I think the real rose hip oil is pressed out of the rose hip seed by cold pressing the seeds onley. This oil you make should be named : jojoba oil with rose hip and vitamin E. I hope you dont mind this comment. I like the video aniway...
I would not agree. Rosehip seeds are incredibly irritating to the touch, so why would cold pressing the seeds give you any benefit, unless somehow there's a chemical process to remove the irritating outer covering before pressing?
+Eva Hagstrom perhaps the heat process could destroy some of the good stuff within the rose hip.. and the carrier oils goodness as well.. generally when getting essential oils you want cold pressed. Rose water can be made in different ways. Afterall you store oils in dark bottles with openings so that the air and light doesn't spoil them. Carrier oils, do't go bad so easily.. unlike an essential or pure oil.
That’s so cute! You said, “and Bobs your uncle!!!” I’ve never heard that saying before and gave me something new to research and learn. Your lovely. Thank you.
I added sesame seed oil and olive oil to mine. Sesame seed oil works as a sunscreen and olive oil is amazing for skin. Rose hips have 600 times more vitamin C than an orange which is amazing.
Very nice. Can you also use dried rosehips for this oil? Also, never shake a bottle of any oil! It introduces too much air and will cause your oil to go rancid quickly. Instead, gently roll the bottle between your hands to mix the oils together. ❤️
You are wonderful! I take in teenagers, and love teaching them about food from scratch and natural remedies and such. You're our new online tutor! Thank you, A. And we'll be careful.
You seem such a delightful person. I had a little problem understanding words, ex: jojoba. I didn't know what you were saying, but someone made a comment that I was able to see. Perhaps you could print names of products that you use for us folks that are new to this. I will definitely look for more of your online instructions!
Thank you so much I really really enjoyed watching you create this anti-aging oil, I really really love ❤️ your Jack Russell too and I’ve subscribed and given you a thumb’s up too. Please stay safe and well too
So lovely .... I made some allready and added two drops of blue camomille oil in the end .... :-) I also made some oil with seabuckthorn.... very nice too :-)
This is lovely but for Rosehip Seed oil to be 100% effective, you need to cold press the mixture. However, with the Vit E, yes it would be good for our skin...but not the real drama of real Rosehip Oil and is natures' Retin-a. xxoo Susan
I just picked a load more rosehips, having made the syrup recently. I didn't read how many you need, so may have to make more syrup! Your video is probably how I would make mine, slightly random, its funny cos I am not the only one who loses things, when you just had them, and would do the sameon a lace table cloth. Funny! Keep it up!
Thank you, so much for your video. I made mine from organic dry rosehips and it did not come out clear in color, it came put quite dark, I strained it 3 times but still dark, any idea why?
Hi Lucy, sorry for delayed response! Have had youtube issues. Mine also came out a dark yellow, is absolutely normal as it's the colour of the rosehip : )
Okay first off I can't believe it's this easy I literally thought you had no idea what you where doing and went and watched other videos. I'm SURPRISED!!! I can't believe it's that simple. Just Simmer/soak the rose-hip's in a base oil like jojoba or almond oil and that's it. This is really it I can't believe it. If that's it, why is it so expensive in stores. Oh can you make rose water the same way like simmer/soak the rose-hips In water then that's it. Please write back I would like to make rose water as well. Thanks so much. Blizzards of love Chanelle
Hi Ember, sorry for delay .. didn't see your msg! Most good, natural products are most expensive, simply because good ingredients cost more, synthetic ingredients are cheap and easy to mass produce. In fact I wrote a post on this subject, and the best natural products I've found, hope it helps! I haven't makde rose water yet so I can't offer advice on that. www.ahandmadecottage.com/2014/01/why-choose-natural-beauty-products.html
i have 5 beautiful mini rose bushes in my yard that i planted a few years ago and feeling kind of bad that i wasted all the rosehips in the past not knowing they could be used for so many good things. i also have "my baby" mini rose that i keep in my home too. i am wondering now tho, after reading someones comment on what types of roses can be used. i understand any rose will do, but do you know if the same goes for mini roses? ive saved so many rosehips and dehydrated and saved tons of petals to use in mt teas and homemade cosmetics. i feel and see a ton of benefits yet maybe it could just be all in my head? lol ive tried looking it up with no luck. so i was hoping you might know? anyways, thank you for this video! i definitely subbed! really enjoy the way you talk. so soft and elegant. very relaxing to listen to.
