In the lanes of Bangalore, the scent of freshly rolled agarbathi has been part of daily life for generations. Karnataka is one of India's great incense heartlands, home to hundreds of agarbathi producers ranging from small family workshops to large-scale operations. Jaygee Industries sits proudly in the first category — a family business now in its third generation, where the recipes, the techniques, and the values have been passed from hand to hand since the 1960s.
This is the story of how a stick of incense is made — and why it matters.
The Art Behind the Smoke: A 60-Year Heritage
"The recipe is the most closely guarded part of our craft. Everything else can be taught. The recipe is inherited."
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Sourcing the Raw Materials
The quality of an incense stick begins long before rolling begins. Authentic masala agarbathi uses natural raw ingredients: sandalwood powder from Mysore, dried jasmine and rose petals, aromatic resins like loban (benzoin) and frankincense, herbs such as vetiver and neem, and mineral charcoal for the base. Low-quality incense often substitutes synthetic fragrance oils and chemical binders to cut costs. At Jaygee Industries, every ingredient is selected for purity — a non-negotiable standard inherited from the founding generation.
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Grinding and Blending
Raw ingredients are dried and ground into fine powders. Each material has its own grind size and texture — sandalwood is different from resin, which is different from dried flowers. The powders are then combined according to the recipe. The recipe determines the fragrance character, the burn duration, the smoke density, and how the scent changes as the stick burns down. Our recipes have been refined over decades.
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Making the Dough
The blended powders are mixed with jigat — a natural binding gum derived from the bark of the Machilus Macrantha tree — and water to form a pliable, fragrant dough. The consistency must be right: too dry and the dough cracks; too wet and it won't hold its shape on the bamboo core. This step requires experienced hands.
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Hand-Rolling
Thin bamboo sticks — typically 8 to 12 inches long — form the spine of every agarbathi. The dough is hand-rolled around the bamboo in a smooth, even motion, applying consistent pressure to create a uniform coating. An experienced roller can produce hundreds of sticks per hour. At Jaygee Industries, this remains a hand process. It always has been.
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Sun-Drying
Freshly rolled sticks are laid out on bamboo trays and sun-dried for 24 to 48 hours, depending on humidity and temperature. This natural drying process is essential — it allows the aromatic compounds to set without heat damage, preserving the delicate top notes of the fragrance. Oven-drying is faster, but it changes the scent profile.
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Quality Check and Packing
Dried sticks are sorted by hand. Any that are uneven, cracked, or below standard are set aside. The rest are counted, bundled, and packed into packaging that reflects the care that went into making them. From raw ingredient to finished stick, the entire process takes 3–4 days.
Why This Matters When You Buy
When you choose authentic masala agarbathi from a producer who still follows traditional methods, you're not just buying a better fragrance experience — though you are getting that. You're supporting a craft tradition that sustains livelihoods, preserves indigenous knowledge, and keeps a piece of Indian cultural heritage alive.
At Jaygee Industries, that's been our purpose for sixty years. And it will remain our purpose for the next sixty.
Taste the Craft — Shop Directly from the Source
When you buy from Bangalore Incense, our retail store, you're buying directly from the family that makes every stick — the same family that has been doing this for over sixty years, across three generations, right here in Bangalore. No middlemen. No markups. Just authentic masala agarbathi at honest prices, shipped to your door across India and internationally.
Shop Our Full Heritage Collection →Wholesale & bulk orders welcome. Contact us at sales@jaygeeindustries.com for trade pricing.