Black Friday @ EO

kooolaid79

Well-Known Member
The XXL is on sale Dear oudh lovers. This is a Oudh you want to have in your collection. For those who have not had a chance to experience Maroke Oudhs, I would highly recommend this Oudh. A very earthy Oudh which will take you on a Island full exotic and beautiful green jungle. The Aroma will be unlike any other sweet oils, you have experienced. So, do yourself a favor and jump on this chance as Sidi Ensar once again has been very generous and kind to lower the price. This won't last long though!
 
Well done!
Never smelled TW95 myself but just noticed that Ensar are having their usual pre Ramadan special sale. Good opportunity to score one oil or more. :)
I wished it was available on the full website and not just some of the oils only. Very appreciated though. ;)
 

Simla House

Well-Known Member
I don't mean to alarm anyone, but there is an earthquake going on at the EO wesbite :eek::eek::eek:
Just blind bought Tigerwood 95 - that is how much faith and deep appreciation I have for EO oils.

Call 911, I just got away with a steal........
You won't be disappointed with that one.
Amazing 4 stage, 4 hour arc with that oud (not to be confused with the longevity; it's an all day affair).
Highly recommended at this generous price.
 

RobertOne

Well-Known Member
Maluku '96



We wanted you to get a glimpse of our Oud Royale 2017, so here is a bag of the grandaddy wood harvested from the same (now extinct) aquilaria cumingiana trees.

This batch is already 20 years-old, harvested in 1996 on Ambon Island, a mere speck on a map of the Maluku archipelago. There’s no way to find this wood today.

It’s a common misconception that black = quality. The darker, the blacker the wood, the better. That’s why people paint, varnish, wax, and do whatever it takes to get bunk wood to look darker than it really is. But it’s actually not that simple. Dark color is a strong indicator of quality, but not as a rule. The best proof of this is Kyara. Much of kyara is actually a specific strain of light-yellow-hued kyen, just like you’ve got here…

Roll a piece of Maluku ’96 about in your palm and you immediately realize that you’re holding a different breed of agarwood. Appearance wise, the wood kinda resembles sandalwood. Only, the scent is many dials up on the spice-scale, and the burn much, much longer. The pieces aren’t black, they’re not even dark brown. Yet, compared to just about every kind of agarwood you’ll ever burn, Maluku aloes is so striking in scent it’s sure to be among the most memorable you’ll smell in your life. Try it: put on a sliver of any batch of wood you own – Cambodi, Borneo, Thai, even Papuan – then bring on the Maluku. I bet you’ll think you’re smelling a newly discovered species of agarwood!





Aficionados of the Japanese incense tradition will appreciate this. It’s not about the look or even the texture of the wood that makes it good or bad. It’s all about the smell. Full stop. That a chip is darker, or has a sticky-pasty texture are signs of quality, sure, but in the end these are only clues that tell you what the smell might be like. Does it have that slight bitterness that classifies it as Rakoku or is it sweet enough to be Manaban? That’s what Kodo disciples seek, not ‘how black is it?’ A Japanese Kodo master will often much prefer a completely ordinary looking strip to a pitch black one. That’s because he knows there’s a lot more to exceptional agarwood than just the hue.

The Maluku ‘96 aroma is so far out, so different to what you’ve come to know as the typical ‘oud chip’ scent, I almost want to put a disclaimer here: “Only for experienced monkoh adepts!” I say that because it’s so unlike the staple oud scent you’d expect from even the finest Borneo chips that a newcomer might well get confused. Then again, better to jump into the deep end and see just how awesome oud wood gets!



Maluku ‘96 hits different mood buttons, tunes a new kind of ambiance, and simply stirs up the olfactory joy you experienced when you first got into heating raw agarwood. It’s that fresh of a take on oud chips! An acacia sweetness that echoes notes of hibiscus and magnolia. Dew drops of fallen laves about to dry, that day-after-the-rain aroma, a tinge of bitterness that you’d associate with rare Sinensis. And, believe it or not, there’s a hint of Mysore in there, cedar and dried citrus.

