Comment on this Article

How to make delicious chocolate honey lip balm

Posted on October 5, 2009
by Instructables - Premier Partner SustainLane Premier Content Partners are part of a growing network of publishers bringing you the very best green content from across the web.

To read more articles by this Premier Partner, follow the link at the end of this post.

I used to wait till my kids were sleeping to slather vaseline over their chapped lips because they hated any kind of moisturizer. So I invented this recipe to tempt them into voluntarily using lip balm, but it's so tasty and moisturizes so well I now make it for myself. The kids love it too.

Step 1: What you'll need

Beeswax
For this batch I bought 2 oz from the farmer's market for $1.75 -- definitely get the freshest wax you can, the difference in flavor is stunning!

Cocoa butter
This can be found in any pharmacy. I've seen it at Rite Aid, Duane Read, etc, usually near moisturizers. This 1oz stick was $1.29

Almond oil
You could probably try other types of oil, but I would steer away from ones with heavy smells or flavors like olive oil -- you don't want to dissimulate the honey and chocolate flavor.

Vegetable glycerin
You can find this in health stores, but I've also seen it in craft stores. This ingredient is what makes this more of a lip balm. Glycerin will absorb humidity from the air to moisturize your lips.

Vitamin E
This is also an oil, with the thickness of fingernail polish when it's pure. The oil helps moisturize, but the main purpose here is as a natural preservative. This can also be found in any pharmacy, but read the label carefully: the quantity named in this recipe is for PURE vitamin E, and sometimes it is sold mixed with glycerin. You can still use it if it's been cut, but you'll have to adjust the amounts: more vitamin E, less glycerin. If you don't feel like doing any math, just get the pure bottle. This bottle cost around $10 but you need so little it will last forever. You can also decide to skip it altogether if you think you'll be using the lip balm within 6 months to a year.

Cocoa
Dark unsweetened cocoa will give you the best flavor

Honey
Any kind is fine

Containers
The first time I made this I used plastic bottle tops and covered them with plastic wrap -- but since I made this batch as gifts, I bought empty tubes on ebay ($7.45 for 25 tubes, including shipping). Little tins would also work nicely and can be reused.

Step 2: Measure ingredients

It helps to have a scale, but I've also given measurements in tablespoons:

3/8 oz beeswax (1 tablespoon plus 1 teaspoon)
1/2 oz cocoa butter (1 tablespoon plus 2 teaspoons)
2 teaspoons sweet almond oil
3/4 teaspoon vegetable glycerin
3/4 teaspoon honey
2 drops vitamin E oil
1 teaspoon cocoa powder

To measure the chunks of beeswax (or cocoa butter), fill a small measuring cup with cold water, then removed the amount of water you want to measure. Float pieces of beeswax in the cup till it reaches your mark.

Put all your ingredients together in a small container which you can easily pour from and which you can place in a pan of hot water. These stainless steel measuring cups were perfect.

Note: if you are using tins to store this and you like softer lip balm you can use the following proportions. This lip balm is too soft to use in tubes. Since it has proportionately less wax it has a stronger chocolate flavor and feels more like a soothing cream on your lips.

1/8 oz beeswax (appox 1 tsp)
1/4 oz cocoa (approx 1 1/2 tsp)
1 tsp almond oil
1/3 tsp vegetable glycerin
1/3 tsp honey
1/2 tsp cocoa powder
1 drop vitamin E

Step 3: Gently heat in double boiler

Place your container in a pot of water and heat the water till it's at a low simmer, mixing your ingredients with a fork until all pieces have melted.


Step 4: Pour

Pour the mixture into your containers. This recipe filled 11 tubes. There's no need to rush, if your liquid starts to solidify before you're done you can always warm it up in the double boiler.

As the tubes solidify you'll notice the lip balm shrinks and a small hole might appear in the middle. If it's still liquid enough you can top it off with an extra drop, but if it's already solid I've read it isn't a good idea to do that because the top might come off.

Clean up the tubes, add labels, and enjoy!



Posted to Instructables by belsey

Instructables is a web-based documentation platform where passionate people share what they do and how they do it, and learn from and collaborate with others.

Comments

post commentPost a comment:

Get Started

Write a Review Post to SustainLane Add Green Products & Businesses

Written by Instructables

Instructables

Instructables is a web-based documentation platform where passionate people share what they do and how they do it, and learn from and collaborate with others. More About Instructables »

Share eco-tips, news, how-tos,
or just blog it.

Post Now!
Advertisement