Design by DivTag Weebly Templates
nutrition by nature
  • Blog
    • Metabolism / thyroid
    • Nutrition myths and health traps
    • Blood Sugar
    • Q&A Mondays
    • Lifestyle tips
    • Beauty
    • Recipes
    • Nutrition 101
    • Resources and links
    • Disclaimer
  • About
    • Media
  • Nutrition Services
    • Nutrition and health coaching
    • Tailored meal plans
    • Cooking classes
    • Price list
  • Testimonials
  • Contact

Rosemary and lemon sugar body scrub

9/5/2012

1 Comment

 
Who wants to pay upwards of $40 for a body scrub when you can home-brew your own for a couple of bucks? Cheap and cheerfulness aside, making your own skin products also means you can control exactly what’s going onto and into your body – your skin is porous and will soak up anything you slather on it, so needless to say additives and excess chemicals aren’t a great idea. If it’s good enough to eat, you can be sure it’s good enough to put on your skin (and perhaps bake with later, no?).
This is not a lotion as such, but the coconut oil is beautifully moisturizing (and won’t leave a greasy residue), whilst the sugar granules help to exfoliate dry skin. Rosemary extract, when applied topically, helps to strengthen capillaries and has a rejuvenating, antioxidant effect, whilst a little invigorating lemon oil departs freshness. Actually,dietary rosemary (ie not in body scrub form!) and rosemary oil consumed daily can help to block excess oestrogen and harmful oestrogen metabolites by stimulating liver enzymes that inactivate oestrone and oestrodiol (study), so including a good fistful of rosemary in your diet is a good way to support endocrine health.

Feel free to omit the rosemary and lemon and experiment with different culinary herbs and extracts – lemongrass, ginger and sage are an energizing combination, whilst infusing dried lavender or adding a few drops of rosewater or pure vanilla make for dreamy, sweet perfumes. Avoid using peppermint oil (or use sparingly) as it can irritate sensitive skin, and it probably goes without saying that using chilli would be a risky idea unless you have the hide of a rhino or are really into Johnny Cash.

Rosemary and lemon sugar body scrub

You’ll need a clean glass mason jar (>300ml capacity) to store the finished product.

1 cup coconut oil*
1.5 cups raw sugar (or other coarse sugar)
4-5 sprigs fresh rosemary
The peel of 1 lemon

Sterilize the glass jar by washing, drying, then placing in a 150°C oven for 20 minutes. Remove and allow to cool completely (do not wash the hot jar with cold water as it will shatter).

In a medium saucepan, heat coconut oil, rosemary and lemon peel until the oil has completely melted. Remove from heat and allow the mixture to infuse for 5-10 minutes. Strain out the rosemary leaves and lemon peel and discard, reserving oil. Allow oil to cool slightly for 5 minutes.

Stir sugar through the infused coconut oil, taking care not to add the sugar whilst the oil is still hot (warm is fine). Pour the mixture carefully into prepared mason jar and allow to set at room temperature.

Apply topically as needed as an exfoliating, moisturizing scrub, liberally on dry areas such as elbows and knees and more minimally on face. Allow to soak in before rinsing off excess after use.

Note: coconut oil is solid at room temperature, but I usually find the warmth of my fingers is enough to disperse a little oil and sugar from the jar once set. If you find the mixture too firm, store in the shower to use after you wash (the warm water and residual heat will be enough to melt the oil a little), or substitute a third of the coconut oil in the above recipe for extra virgin olive oil or macadamia oil (the monounsaturated fats will make the mixture a little runnier at room temperature).

*Refined coconut oil is best for this recipe as it has imparts no flavour and is hypoallergenic in comparison to raw, cold-pressed varieties which sensitive individuals may react to.
You may also like this post... 

Why I love coconut oil... + coconut oil chocolate with sea salt & chilli

1 Comment
http://classyresumewriter.com/ link
8/24/2016 11:13:19 am

Oh, I've heard a lot of complicated things about being beautiful in a healthy way. Nevertheless, it's really easy.

Reply



Leave a Reply.

    Kate Skinner Nutrition

    Kate Skinner

    Nutritionist, Health Writer
    Adv Dip Nutr. Med. (ACNT), 
    BDesArch (USyd)

    About Kate 

    Follow @nutrition_kate

    Top posts

    • Nutrition tips for sleep
    • Salt myths & truths: the value of dietary salt
    • Nuts & seeds are for birds & squirrels
      (not humans!)
       
    • Polyunsaturated vegetable oils: toxic
    • Gelatin: a beauty food
    • Super snack ideas
    • Weight loss 101:
      the dangers of
      under-eating and
       
      over-exercising
    • Love your love handles, ladies!
    • Will going vego really save the planet? 

    Hot topics

    All
    Blood Sugar
    Children's Health
    Delicious. Magazine
    Ethical Eating
    Events
    Exercise
    Fats
    Health Myths
    Health Traps
    Hormones
    Lifestyle Tips
    Metabolism
    Nutrition Myths
    Pregnancy & Fertility
    Q&A Mondays
    Real Food
    Recipes
    Skin & Beauty
    Sleep
    Sugar
    Thyroid
    Traditional Diets
    Weight

    RSS Feed


Website design copyright Kate Skinner. All images and content copyright Kate Skinner.
Powered by Create your own unique website with customizable templates.