Hi Kat! Aw thank you, I'm glad you liked the video and thanks for the complement on the way I talk, I'm not sure my husband would agree ;-) Haha. As for using small Rose hips I'm not sure to be honest? I imagine they could be used but you perhaps wouldn't get as much goodness from them as you might from the larger varieties? but that said there's no harm in trying! sorry I can't be of more help x
This might be a dumb question so I apologize in advance...but can you use dried rose hips? I don't think well I don't really know where to get fresh rose hips? Would you get the same benefits with the dried roses.
Love your video. Please make more of these. I use Organic Rose Hip Seed Oil with essential oils also. How do you make your labels? Where do you get them from? What do you use to get them to stick onto the bottle?
Aw thanks Elleen! These are the labels I use, they're sticky too :-) www.ebay.co.uk/itm/like/301312102494?limghlpsr=true&hlpv=2&ops=true&viphx=1&hlpht=true&lpid=108&device=c&adtype=pla&crdt=0&ff3=1&ff11=ICEP3.0.0-L&ff12=67&ff13=80&ff14=108&ff19=0
Just found your video. It's autumn now in NZ and we're nearly out of lockdown. Yay :) Have ordered carrier oil (cosmetic grade Almond Oil) and super excited. We have had a few frosts already but the hips I have are quite big from old fashioned roses and haven't gone hard yet. How soft should they be? Another quick question - do you wash your hips? The ones I have picked are quite dirty on the bottom where the flower head was. Is it ok to have a mix of yellow and red hips? Thank you :)
Hello, I'm so sorry I've only just seen this so I'm probably too late. But for the record, they should be a little soft but if they're not a blast in the freezer over night should help. I do wash them yes! I've never seen a yellow rosehip so I'm not entirely sure about that! hope that helps :-)
Hi there, wondering where you get the "carrier oil" from and how long this will keep? Do you refrigerate it to help preserve it? I see you used a couple of Vit. E capsules to also help keep it. Thank you and great video!
I like 'Fushi' Jojoba oil or I buy from the website 'akamuti' because they make in small batches for a fresher shelf life, and I trust them. No I don't refrigerate, I just keep it in a cool, dry (preferably dark) place. Yes that's exactly why I use the vitamin E for, to help preserve. If stored well cold pressed oils can last for years (supposedly) but you can always tell if it's past it's best by the smell I find.
To bash or not to bash? I see others leaving full hips in oil for 6 weeks and don’t burst them open saying it just releases water into oil causing bacterial growth. What do you think?
Hi Ana, you probably might have lost a little bit of the goodness depending how burnt they were. I burnt mine on my very first attempt - you can really smell it can't you? I still made it but used it on my legs, I then re-made a small amount just for my face, as that's where I need the help the most ;-)
They're by a company called 'French General' but they seem to be out of stock everywhere. Here's a link to them but if you search for them on amazon it will give you some pretty alternatives ;-)
I'm looking forward to the first frost now, as there are a couple of bushes out the back rammed with hips! I might have a go at this in the slow cooker (on low), though - it will be *way* cheaper to run than the oven for the same amount of time, I think.
You could also 'cold infuse' the oil with dried rosehips if the heat method doesn't suit you. Just put in a sealed glass jar with oil of choice, and sit in a sunny windowsill for 4-6weeks (or on a sunny windowsill for 2 weeks and the rest of the time in a cabinet...everyone has their preferred method). The issue with most slow cookers is that they burn too hot for infusing oil (about 100-120degrees). You could put water in the cooker with a wash cloth on the bottom and place the jar in it- indirectly heating the oil- but you may want to shut it of (with a lid on) and only turn it back on to heat it up again occasionally if it's too warm. My oven (a gas stove) is almost warm enough from the pilot light to infuse the oils over a few days time. I like my jars just slightly warm to the touch- and easily handled. You don't want to go over 100degree (ideally around 80-90)...to maintain the benefits of the oil and herbs.
Hi Anna, I don't think it would have the same affect I'm afraid as it's the actual process of heating that allows the goodness from the rose hips to be absorbed into the oil ... (would be like putting a teabag in cold water :-))
Ivy Mok no, because they are dried, they usually are much more compact. so if you were to fill up a jar with fresh rosehips, you would fill just over with the oil barely covering them. with dried, you would just fill the jar halfway or so (depending on size) and then you would fill the rest of the way up with oil because the rosehips will soak up some of the oil and expand. i hope i made any sense. if you'd like a more clear better explanation than mine, look up mountain rose herbs video on oil infusion. its great! and very easy to follow instructions.
