What Makes An Essential Oil Therapeutic Grade?
Most people read the label on essential oils bottles and see the words “100% PURE” and think that is a therapeutic grade oil. There is so much more involved in producing truly therapeutic grade oils.
The key to producing a therapeutic grade essential oil is to preserve as many of the delicate aromatic compounds within the essential oil as possible. Most of these elements are very fragile and are destroyed by high temperature and high pressure.
Nutritionists tell us not to boil our vegetables because the hot water removes the vitamins and nutrients. Similarly,
“boiling” plants to extract their essence destroys many of a plants fragile constituents, which gives essential oils their therapeutic properties. So keeping the distillers temperature low is a must.
Distillation might determine the assessment of worth of the oil, or destroy the value of the oil. Essential oil distilling is not just
a job, but an art. The operator of the distiller must have a full experience of the worth of oils in order to produce
quality oils. If the pressure is too high, or the temperature is too high, it can change the molecular structure of the
fragrance molecule, altering the chemistry constituents.
Essential oils MUST be distilled for the proper length of instant to release all their active constituents. A distiller who is only interested in profit will distill oils
for 15 minutes at very high temperature and very high pressure. This way they might produce more oil and thus more profits.
For example, cypress must be distilled for 24 hours to release all the chemical constituents. Most distilling
operations, throughout the world, only distill cypress one hour and 15 minutes.
Similarly, lavender does not produce all its therapeutically efficient substances unless it is distilled for one hour and
30 minutes; but most lavender is distilled for only 15 minutes!
Three-quarters of the volume is extracted during the first quarter of the distillation process. Many producers finish the process there because the increased time does not significantly increase the volume. Time is “only” a crucial variable to extracting the plants therapeutic properties.
Another trick some distillers will do to produce more oil, is to redistill the plant material over and over as many as
5 or 6 times. Its like using a tea bag over & over again. When the plant material is redistilled, all the batches after
the first distillation are no longer therapeutic grade.
The oil distiller will then save the first batch to be sold as therapeutic grade oils. Then the the rest of the distillations
are sold to the unsuspecting public as referred to as “pure” oils.
There are many other factors that effect the quality of the oil.
A few examples:
How long did the plant material sit around before it was distilled?
Is the distiller made of chemically reactive metals or was it stainless steel?
Was the soil fertilized with chemical fertilizers or organic fertilizers?
Were any chemicals added to the distillation water?
Many distillers add chemicals to the water as they are distilling to produce greater volume in the distillation process. They may say they don’t make use of adulterants in the oil since they only used it in the water. The chemical still gets into the oil and it is stretching the truth to say an oil
distilled this way is pure.
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