Different types of wood are suited to different styles of heating. These ones work well for any occasion because each piece is entirely burnable – resin permeates the entire chip, right through to its center. So, there’s no need to cut out any white streaks that line the resin (like you see with inferior chips) that gives it that firewood smell right at first whiff. This means you’ll be alright putting a chip on a hot charcoal, if you have to. The wood itself is sturdy and tenacious so even if you scorch it on a hot coal you’d still get the heart of the scent in good measure. Of course, heat the chips at a lower temperature and you’re in for a bouquet of wild flowers and a spiciness that trumps even straight cedar, with a mystical aroma that reminds you that this is oud from a different era. That’s vintage Maluku for you…



I’ve found that many people think most oud wood kind of smells the same. Or, at least, the different regions’ woods don’t have the same contrast you find in oud oils. Well, heat up a piece of this and it’s like you’re someone who’s used to Thai ouds and then suddenly somebody gives you a swipe of Xiang Liao Ling – how’s that for a mind shift?!

The uniqueness of the scent is great in itself. But what’s even better is how it will broaden your appreciation for every other kind of oud wood. Remember: In the world of oud, contrast is the way to go. Experience as many scent profiles as possible in order to delve deeper into each, that’s the rule of thumb. In that vein, you should get at least a few Maluku burns behind your back because your olfactory palette will be so much more enriched thereby. Not to mention the otherworldly aroma that lingers when you get back home from work… when your mood is instantly effected by the primal calm inspired by raw oud wood.

I wish I had more Maluku wood. I wish I could find more Maluku wood. But what I have is all I’ve got and will ever get. And there’s not much to go around. The pieces are so rare and so unlike anything else, I encourage you to not just get some to burn today. Get a little bit extra for tomorrow as well…

Highly recommended.



Note: If you ask me, just about all these chips qualify as miniature display pieces. Someone artistically inclined will quickly find a way to showcase them, only burning a tiny sliver at a time.

If we offered our normal 10 gr packets, we’d have to start breaking up these beautiful olfactory portraits. We’d hate to do that and ruin their natural shape, so to preserve each chip’s integrity (this is the way nature carved them, after all) we’re only offering a handful of 10 gr packets, while the remainder of the batch comes in 20+ gr sizes. And honestly, with oud wood this rare and this exceptional, you shouldn’t get less than that anyway!

https://ensaroud.com/product/maluku-'96/412
They are sculptures in themselves, astonishing that Aquilaria could be beautiful on a purely visual level.

Their organic forms are liken onto rorschach ink-blots.

Buterflies, calligraphy, the tears of ifrit, the blood of djinn, songbirds.
 

kooolaid79

Well-Known Member
Thank you guys! Just picked up another Archipelago to stash away as a gift for my son's high school graduation.
What a beautiful gift Dr! Many congratulations again on acquiring such a fantastic Oudh.
My younger brother who got the Archipelago plans on telling my other brother to get it as it is a Oudh which one can only tell by wearing and smelling it. Hopefully some other friends who are also young into the oudh world will have to get this Oudh if they want to grow and mature into the depth of Oudh!
 

Kruger

Well-Known Member
SultanAhmetSale.jpg

In light of recent talks about the subjective/objective nature of smell, I wanted to take the opportunity to:

1. Remind you take another look at Sultan Ahmet, which lets you know what we think about the matter.

2. Let everyone know that Ensar made it clear that he never intends to discount Sultan Ahmet again. Personally, I never would if I could help it (I was there and know what these ouds cost to make - financially & physically… not to mention even putting my own marriage on hold to make it happen!). The description also makes it clear what we think about the current, non-sale, price… for those interested in 10th-of-the-price Etsy smell-alikes :)

So, the $500 discount is only for this limited time, and will not come around again.
 

Ensar Oud

Well-Known Member
I couldn't let you go without a mind-altering Sri Lankan Sultan, now could I?

