If orange peel could turn into resin, this is a glimpse into what that transformation would smell like. If youād then place that resinous peel on low-temp kodo coal, youād smell a sultry sweetness, part stacked dried citrus part sinensis part wildflower incense. Wholly sublime.
Itās a smell that doesnāt exist anywhere, save the scent of Indohitu.Ā
This is one of those times when youāre fortunate to score a super fine batch of incense-grade agallocha nuggets that you choose not to sell as chips like everybody else would. You go EO crazy and grind them up to a powder that will battle the cauldronās constant heat until those orange-oud bubbles of resin are thrust out into the beaker, which when you smell that drop you close your eyes and goā¦ āthis is what oud is about!ā
Youāll be one of literally a handful to own a bottle. Micro-batches are micro because the precious batch of agarwood used was exceptionally small (so small, you have to calculate if a distillation is even possible) and instead of combining batches over time in order to increase the yield and forever forego the smell of Indohitu, we distilled it single-shot as an act of pure oud-addicted indulgence.
Reviews of Indohitu
What a beautiful Hindi this is. Hindi with zen-like aesthetics, there is an addictive tangy-orange aspect that flaunts itself and keeps my nose glued to the spot of application. ā Rezwan, Canada