3.9 KiB
title | description | date | tags | synopsis | imageURL | imageAlt | mastodon_id | |||
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Silver Tip: an Incense Build Featuring Osmanthus and Mastic | I make a fresh, sweet, and green incense build reminiscent of the flavor of white tea | 2024-09-20 |
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I make a fresh, sweet, and green incense build reminiscent of the flavor of white tea. | /img/testAsh.webp | A small tin labelled 'test ash' beside a small glass jar containing matches. | 113173725532729481 |
If my memory serves me, some time ago I tried a stick from Yi-Xin that contained osmanthus flowers and mastic gum. I recall enjoying the combination, so when I found a bag of dried osmanthus on sale while doing some online grocery shopping, I set out to make something using these ingredients.
Having read that osmanthus, like lavender, was one of those few flowers that could be used successfully in incense, I was brimming with confidence as I ground them finely and made an attempt at a batch of sticks containing 19% of the powder. The result was ghastly. At this percentage, alongside that characteristic beautiful fruity fragrance was a proportionate helping of the acrid scent of burning plant matter. Following this failure, I put aside my hubris, opened my tin of 'test ash'1 and began testing incense powders comprised of differing ratios of osmanthus and base-wood in a series of trail-burning tests, eventually finding that a ratio of 10% osmanthus to base wood seemed to return a reasonably good fragrance in the burn.
Armed with this knowledge, I put together a build. The star aromatics sit atop a woody base of sandalwood and juniper sweetened by a touch of benzoin; the composition is slightly lifted with a minuscule amount of camphor, bound with guar gum and a little acacia gum. While also acting as a weak binder, the acacia gum is present to lower the burn temperature and strengthen the sticks.
The Build
Ingredient | Grams | % of Build |
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Juniperus Virginiana | 2.6 | 35.62% |
Santalum Spicatum | 2.6 | 35.62% |
Osmanthus Fragrans | 0.73 | 10% |
Mastic Gum | 0.5 | 6.85% |
Acacia Gum | 0.3 | 4.11% |
Benzoin Siam | 0.25 | 3.42% |
Guar Gum | 0.25 | 3.42% |
Borneol Camphor | 0.07 | 0.96% |
As with all of my incense, I extruded the dough into 2-2.5mm coreless sticks which I then dried on a mesh screen at room temperature and left to cure for a number of weeks.
Conclusion
The sticks this build produces offer a quiet listen, but I find it very pleasant. Something about the combination of juniper, mastic, and osmanthus forms a fragrance that's at once green and fruity, with a bright, peachy, stone-fruit note, all atop a woody base. After a couple of months, the camphor is barely there on the stick; whether it is present in the burn is difficult to say without trying a build sans borneol.2
My partner has a small wood-burning backpacking stove they like to use to make tea while camping. While I haven't yet had the pleasure, I have to imagine that making a cup of white tea on such a stove in a juniper forest would smell similar to the fragrance of this stick.
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I use the stick of a cotton swab to create a divot in the ash bed, which I carefully fill with incense powder to be tamped down, lit, and evaluated. When I'm done, I simply close the lid, shake the container, and drop it once or twice on a flat surface to smooth the ash and prepare it for the next use. ↩︎
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Such a tricky ingredient, camphor. The tiniest amount can seem utterly overwhelming when blending or on a fresh stick, and as incense cures and ages, it seems as though it may or may not mellow out in the burn. ↩︎