Too bad that Caldwell guy can't spell Ralphie smh lol Nevermind him "expensive" has always been a relative word. Maybe someone doesn't want (or cannot afford) to spend $21.25 on 8oz of oil. Which is the cheapest I found it on this side of the water. let him stay in his jerky world. Thanks for toot lady! Now onto my question. Can this work with dried rosehips?
:-) Thanks lorenmojo I agree, I've never found a cheap rosehip oil, and if I did I suspect it's quality wouldn't be too hot. Ah well, each to their own ey? Mmm the answer to your question is ... I'm not entirely sure! I don't see why not, it's just whether you'd get as much goodness from them dried as fresh? Sorry can't be of more help!
***** I am not sure about the other nutrients, but vitamin C is water soluable. As a result of the drying process, there is considerably less vitamin C in dried rose hips. While there certainly is some still there, that is the main drawback I could see. Fresh is usually better but I am sure some of the beneficial effects still would be there. Some sources out there say that the drying process removes the vitamin C. It makes sense why, but I am unsure how much actually is lost.
I think the real rose hip oil is pressed out of the rose hip seed by cold pressing the seeds onley. This oil you make should be named : jojoba oil with rose hip and vitamin E. I hope you dont mind this comment. I like the video aniway...
I would not agree. Rosehip seeds are incredibly irritating to the touch, so why would cold pressing the seeds give you any benefit, unless somehow there's a chemical process to remove the irritating outer covering before pressing?
I think that she is on the right track. Rose water is made with petals and the rose bud, so why would this be any different?
+Eva Hagstrom perhaps the heat process could destroy some of the good stuff within the rose hip.. and the carrier oils goodness as well.. generally when getting essential oils you want cold pressed. Rose water can be made in different ways. Afterall you store oils in dark bottles with openings so that the air and light doesn't spoil them. Carrier oils, do't go bad so easily.. unlike an essential or pure oil.
I used the rose water as an example to defend your point Mel.
this is all wrong !!! nobody does it this way in Arizona. László Isó is right.
That’s so cute! You said, “and Bobs your uncle!!!” I’ve never heard that saying before and gave me something new to research and learn. Your lovely. Thank you.
I added sesame seed oil and olive oil to mine. Sesame seed oil works as a sunscreen and olive oil is amazing for skin. Rose hips have 600 times more vitamin C than an orange which is amazing.
Is ok to put just olive oil?
Very nice. Can you also use dried rosehips for this oil? Also, never shake a bottle of any oil! It introduces too much air and will cause your oil to go rancid quickly. Instead, gently roll the bottle between your hands to mix the oils together. ❤️
You are wonderful! I take in teenagers, and love teaching them about food from scratch and natural remedies and such. You're our new online tutor! Thank you, A. And we'll be careful.
You seem such a delightful person. I had a little problem understanding words, ex: jojoba. I didn't know what you were saying, but someone made a comment that I was able to see. Perhaps you could print names of products that you use for us folks that are new to this. I will definitely look for more of your online instructions!
Thank you E H, such a lovely message. Glad you like the videos x
90
Thank you so much I really really enjoyed watching you create this anti-aging oil, I really really love ❤️ your Jack Russell too and I’ve subscribed and given you a thumb’s up too. Please stay safe and well too
Thank you so much :-)
So lovely .... I made some allready and added two drops of blue camomille oil in the end .... :-) I also made some oil with seabuckthorn.... very nice too :-)
Really enjoyed your video. You made me laugh several times - what could be better than that :).
Loved your video! Possible to make it in a small crock pot on low rather than in the oven?
Thank you! Sorry I missed your message. Yes I think that would be fine!
You are so lovely. Thank you for your sweetness. Love how you measured by sight. I cook like that and it works.
This is lovely but for Rosehip Seed oil to be 100% effective, you need to cold press the mixture. However, with the Vit E, yes it would be good for our skin...but not the real drama of real Rosehip Oil and is natures' Retin-a. xxoo Susan
I just picked a load more rosehips, having made the syrup recently. I didn't read how many you need, so may have to make more syrup! Your video is probably how I would make mine, slightly random, its funny cos I am not the only one who loses things, when you just had them, and would do the sameon a lace table cloth. Funny! Keep it up!