I bet the Sri Lankan ouds you've smelled have been, bar none, delicate floral, nice-smelling 'ouds'. Light in color and profile. What sets Sultan Salman apart is that it doesn’t do 'nice'. This is a resinous blast straight from the heart of centennial Walla Patta mother trees.

Now… picture a Sri Lankan oil turned equal parts New Guinea ethereal and transendent. Picture that same oceanic blue-green vaporousness infused with the almost Bornean buttery spiciness so inherent in Walla. Fuse them together into a unique Ceylonian scent and you've captured the most exquisite aroma agarwood has to give.

If you're ready to sign up for some proper graduate studies in the scent of raw resin (not auxilliary notes!) then here you've got the agaresin on full display.

At the risk of putting down a bottle of oud that sold for $1,000 more, quality-wise Sultan Salman smells right on par with Sultan Abdül Aziz… And the blue-green, all-resin profile… bang on! Only with that dark Walla cucumber cool smoke atop mimosa blossoms beckoning the soul to caverns yet unexplored by any oudloving nose that ever went.... "Ahhhhhh!"

This Ramadan only, save a whopping $710 on a bottle of Sultan Salman. Limited Supply!
https://ensaroud.com/product/sultan-salman/524

 

Ensar Oud

Well-Known Member
SURIRANKA SENKOH

Crafting Sri Lankan oud has been the biggest challenge of my career. Do you love the frangipani and mimosa blossoms though? And the little green algae swimming atop the pristine coral reef? That’s why I stick with it and grudgingly keep going. A difficult marriage, Sri Lankan oud is like a woman too beautiful to let go of.

Indian and Chinese buyers are cleaning out the Walla jungles as we speak. Three of our hunters drowned in the flood that hit a couple of months ago (may they rest in peace), as the biggest broker in the country watched his entire stock wash away.

It’s not just going neck and neck against what the Chinese are paying for wood – it’s that you’re competing for the same wood and you want to use it to make oil. (“Who on Earth wants to make oil out of resinous agarwood?! That is the big mistake on your side,” in a thick Indian accent).

Aside from that, prices here are already two, three, four times higher than the same grades command elsewhere, and not because of middlemen… I’m talking at the source!

Small wonder I just think of packing up all the time.

That’s until you empty the beaker and get your first whiff of oud like Suriranka Senkoh. And it feels like you’ve just stumbled upon a forgotten trail that runs deep through a forest lush with colors you’ve never seen before. Suddenly, you don’t think of leaving anymore…

Suriranka Senkoh is not the kind of oud you can distill at first attempt even with the best batches of wood at your disposal. There’s the temperature curves, the boiler angles, the condenser’s crooked neck… too many things you need to be intimately familiar with before you can ever pull out this kind of smell.

Sultan Salman added a New Guinea flare to Ceylon. This time you’re getting full-on incense-grade WP with front row seats for an up-close and personal with the oleoresin oozing on a low heat monkoh heater, Chukogu Senkoh style. No yellow hued, fruity smells here. The blue-green resinous core is so deep it makes you want to pull your hair out in ecstasy and scream: a beauty almost too beautiful to behold.

The green frangipanied marine top notes of zesty Walla dart at you right through the drydown, where it’s still all that… only more like Vietnamese bitterness that’s gone lemon blossom crazy. If you had your doubts about what real incense-grade Walla ought to smell like, doubt no more!

This is among the most precious oils I’ve ever made, and one I intended to release only a few years from now. The cucumber cool, mimosalicious top notes. The sinking incense note that’s so pretty you can’t believe it came out of wood. The pristine champa heart, filtered blue and green. I’d marry it if I could. The aquatic kiss that brands your cheeks aquamarine. The white frangipani that swims in monkoh smoke. The tuk-tuks, the missing yield, the drowned hunters, the heartbreak surrounding every single aspect of coaxing such odour out of trees… Oud that’s so in-your-face good I’m afraid I won’t be able to smell anything like it again.

This oil goes out to those people who have supported my craft over the years and tagged along to taste my struggles. You deserve it!

 
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