purely sensory terms, I prefer +the stuff on an incense heater. And I don't like it much there. + +On an emotional level, cooking the flavor out of these beautiful +resins—precious materials that +[wars have been fought over](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chios_massacre) +—feels like an +[Ecce Homo](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ecce_Homo_(Garc%C3%ADa_Mart%C3%ADnez_and_Gim%C3%A9nez)) +moment. Continuing on the religious theme, perhaps more apt is the famous line +from the Gospel of Matthew: "…neither cast ye your pearls before swine, lest +they trample them under their feet…." Whether you're looking for something to +chew or a fragrance to enjoy, my recommendation would be to use a chunk of mastic instead. + +[^1]: Honestly, it's quite difficult to make myrrh smell nice in incense too. + diff --git a/content/now-burning/Now Burning_2026-02-18_14:15.md b/content/now-burning/Now Burning_2026-02-18_14:15.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..3466d60 --- /dev/null +++ b/content/now-burning/Now Burning_2026-02-18_14:15.md @@ -0,0 +1,7 @@ +--- +title: Sumire +manufacturer: Tennendo +date: 2026-02-18 14:14:00 +time: 2:14 PM +--- +I've heard it called “soapy,” but I quite enjoy this violet incense. diff --git a/content/now-burning/Now Burning_2026-02-20_08:59.md b/content/now-burning/Now Burning_2026-02-20_08:59.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..7fcb46b --- /dev/null +++ b/content/now-burning/Now Burning_2026-02-20_08:59.md @@ -0,0 +1,7 @@ +--- +title: Excellentia (Shira-giku) +manufacturer: Shoyeido +date: 2026-02-20 8:59:00 +time: 8:59 AM +--- +With a 7-8 hour burn time, this coil is a bit of a commitment! diff --git a/content/status/Status_2026-02-17_15:47.md b/content/status/Status_2026-02-17_15:47.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..e9aa3cb --- /dev/null +++ b/content/status/Status_2026-02-17_15:47.md @@ -0,0 +1,5 @@ +--- +date: 2026-02-17 15:44:00 +emoji: 🫠 +comment: Mefjus’ *Manifest* is a hell of an album. No one puts out such pristinely produced tracks as Drum and Bass artists. +---