Mine are the flyer saucer shape, which google search said they originate from Chile.
Glad to hear I'm not the only one :-) Oh I like using the flying saucer shaped ones ... I'll be making mine using those this year.
I am so happy I found you. I love you videos, please don't stop.
Thankyou!! Helpful!🌹🥀🌺🌸🦋🌸🌺🌹🌷
Very nice video. Excellently done. Is there a "shelf life" to your rose hip oil? I've not made it before, but I'm going to give it a try.
Thank you SO much. I have got lots of roses so I will definitely make them this November. LOVE your dog😍
Thank you, so much for your video. I made mine from organic dry rosehips and it did not come out clear in color, it came put quite dark, I strained it 3 times but still dark, any idea why?
Hi Lucy, sorry for delayed response! Have had youtube issues. Mine also came out a dark yellow, is absolutely normal as it's the colour of the rosehip : )
Thank you so much for your reply
Okay first off I can't believe it's this easy I literally thought you had no idea what you where doing and went and watched other videos. I'm SURPRISED!!! I can't believe it's that simple. Just Simmer/soak the rose-hip's in a base oil like jojoba or almond oil and that's it. This is really it I can't believe it. If that's it, why is it so expensive in stores. Oh can you make rose water the same way like simmer/soak the rose-hips In water then that's it. Please write back I would like to make rose water as well. Thanks so much.
Blizzards of love
Chanelle
Hi Ember, sorry for delay .. didn't see your msg! Most good, natural products are most expensive, simply because good ingredients cost more, synthetic ingredients are cheap and easy to mass produce. In fact I wrote a post on this subject, and the best natural products I've found, hope it helps! I haven't makde rose water yet so I can't offer advice on that. www.ahandmadecottage.com/2014/01/why-choose-natural-beauty-products.html
I think rose water is from the petals.
Cold infusion would probably be best to avoid losing the beautiful smell.
i have 5 beautiful mini rose bushes in my yard that i planted a few years ago and feeling kind of bad that i wasted all the rosehips in the past not knowing they could be used for so many good things. i also have "my baby" mini rose that i keep in my home too. i am wondering now tho, after reading someones comment on what types of roses can be used. i understand any rose will do, but do you know if the same goes for mini roses? ive saved so many rosehips and dehydrated and saved tons of petals to use in mt teas and homemade cosmetics. i feel and see a ton of benefits yet maybe it could just be all in my head? lol ive tried looking it up with no luck. so i was hoping you might know? anyways, thank you for this video! i definitely subbed! really enjoy the way you talk. so soft and elegant. very relaxing to listen to.
Hi Kat! Aw thank you, I'm glad you liked the video and thanks for the complement on the way I talk, I'm not sure my husband would agree ;-) Haha. As for using small Rose hips I'm not sure to be honest? I imagine they could be used but you perhaps wouldn't get as much goodness from them as you might from the larger varieties? but that said there's no harm in trying! sorry I can't be of more help x
This might be a dumb question so I apologize in advance...but can you use dried rose hips? I don't think well I don't really know where to get fresh rose hips? Would you get the same benefits with the dried roses.
Astrina Martin yeah
Love your video. Please make more of these. I use Organic Rose Hip Seed Oil with essential oils also. How do you make your labels? Where do you get them from? What do you use to get them to stick onto the bottle?
Aw thanks Elleen! These are the labels I use, they're sticky too :-) www.ebay.co.uk/itm/like/301312102494?limghlpsr=true&hlpv=2&ops=true&viphx=1&hlpht=true&lpid=108&device=c&adtype=pla&crdt=0&ff3=1&ff11=ICEP3.0.0-L&ff12=67&ff13=80&ff14=108&ff19=0
lovely indeed! Thank you.
Just found your video. It's autumn now in NZ and we're nearly out of lockdown. Yay :) Have ordered carrier oil (cosmetic grade Almond Oil) and super excited. We have had a few frosts already but the hips I have are quite big from old fashioned roses and haven't gone hard yet. How soft should they be? Another quick question - do you wash your hips? The ones I have picked are quite dirty on the bottom where the flower head was. Is it ok to have a mix of yellow and red hips? Thank you :)
Hello, I'm so sorry I've only just seen this so I'm probably too late. But for the record, they should be a little soft but if they're not a blast in the freezer over night should help. I do wash them yes! I've never seen a yellow rosehip so I'm not entirely sure about that! hope that helps :-)
I picked a load last week but obviously too soon. Over excited! Where do you get your bottles from? So lovely.
