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Hydrosols

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Hi Karen,

 

As Butch mentioned below, they can be used in lotions in place of the

distilled water, in linen sprays, body sprays, air fresheners, skin

toners, baths, household cleaners, soaps, etc ....

 

I even use some hydrosols in food recipes! Rose hydrosol is wonderful in

confections, and some of the the other hydrosols (such as lemon myrtle)

are fabulous mixed with seltzer water (in summer they are especially

refreshing) for a light beverage. I've used rosemary and oregano

hydrosols with salt and water for throat gargles when sick ... so many

possibilities.

 

Happy hydrosoling!!!!

 

*Smile*

Chris (knee deep in slush!)

 

http://www.alittleolfactory.com

 

**snipped**

 

 

> I've heard of them being used for soap-making but other than that

> I don't know how to use them.

> Karen J

 

Chris needs to help out a little bit here with how she uses them in

soaps/cosmetics in place of water. ...

 

 

Chris will tell you that you can make lots of nice stuff with them ..

like linen sprays, room fresheners, face and body mists .. especially

with rose and/or lavender hydrosols .... you can bathe in them and act a

danged fool with'em if you have enough. ;-) ...

 

Hydrosols can be used as the water part of creams and lotions, can be

used in soap making, can be made into facial toner, etc. ...

..

 

Y'all keep smiling, Butch http://www.AV-AT.com

 

 

 

 

 

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Hey Karen,

 

> I have asked this before and haven't gotten a response so I will ask

> it again.

 

Best to do that .. cause I didn't see this one first time around.

 

> Do hydrosols have the same properties as their corresponding

> essential oils and are just " diluted " ? And do you used them for the

> same maladies??

 

Sorta .. and .. Sorta No .. and No. ;-p

 

> I've heard of them being used for soap-making but other than that

> I don't know how to use them.

> Karen J

 

Chris needs to help out a little bit here with how she uses them in

soaps/cosmetics in place of water.

 

Hydrosols are gentler and safer than the essential oils .. hydrosols

will more accurately reflect the true profile of the plant because an

essential oil contains only non-water soluable chemical constituents ..

hydrosols contain both because hydrosols contain the essential oil too.

 

The percentage of essential oil in a hydrosol depends on the value of

the essential oil. For example .. Oregano, Rosemary, Sage and the like

are distilled once and the remaining hydrosol can have up to 10% EO in

it .. maybe more depending on the plant distilled.

 

But oils like Rose Otto and Melissa are cohobated .. to get the rest of

the oil out of the hydrosol. That simply means .. the hydrosol is run

through a second form of distillation and in the case of Rose Otto, the

lion's share of the Rose Otto is removed that second time. Wouldn't be

cost effective to do that with a relatively inexpensive EO.

 

Rose Hydrosol still has a MINIMUM of 1% Rose Otto in it .. get your

calculator out and you'll see that it is far more valuable than the

highest price you could pay for Rose Hydrosol. But that remaining EO

can't be reclaimed because (1) it would be too expensive to run it again

for that amount of oil ... (2) it would harm the oil to run it again.

 

You ask the use of Hydrosols .. you need to narrow it down to the type

you speak of as each has its own purpose .. often shared but not in

every case.

 

Many can be drank .. most all can be used on skin .. some can be used in

the eyes .. some can be used on newborn babies butts .. and Rose

Hydrosol can even be used around cats .. says the expert Lavender Sue.

 

Chris will tell you that you can make lots of nice stuff with them ..

like linen sprays, room fresheners, face and body mists .. especially

with rose and/or lavender hydrosols .... you can bathe in them and act a

danged fool with'em if you have enough. ;-)

 

Hydrosols can be used as the water part of creams and lotions, can be

used in soap making, can be made into facial toner, etc.

 

But you know all that now .. cause prior to sending this post .. I done

dumped a bunch stuff in your In Box. ;-p

 

Also .. go here and read .. understand the system and you'll get a much

better idea about the them .. gotta see the big picture.

http://www.av-at.com/distillation/rosadamascena1.html

 

Y'all keep smiling, Butch http://www.AV-AT.com

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  • 8 months later...

Butch:

 

I'm currently taking Jeanne Rose's aromatherapy correspondence course and

just recently attended her " Vocabulary of Scent " weekend intensive. She

does, indeed, claim to have " invented " the term hydrosol. Came from her own

two lips.

 

Interesting to finally meet her in person, to say the least. Not exactly

what I was expecting. I enjoyed the workshop and I AM learning, but she's

not the easiest instructor I've ever had :).

 

Georgene

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Hi Georgene,

 

Very interesting!

