Guest guest Posted December 28, 2000 Report Share Posted December 28, 2000 wildthinng@... wrote: > Where can I purchase vegetable glycerin? I usually buy mine at http://www.jeansgreens.com. Nice lady--good prices. May -- ~~Amo ergo sum~~ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 29, 2000 Report Share Posted December 29, 2000 www.craftexpress.com has it for $12.50 a gallon marilyn in Texas Where can I purchase vegetable glycerin? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 29, 2000 Report Share Posted December 29, 2000 I purchase my vegetable glycerine from Herbal Accents in California. http://www.herbalaccents.com You can shop via the site or request a catalog. I have found that they are the most reasonable in price. I get most of my products from them. Debbie Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 29, 2000 Report Share Posted December 29, 2000 After checking out all the places where people buy their supplies, I have to say that Liberty Natural Products is cheaper on many of the items. The are located in Portland, OR Their on line catalog is at: http://www.libertynatural.com/ I've been doing business with them for about 5 years and find them to be very helpful. -- AJ's Udder Delight Saanen, Oberhasli, Toggenburg Dairy Goats Milk production in an UDDERly DELIGHTful package UDDERly DELIGHTful Goatmilk Soap and Bath Products Green Kennewick, WA http://www.nwinfo.net/~milkmaid http://www.agdomain.com/web/ajudgoats/ _____________________________________________ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 13, 2004 Report Share Posted November 13, 2004 Bumpas wrote: > What technically is vegetable glycerin? It sounds more like a chemical than a food. > Well it does rather :-)) and it doesn't help that you usually buy it in the hand cream section of the HF store!!! It's a plant extract from plant fats treated with the alkai of a fatty acid to form this glycerine that has a sweet taste. It's been in use since 1779. The name comes from the Greek word glykys meaning sweet. It is a colorless, odorless, viscous, nontoxic liquid with a very sweet taste and has many uses, the sweetness being just one of them. It's not technically a sugar but a " trihydric alcohol " . Alcohol here is a category of molecular structure not the ethyl alcohol that is in wine and spirits nor the isoprpyl alcohol in rubbing alcohol. It's a separate type of molecule. Apart from using it as a sweetener you find it in facial scrubs, hand cream, foot creme, contact lens cleaner, moisturizers, etc. Reason: A lot of things can dissolve in glycerine that do not dissolve in other solvents like water or alcohol and so it is also used as a solvent. More common solvents are water and alcohol. A lot of natural remedies are made in a glycerine base for its solvent capabilities, including all gemmotherapy ones developed by the French from the growing tips of plants. (The components needewdfor the remedy dissolve better in glycerine than in water or alcohol. Glycerine does not dry out on exposure to air so that also makes it a good lubricant. It's in a lot of lubricating products whether industrial or skin moisturizer or enemas :-) It has the unusual ability to blend equally well with water or oil so that makes it ideal for many products that want oily and watery ingredients together - hence skin creams and such. It does not " go off " so is used as a preservative in many applications including leather tanning. As for ingestion - due to the enema effect, you do not want to consume it by the gallon. A very large amount will act as an emetic but is not advised as one. You would not consider it nutritious as such - just a nontoxic way to make something staste sweet. Many medicines are made in glycerine for that reason, and topical ones use glycerine because it helps absorption through the skin. As a sweetener I find a half teaspoon sweetens a cup of frozen berries well enough for me - I used to use a teaspoon but found that too sweet. Vegetable glycerine is derived from fats of plants. It involves " saponification " of fats - the name of the chemical extraction process. Regular glycerine is made from animal fats. It can also be made by fermentation of alcohol. And the manufacture of soap has glycerine as a by-product - regular glycerine, not vegetable glycerine. Oh I forgot - it can also be used to make a fuel called " bio-diesel " :-)) So you may now know a lot more than you wanted to know about glycerine and vegetable glycerine :-)) Because it is such a fantastic solvent it has as many uses as that other fantastic solvent - water. Namaste, Irene -- Irene de Villiers, B.Sc; AASCA; MCSSA; D.I.Hom. P.O.Box 4703, Spokane, WA 99220-0703. http://www.angelfire.com/fl/furryboots/clickhere.html Veterinary Homeopath and Feline Information Counsellor. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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