Hi kit! Aw thanks :-) I find them from charity shops. Mmm might be too soon, shouldn't be too much longer ... jack frost is on his way!
Hi there, wondering where you get the "carrier oil" from and how long this will keep? Do you refrigerate it to help preserve it? I see you used a couple of Vit. E capsules to also help keep it. Thank you and great video!
I like 'Fushi' Jojoba oil or I buy from the website 'akamuti' because they make in small batches for a fresher shelf life, and I trust them. No I don't refrigerate, I just keep it in a cool, dry (preferably dark) place. Yes that's exactly why I use the vitamin E for, to help preserve. If stored well cold pressed oils can last for years (supposedly) but you can always tell if it's past it's best by the smell I find.
Thank you kindly! Greatly appreciated!
My rose hips are green. Did I pick them too soon? Mid August?
Great video. Loved the feel :) Can you use the hips of any roses, or just the red you used? I have several varieties in my garden.
Thank you! I use several varieties ... as long as they are rosehips and are nice and soft (and not too hard) they should be fine :-)
Can we just buy some Rose hips and chop them or grind them with a coffee grinder? Also can you add any vitamin A oil?
well that was brilliant
could i use coconut oil or anything else?
To bash or not to bash? I see others leaving full hips in oil for 6 weeks and don’t burst them open saying it just releases water into oil causing bacterial growth. What do you think?
Thanks for the great video! Love it!
You're welcome Antoinette, glad you like it!
Hi does anyone know which natural preservatives are best for making the oil last longer ?
Vitamin E is a good natural preservative. I usually pop 2 / 3 capsules in mine.
jojoba oil is a natural preservative also!
Great video! I purchased DRIED rosehips can I use those??
+oliviascudder Glad you liked the video. Fresh rosehips are always preferable as a lot of the goodness will be lost in the drying out process.
so i made a tea out of rosehips, and instead of throwing the rosehips away, i froze them. can i still make rosehip oil from the frozen rosehips?
Mmn I don't think so .... I suspect if you've already made tea from them much of their goodness will be lost!
The water content after tea steeping could ruin your lovely carrier oil.
Make a lotion with the excess and vitamin e isnt recommended preservative. It isnt a preservative at all especially for aqueous based products
Hi, thank you so much for this video. I tried making it in the slow cooker on low but the rose hips burnt a little. Is this ok?
Hi Ana, you probably might have lost a little bit of the goodness depending how burnt they were. I burnt mine on my very first attempt - you can really smell it can't you? I still made it but used it on my legs, I then re-made a small amount just for my face, as that's where I need the help the most ;-)
A Handmade Cottage you're right there about the smell! :-) thanks for replying.
Probable a dumb question, but can I harvest rose hip when they are dead and brown, or is it too late? Anything I can with them?
No Sandie, all the goodness will be lost from them unfortunately.
Thanks for the video. Where did you buy your decorative labels from?
They're by a company called 'French General' but they seem to be out of stock everywhere. Here's a link to them but if you search for them on amazon it will give you some pretty alternatives ;-)
Thank-you so much :)
I'm looking forward to the first frost now, as there are a couple of bushes out the back rammed with hips!
I might have a go at this in the slow cooker (on low), though - it will be *way* cheaper to run than the oven for the same amount of time, I think.
Me too! I'm almost out of last years! ... yes slow cooker should work perfectly. Let me know how you get on!
***** Will do, ta! :-)
You could also 'cold infuse' the oil with dried rosehips if the heat method doesn't suit you. Just put in a sealed glass jar with oil of choice, and sit in a sunny windowsill for 4-6weeks (or on a sunny windowsill for 2 weeks and the rest of the time in a cabinet...everyone has their preferred method).
The issue with most slow cookers is that they burn too hot for infusing oil (about 100-120degrees). You could put water in the cooker with a wash cloth on the bottom and place the jar in it- indirectly heating the oil- but you may want to shut it of (with a lid on) and only turn it back on to heat it up again occasionally if it's too warm. My oven (a gas stove) is almost warm enough from the pilot light to infuse the oils over a few days time. I like my jars just slightly warm to the touch- and easily handled. You don't want to go over 100degree (ideally around 80-90)...to maintain the benefits of the oil and herbs.
