The Romantic History of Honey
Honey has a long and romantic history—it is one of the oldest “ingredients” known to man. Women—and a few savvy men—through the ages have bathed in and used honey to keep their skin and hair radiant:
Madame du Barry, the infamous last mistress of Louis XV, used honey as a form of a facial mask, lying down for a rest while the honey did its work. Cleopatra of Egypt regularly took honey and milk baths to maintain her youthful appearance. It was said that Queen Anne of England used a honey and oil concoction to keep her long hair lustrous, thick and shiny. It was claimed that another famous Englishwoman, Sarah, Duchess of Marlborough, used her own secret recipe for honey water to keep her hair beautiful. Chinese women have a tradition of using a blend of honey and ground orange seeds to keep their skin blemish-free.
Honey’s Humectant and Antimicrobial Qualities
But history aside, honey is actually a pretty remarkable liquid. Honey is primarily known for its humectant—a compound that attracts moisture to itself and helps retain the moisture—and antimicrobial qualities. Naturally, humectants are wonderful oil additives to lotions, scrubs, and other skincare products. Honey’s unique chemical composition also makes it an effective antimicrobial agent. People have used it to treat minor burns and scrapes, and for aiding the treatment of sore throats and other bacterial infections for centuries. If you just want to use it in some tea or on a muffin, honey contains antioxidants, trace amounts of vitamins, so it’s better for you than just plain sugar.
Honey in Soap Making
Honey is also a wonderful additive to soaps, and you don’t have to be a beekeeper to use it. It imparts a light, warm, sweet scent, the added sugar content helps increase the lather, and acts as a humectant. We generally use about 1 tbs. per pound of oils and add it at a very light trace. You want to make sure it gets completely incorporated into the soap before your trace gets too thick. Honey will turn your soap a light tan color. This, similar to what occurs when you use milk in soap, is from the chemical reaction with the extra sugars in the soap. There are also melt and pour bases with honey in them like honey melt and pour base. You can add honey to just about any basic cold process soap recipe, or create your own recipe from scratch.
A Favorite Recipe
34% Olive 28% Coconut 19% Palm 5% Castor 9% Sunflower 5% Cocoa Butter
To make a 3 lb. batch of soap (2 lbs. of oils):
11 oz. olive oil9 oz. coconut oil6 oz. palm oil1.5 oz. castor oil3 oz. sunflower oil1.5 oz. cocoa butter4.6 oz. of lye10 oz of water2 generous tbsp. of honey added at very light traceFragrance and/or color as desired