The upcoming growing season is on the horizon and it's time to make sure that everything from the previous season is realized.
This week we hand painted and labeled all of our 2013 honey jars. Here is a photo from 2012's honey batch on a previous post.
And we decanted all of our calendula oils and made balms. As herbal medicine is the medicine of the people, the process of making balms is totally accessible and relishable. I wanted to offer a simple recipe which you will find below. If you have questions let me know!
Calendula Flowers |
Calendula in Oil Sitting Sunside |
A bit of strained Calendula Jojoba Oil |
Balm Making Session with the Lovely: Karen, Trevor & Jen. Thank you!!! |
|
Last bit of heart shaped beeswax melting in Calendula Oil |
Step One: Gather Calendula Flower
Calendula flowers have beautiful seeds and take to the earth very easily.
Step Two: Lay flowers out to dry for a day.
Calendula's moist healing properties can lend themselves to encouraging mold.
Drying them out a bit helps reassure a mold-free process!
Step Three: Place calendula flowers in a clean and dry glass container.
Cover flowers in oil. Let sit in a sunny spot until ready to use.
If you were to look in a book for how to make an oil, it might recoommend to put calendula oil on a heat mat for 2-6 weeks.
But before the time of heat mats, we had sunshine and I like the method of placing jars in a spot where it receives both the sun and moon.
A greenhouse is a nice cozy spot as well.
There are many types of oil options. The oil you choose will be determined by your final product's intended use,
as well as what oils happen to be in your home.
In this batch I used a blend of cold-pressed organic olive oil and wildcrafted jojoba oil.
Olive oil is highly nutritive, stable and an all-around good option and jojoba is a very stable oil,
easily absorbed into the skin and a bit thinner than olive oil and so a nice option for a face balm.
Step Four: Strain Oil into Clean Dry Glass Jar
Don't forget to squeeze out the oil from the flowers
Step Five: Heat up Oil
A double boiler system is fantastic, with a glass bowl over a pot with boiling water.
Heat the oil on low heat
Step Six: Add beeswax & dissolve into Oil
I like to use for every 1 cup of oil, 1 ounce of beeswax. If you don't have a scale you can slowly add beeswax, melting it in the oil, and taking a spoon to test samples to gauge if you need more wax. We didn't have enough beeswax this year from the farm so we supplemented with wax from Healing Spirits Herb Farm. Thank you!!
Step Seven: Take off heat and add anything else.
This blend will cool and solidify rapidly so this next step I like to do with some haste.
Some ideas: Essential Oil: 5-10 drops to 1 ounce
Vitamin E
Step Eight: Pour into containers and let cool before sealing
Share & Enjoy!
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