Great video, very informative. If you make an ASMR version of this video - guarenteed 50k hits.
I wish you would had showed how you did it....
plz were can i buy the rosehip seed in nigerian lagos so i can make mine for anti aging oil plz waiting for ue responsed thanks
can't I just infuse the oil with crushed rosehips instead of heating it?
Hi Anna, I don't think it would have the same affect I'm afraid as it's the actual process of heating that allows the goodness from the rose hips to be absorbed into the oil ... (would be like putting a teabag in cold water :-))
In what oil do you put them in..?
I've used Jojoba but sweet almond oil would also work well.
How abt using dried rosehip fruits? Is the portion size still hold with 1 part of rosehips and 2 parts of oil?
Ivy Mok no, because they are dried, they usually are much more compact. so if you were to fill up a jar with fresh rosehips, you would fill just over with the oil barely covering them. with dried, you would just fill the jar halfway or so (depending on size) and then you would fill the rest of the way up with oil because the rosehips will soak up some of the oil and expand. i hope i made any sense. if you'd like a more clear better explanation than mine, look up mountain rose herbs video on oil infusion. its great! and very easy to follow instructions.
Can i use olive oil instead of jojobo oil???
Could you do this in a slow cooker if you have a low heat setting?
Absolutely, would be ideal ;-)
Will rosehip oil help with itchy skin? My hands and feet get super itchy and hydrocortisone cream doesn’t do anything for it.
No. It’s very gentle
amazon has low cost rose hip oil in the dark glass..
so great!like ur channel!
you need, please, to write down the ingredients, did not understand the oil you used first and the one you put like preservative. thank you very much.
You can find the full ingredients list on my blog by following this link www.ahandmadecottage.com/2013/11/how-to-make-rose-hip-anti-aging.html
Can this be done with dried rose hip seeds
slow cooker would be good too
How long will It last ? How should it be stored?
+julie henderson Hi Julie, Ideally in a dark glass bottle in a cool place.
Heating oil is not the best idea. The oil oxidises when heated. Is becomes toxic and creates free radicals.
awesome video! please make more similar video
'trees' lol
Btw, i love your vid! ❤️❤️❤️
how can you make rosehip oil out of the powder form?
Same way use the powder in the oil, I sun infusion it for about 2-6 weeks or you can crock pot it and then strain with cheese cloth
Is that the jumper that became a snood and headband?
Yes! well spotted :-)
nice job :-)
your wasting those seeds you could plant them!
This is infused oil, not rosehip oil!
Sorry girl, but cold pressed rose hip oil is made from seeds.
please do more videos!!!
What the hell is rose hip powder good for then?
Rose hip powder has lots of benefits, however it's more common to take the powder internally. This recipe is for external use only.
itching powder
Too bad that Caldwell guy can't spell Ralphie smh lol Nevermind him "expensive" has always been a relative word. Maybe someone doesn't want (or cannot afford) to spend $21.25 on 8oz of oil. Which is the cheapest I found it on this side of the water. let him stay in his jerky world. Thanks for toot lady! Now onto my question. Can this work with dried rosehips?
:-) Thanks lorenmojo I agree, I've never found a cheap rosehip oil, and if I did I suspect it's quality wouldn't be too hot. Ah well, each to their own ey? Mmm the answer to your question is ... I'm not entirely sure! I don't see why not, it's just whether you'd get as much goodness from them dried as fresh? Sorry can't be of more help!
***** I am not sure about the other nutrients, but vitamin C is water soluable. As a result of the drying process, there is considerably less vitamin C in dried rose hips. While there certainly is some still there, that is the main drawback I could see. Fresh is usually better but I am sure some of the beneficial effects still would be there.
Some sources out there say that the drying process removes the vitamin C. It makes sense why, but I am unsure how much actually is lost.
You look like milla jovovich
It's pronounced HoHoba oil not yohoba oil
Not really sure what you are doing, but good try 😁
CAN YOU USE A DOUBLE BOILER
Yes! double boiler is perfect for the job :-)
😛
grrrrrrrrr....
postman
hahaha XD
Too bad Railphie cant shush you. Rose hip oil is not expensive.
Oh my God, another terrible video with people who don't know what they are doing. You never put your oils in the oven.
She sounds drunk!
If only :-)