One of the things that I’m always doing at this time of year is making creams.
It’s a simple recipe that I learned when studying at the
Canterbury College of Natural Medicine.
It’s based on Galen’s cold cream and has been around for a couple of
thousand years.
Herbal Cream Recipe:
60 ml oil
10g beeswax
10ml herbal infusion
Place oil and beeswax in the top of a double boiler or in a bowl
in a pan of water. Gently heat until
beeswax is melted. Remove from heat and
add herbal infusion. Beat until thick.
Comfrey, lemon balm and calendula infusing in oil. |
A preservative such as tincture of benzoin or vitamin e can be
added.
I found that this recipe needed the preservative. It goes mouldy quite easily. So (being me) I rearranged it slightly.
I make a warm infusion of my chosen herbs in the oil first and
remove the liquid infusion. It means
that it takes a lot longer to make creams, but the result is worth it and they
seem to keep forever - even with the lids half off the way Miss Seven seems to
always leave them.
To make a warm oil
infusion:
Heat oil in the top of a double boiler, or in a bowl on a pan of
water. Don’t let the water boil, a
gentle simmer is enough. Chop or grind
your herbs and add them to the oil.
Leave them infusing for at least an hour. When it’s ready, the herbs will seem used
up. Some will seem crunchy and others
limp and faded. Strain carefully through
cloth.
To finish the cream, add beeswax, dissolve and beat.
Straining herbs out of infused oil. |
My favourite herbs to use for this cream are comfrey, lemon balm
and calendula. I make this for eczema
and psoriasis as both Hubby and Miss Seven suffer from this kind of skin
disorder. It works a charm for both of
them. Another good one is to use
plantain and lavender for insect bites and stings. Chickweed can be added to this to ease any
itching. I’ve also made a sage and
garlic cream for athlete’s foot. It
worked but made the user smell like roast chicken.
The choice of oils depends on what you want to use.
● Olive oil is good for your
skin, but the cream is quite heavy and will sit on the skin for a while - this
isn’t always a bad thing. Olive oil is also becoming quite expensive.
● Apricot Kernel Oil or Almond Oil are both great for your skin,
light and easily absorbed, but expensive and no good for anyone with nut
allergies.
● Grapeseed Oil is cheap and while it’s not as light as Apricot or
Almond oils it’s not as heavy as Olive oil.
It can add a yellow tint to your cream, but this isn’t noticeable once
it’s on your skin.
● Any oil that is cold-pressed
is usually cold-pressed because it changes when heated. In many cases the
molecular structure of the oil breaks down and forms plastic polymers which is
no good for your cream (or eating).
Wax melting in infused oil. |
If you want to use essential oils instead of herbs, they should
be added during the beating, otherwise the heat will cause them to evaporate
leaving a pretty scent but no active constituents and therefore no actual
use. Be careful in selecting essential
oils - no more than 2 or 3 to a cream and 5 drops is the most I would recommend
adding to a mix of this size. Too many
different essential oils creates confusion in the cream and too much of any can
be detrimental to your skin. As your
skin is oil based, attempts to wash off an overpowering or irritating essential
oil with soap and water will only draw it deeper into your skin. If you want to remove an essential oil, pour
a carrier oil like olive oil over and then wipe it off with a paper towel.
Ointments are creams that sit on the surface of your skin and
are not absorbed into it. An olive oil
based cream is halfway there, but it will soak in after a while. They are good for nappy rash and situations
where your skin is already irritated.
Herbal Ointment Recipe:
Petroleum jelly (vaseline) or soft parafin wax
Dried herbs
Beating the cream - this is starting to set. |
Heat the jelly or wax with herbs in the same manner as a
cream. When the herbs are crispy and
used up it is ready. Strain and pour
into container.
My Little Tips and Tricks
Less is more. Don’t add
too many different herbs into a cream as it can cause confusion and they may
work against each other. Keep it
simple. If you want to make a cream for
multiple purposes, consider instead making several different creams.
Make sure you strain all of the herb out of the oil and as much
of the oil as you can out of the herbs.
Why leave oil behind in your herbs?
Any herbs that end up in your cream can go mouldy.
If you want to make your
cream more luxurious, add cocoa butter.
Don’t reduce the amount of wax or your cream
won’t set and will have fine hard lumps of wax suspended throughout.
Chop your wax into small pieces before adding to the oil. This makes it dissolve quicker and the whole
mix doesn’t get as hot which saves time beating.
Take your cream off the heat just before all the wax is
melted. It will continue to melt while
beating as there is still plenty of heat in the oil and this saves time
beating.
When beating, pour it into a glass baking jug first. This cools the oil and wax quicker and can
save you half an hour of beating time.
Finished Product |
Don’t spend money buying pots and jars for your creams. Reuse old plastic spread jars with wide
mouths. The small peanut butter or
nutella jars work very well. Old
cosmetic cream pots can be used too.
Alternatively, the cheap little food storage containers that you can buy
from the supermarket work very well too.
Make sure your jar or pot is clean and completely dry before
pouring your cream into it. Otherwise it
can cause mould in your cream.
Don’t rush to put your lids on.
If the jar and cream are still warm, they can sweat which can cause
mould.
Labelling can be awkward.
I’ve found that spirit markers rub off when you have some cream on your
hands and are opening or closing a jar.
A piece of paper stuck on with sellotape works.
Cleanup is awful! The
cream will not soak off your pots, jugs and spoons with dishwash and hot
water. It takes a bit of work to clean
your utensils - I stick with a spoon rather than a whisk for this reason. I also wipe everything firmly with paper
towels before attempting to wash, the cream seems to stick to the paper quite
well and it makes the clean up far easier.
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