Guest guest Posted June 24, 2004 Report Share Posted June 24, 2004 I hear you Bobbi, but I'm with Deb. The water I can understand, but dirt? The process you describe sounds ok, but it doesn't sound like this is the process that was used for your product. Steam would include essential oil and water, but not dirt. Nor would it pass through any kind of filtration system worthy of the name, assuming somehow it had gotten that far. As a separate issue, what did you pay compared to what the EO normally goes for? If yours has water in it, then I hope he gave you a really good price. Diane GreenFireHerbs.com Re: seperating oil and water It is an essential oil, the farmer I bought it from explained the process and I will be able to witness it first hand in a month or two. Yes it is steam distilled. They put the mint into a large trailer that is hooked up to the steam pipes. The steam heats the mint up to some really high temperature and as the steam rises it catches the oils in the process. Those droplets of water and oil are then put into another machine that does some filtration and drops the temperature down to 150 degrees. It then sits for a few days so the water and sediment can collect at the bottom of the very large barrels. The peppermint essential oil that I received was the last of his stock until august and that probably why there was sediment in it. Anything that comes from nature, unless it has been thoroughly cleaned first, has the potential of having dirt on it. Its a simple straining to get the sediment out. Its the water that I am having issues with. Steam distillation uses water so it isnt so far off to think that there would be water than needed to be removed at some point in the process. > I don't understand how this is an essential oil. from what i have learned/studied, most eo's are steam distilled and wouldn't have dirt in them. nor would they have water left over as a residue. sounds to me like youu have more of a peppermint infusion than eo. > deb Post message: Cosmeticinfo Subscribe: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Cosmeticinfo Unsubscribe: Cosmeticinfo-unsubscribe List owner: Cosmeticinfo-owner URL to this page: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Cosmeticinfo Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 24, 2004 Report Share Posted June 24, 2004 can you get your hands on a separatory funnel?? kiwana Re: seperating oil and water To: cosmeticinfo Bobbi, How fun to get essential oil directly from the still! I wouldn't filter it as you might loose some of the oil. I would take the smallest (narrowest) pippette you can and gradually suck off the oil from the top. If you try to pour it you wil risk mixing them again. Or if it is a large amount, you can pour a majority of it, then let it set and pipette off the smaller amount. I assume the dirt is in the water phase and so will just stay back with the water then. It will be better to loose some of your oil rather than get some water in your oil! Sagescript Institute, LLC Microbiology Assays Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 24, 2004 Report Share Posted June 24, 2004 I guess the reason I can understand the dirt is that water will trap dirt, naturally. It might not have been filtered, I might be off on that. But the oil is pure, I simply poured it through a coffee filter a couple of times to get rid of the dirt. The problem was mainly the oil/water issue. I thank everyone for their advice. The essential oil was the very last of the most recent crop this season. The grower literally has only 6 ounces left and I got it all. He showed me two other mint essential oils, both varieties of spearmint and they were completely clear and no water at the bottom, so I assume that since it was at the bottom of the barrel, so to speak, that is why the water was present. On the issue of price.....it is literally the best price I have seen. I have purchased from another grower out of state and the price was nearly double on the same amount and then shipping on top. It smells fantastic, just like other high quality peppermint essential oils I've smelled. I am very pleased with it and its quality. It is also nice to have the opportunity to witness the process and trust that it is pure, uncut and unadulterated. I have even purchased from some of the big brand names in essential oils (who will remain nameless) and none even compare to how incredible this smells. oh, and I got a drop on my finger......it tingled for more than an hour(it seems very strong).....I wont do that again!! But I'm sure a small amount mixed well with a carrier will be just wonderful. Here we come foot products!! Thanks a bunch, Bobbi Benski Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 24, 2004 Report Share Posted June 24, 2004 The problem was mainly the > oil/water issue. I wonder if you were to freeze it. I would think that the water would freeze before the oil and that may give you a chance to get rid of most of it. Pat. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 25, 2004 Report Share Posted June 25, 2004 In a message dated 6/24/2004 9:31:59 AM Pacific Daylight Time, fyreflye_@... writes: > it isnt so far off to think that > there would be water than needed to be removed at some point in the > process. I'm no expert in eo's/distillation by no means, but from what I remember from a 3-month course in spa & aromatherapy, there IS something else needed in this farmer's distillation process - somewhere for the water to go. The water should not be going into the same container as the eo. I can't help you with how to separate the water and eo, but try emailing Butch. His website is www.av-at.com. Teresea C. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 25, 2004 Report Share Posted June 25, 2004 In a message dated 6/24/2004 9:31:59 AM Pacific Daylight Time, fyreflye_@... writes: > it isnt so far off to think that > there would be water than needed to be removed at some point in the > process. I'm no expert in eo's/distillation by no means, but from what I remember from a 3-month course in spa & aromatherapy, there IS something else needed in this farmer's distillation process - somewhere for the water to go. The water should not be going into the same container as the eo. I can't help you with how to separate the water and eo, but try emailing Butch. His website is www.av-at.com. Teresea C. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 26, 2004 Report Share Posted June 26, 2004 > In a message dated 6/24/2004 9:31:59 AM Pacific Daylight Time, > fyreflye_@h... writes: > > it isnt so far off to think that > > there would be water than needed to be removed at some point in the > > process. Would anhydrous calcium sulfate work? Add to the oil, shake and it should absorb the water, then filter off? Dave Eastham Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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