Olive pomace oil is a great base oil for soap and other body care products. Being gold to light-green in color and with a mild olive aroma, olive pomace oil is high in oleic acid. It is known to be a skin rejuvenator, a great humectant in that it attracts external moisture to the skin and is also known to soothe tender, irritated skin. The term "pomace" refers to the grade of olive oil, which means that the oil is produced by expeller pressing the ground olive flesh and pits left after the first cold press of the olives and pits for "virgin" olive oil. Being that it is the second pressing of the olives and pits, it is normally a lower grade oil, and much less expensive which is why many soap makers use it as their base oil when making soap, although sometimes it is mixed with a small amount of extra virgin olive oil.
Botanical Name
Olea europaea
Country of Origin
Spain, Greece, Tunisia or Turkey
Extraction Method
Coming Soon
Refinement Process
Refined
Food Grade
Yes
Suggested Uses
Olive pomace oil has a wide variety of uses. It is sometimes used in the culinary world but more often used in the body care industry to make soap, creams, lotions, massage oils, balms, body butters and hair care products. One drawback to using olive pomace oil is that it normally contains a high percentage of unsaponifiables which can cause soap to trace more quickly and/or cause other ingredients to overreact. Cured bars of soap made with olive pomace oil will generally have slight green or yellow tint to them. Olive oil soap in general will produce a bar of soap with creamy and dense lather. It takes olive oil soap longer to cure and harden, sometimes up to 8 weeks, so it requires a certain amount of patience when using olive oil as your base fat in soaps.
Shelf Life & Storage
Product shelf life is dependent on storage conditions and is highly variable. Product should be stored under cool, dry conditions and in a humidity controlled environment. Industry standard for shelf life on this product, when stored under optimum conditions, is 24 months from the date of manufacture.
Saponification Value
190 mg KOH per gram of fat
Conversion Value for NaOH (Sodium Hydroxide) = 0.135 oz
Conversion Value for KOH (Potassium Hydroxide) = 0.190 oz
For more information on SAP values and conversions, click here. (link this)
Disclaimer
Please note that this information has not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration and is for educational purposes only.
This information is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure or prevent any disease.