 

And check this out ... I saw one supplier define the difference between

hydrosols and hydrolats as this:

" Many people use the terms interchangeably. Our definitions are that a

hydrolat is the water recovered from the distilLATion of the essential

oil, a hydrosol is the essential oil diSOLved in water, these hydrosols

normally contain a small amount of alcohol. "

So even with those terms folks disagree on the exact meaning ;-p

 

*Smile*

Chris (list mom)

 

http://www.alittleolfactory.com

 

 

 

 

Georgene Lockwood [glockwood]

Tuesday, December 09, 2003 10:19 AM

 

Re: hydrosols

 

 

Butch:

 

I'm currently taking Jeanne Rose's aromatherapy correspondence course

and

just recently attended her " Vocabulary of Scent " weekend intensive. She

does, indeed, claim to have " invented " the term hydrosol. Came from her

own

two lips.

 

Interesting to finally meet her in person, to say the least. Not exactly

what I was expecting. I enjoyed the workshop and I AM learning, but

she's

not the easiest instructor I've ever had :).

 

Georgene

 

 

 

 

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At 05:08 PM 12/9/03, you wrote:

> " Many people use the terms interchangeably. Our definitions are that a

>hydrolat is the water recovered from the distilLATion of the essential

>oil, a hydrosol is the essential oil diSOLved in water, these hydrosols

>normally contain a small amount of alcohol. "

>So even with those terms folks disagree on the exact meaning ;-p

 

Dhris, could you share the source for THAT one, please?

 

seems to me they are...well, nemmine what they are saying about people like

us who sell HYDROSOLS...which are products of distillation...

 

 

 

 

 

Your source for superb Essential Oils, Aromatherapy

Accessories, Information, Books and more!

Visit us at: <http://www.naturesgift.com>

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>hydrolat is the water recovered from the distilLATion of the essential

>oil, a hydrosol is the essential oil diSOLved in water, these hydrosols

>normally contain a small amount of alcohol. "

 

Marge wrote:

 

Chris, could you share the source for THAT one, please?

 

seems to me they are...well, nemmine what they are saying about people

like

us who sell HYDROSOLS...which are products of distillation...

 

Alexander-Essentials over in the UK - not sure but in this un-original

world one has to figure they maybe got the idea from somebody else and

rehashed it ... ;)

 

*Smile*

Chris (List mom)

http://www.alittleolfactory.com

 

 

 

 

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  • 5 months later...
Guest guest

At 01:16 PM 5/29/2004, you wrote:

 

>oops. That WAS supposed to go to Deb.

>Sorry, list.

 

 

doncha hate it...

 

actually, it's a good question and worth asking in public.

 

when you have a hydrosol you have something so different from the eo...

(and we won't even discuss the fresh flowers, 'cause the eo isn't going to

smell like them, either!)... but you have the water soluble phytochemicals

that don't come thru in the eo.

 

on the two hydrosols that you have...

 

I have never found a lavender hydrosol that I like... none of them truly

smell like the associated eo... and I've sampled US, french, bulgarian...a

range. something that comes thru in the hydrosol spoils the lavender

aroma...to my nose.

 

 

rose hydrosol shouldn't smell spoiled...but it's not going t smell like a

fresh flower, either... it's closer aromatically to a very much diluted

rose oil than the lavender is to a diluted lavender oil.

 

does that help some?

 

 

 

Your source for superb Essential Oils, Aromatherapy

Accessories, Information, Books and more!

Visit us at: <http://www.naturesgift.com>

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thanks. Responding off list (this time). lol

Cindy (the terribly embarrassed)

Pittstown Soapworks

www.pittstownsoapworks.com

-

 

 

doncha hate it...

 

actually, it's a good question and worth asking in public.

 

when you have a hydrosol you have something so different from the eo... (and

we won't even discuss the fresh flowers, 'cause the eo isn't going to smell like

them, either!)... but you have the water soluble phytochemicals that don't come

thru in the eo.

 

on the two hydrosols that you have...

 

I have never found a lavender hydrosol that I like... none of them truly smell

like the associated eo... and I've sampled US, french, bulgarian...a range.

something that comes thru in the hydrosol spoils the lavender aroma...to my

nose.

 

rose hydrosol shouldn't smell spoiled...but it's not going t smell like a

fresh flower, either... it's closer aromatically to a very much diluted rose

oil than the lavender is to a diluted lavender oil.

 

does that help some?

 

Your source for superb Essential Oils, Aromatherapy

Accessories, Information, Books and more!

Visit us at: <http://www.naturesgift.com>

 

 

 

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