Fu-In Kyara (50 Stick box)
風韻の伽羅
Stick Aroma:
Bengay/Tiger balm/RubA535 (Menthol/Mint, Camphor, Cinnamon)
Antique Store (Old wood, Old silk)
Diesel Cologne from high school (Cinnamon, Vanilla Coke)
Dry ginger, anise, mint
Smoke Aroma:
Davidoff Cigar
Sauerkraut & Rain
Semi dried tofu (when making tofu steak) / Yuba
Japanese apartment
Japanese laundry
Nostalgia, Satisfaction, Pleasant memories
From looking at what I wrote for the aromas of the stick, I was introduced to many of them when I was around 16~19 years old.
- RubA535/Bengay was something I used a lot after kickboxing,
- Diesel cologne was actually my little brothers, I used to use it when I went out on special nights.
- Antique store is sort of an oddity, there’s a place called Jayson’s
Corner on 17th avenue and a few stores in Eau Claire market that have
this aroma. I think many I remember it mostly from souvenir shopping in
Japan?
From the aromas of the smoke, many of them are from very special life events for me.
- Davidoff was the first cigar I’ve smoked, and the very gentle smoke of the incense is really reminiscent of it.
- Sauerkraut and Rain was from my honeymoon in downtown Frankfurt. We
were near a really old and super famous gothic church ‘Dom St.
Bartholomaus’ which was and probably still is under construction.
We walked past a street fair featuring french wines and a variety of
food. It was a little chilly out because it was raining earlier in the
day, skies were gray and we were sitting outside at essentially a picnic
table drinking wine and eating sauerkraut and sausages. I think what I
may be attached to the most for this aroma is the blend of really humid
cold air and sauerkraut cooking in the distance. - Semi Dried Tofu & Yuba comes from my experience at the
consulate. Tofu steak was probably one of the dishes I was best at
cooking for lunch, so I was drying tofu at least once a week. Yuba from
my most recent trip to Japan when we went to Arashiyama and had a
kaiseki menu for lunch at one of the restaurants on the strip. - Japanese apartment and Japanese laundry go hand in hand I guess,
it’s a really ‘home-y’ feeling when laundry hangs up to dry. The smell
of their detergent is probably at least a little responsible for this.
Their houses aren’t that big, and usually I hang up and take down the
laundry when I’m there — so it’s an aroma I’m around nearly every day.
What a cool burst of nostalgia and satisfaction. One other thing I’d
like to note about this incense in particular is the beautiful stream of
smoke that comes off the stick. ASMR.
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