But the idea I found particularly fascinating was using real honey in a lip balm. And this requires a bit of a trick, because honey is water-soluble, not fat-soluble. If you pour honey into a pot of melted fats and oils, it will immediately sink to the bottom. If you try to stir it in, it will soon separate and sink to the bottom again. But with some research I found a technique to incorporate honey that works well and was able to make the most delightful honey lip balms, and I am going to share that secret with you.
In order to combine water-soluble and fat-soluble components, what you need is an emulsifier. Contrary to what some claim, beeswax alone is not an emulsifier. It may contribute some stability by physically hardening the mixture, but this is not a true emulsifier. The confusion probably stems from a very old technique of creating an emulsifier by combining beeswax with borax to produce creams, etc. In this case, it is the reaction between the beeswax and the borax that produces an emulsifier, not either component alone. However, this technique is not suitable for our application where we only want to incorporate a little bit of water-soluble components into an otherwise fat-soluble base.
There are a variety of emulsifiers available, but many are synthetic and I wanted to keep my formulas as natural as possible. The solution I found was lanolin. This product is derived from the natural coating of sheep’s wool and serves as a natural emulsifier. In a lip balm, it serves double duty, as it is also a marvelous skin-protectant in its own right.
Now, let’s get down to the actual steps to making this amazing lip balm.
As with other ointments, we will melt and combine the ingredients using a double boiler set up (a bain-marie, if you want to be fancy). Here, I have simply nested a metal bowl into pan of water on the stove top, which is really all you need. I begin by melting the hardest ingredients first.
2 tablespoons of shea butter and 1 tablespoon plus 2 teaspoons of beeswax. This recipe has a pretty high proportion of shea butter, both because of its skin conditioning properties and to help keep the lip balm firm so that it melts onto your lips, but hopefully not in your pocket.
Now we add the secret ingredient, 1 tablespoon of lanolin. Besides its skin-protectant properties, this is the ingredient that will allow us to mix in the next two ingredients.
And 1 teaspoon of honey!
You can see that both of these ingredients sink to the bottom and bead up. Although the lanolin will stabilize the emulsion, it still takes vigorous mixing to create it. You can see a whisk here, but I would actually suggest an immersion blender.
I like to get all of my lip balm tubes lined up neatly in advance, before I get ready to start pouring.
Now, before we add the aromatic essential oils, we remove the bowl from the hot water bath and allow it to cool until it just begins to harden. This way, we won’t lose volatile essential oils by overheating them. If it begins to harden too much, set the bowl back on the hot water bath briefly and stir it back in. Once the essential oils or other flavors are mixed in, we are ready to pour it up in the containers. I like to use a syringe, like the kind used to measure medicine, to fill the lip balm tubes.
Here you can see what the hot liquid looks like in the tubes. As you can see, the first tubes have already begun to set up while I was pouring the rest.
And here you can see what they look like once they have cooled and hardened. As you can see, each batch makes about 16 tubes. This is part of the reason I also sell some of my lip balm, after all, who really needs 16 tubes of lip balm, all of the same flavor!
Base Recipe
- 5 parts Beeswax
- 6 parts Shea butter
- 4 parts Coconut oil
- 3 parts Lanolin
- 1 part Glycerin
- 1 part Honey
- a small amount of essential oils or flavoring
Sweet Cinnamon
- 0.7 ml cinnamon bark essential oil
- 0.7 ml clove bud essential oil
Honey Vanilla
- 1 ml vanilla CO₂-extract
French Vanilla Latte
- 1 ml vanilla CO₂-extract
- 1.5 ml coffee CO₂-extract
Merry Mint
- 0.4 ml spearmint essential oil
- 0.2 ml peppermint essential oil
Lavender Vanilla
- 0.7 ml lavender essential oil
- 1 ml vanilla CO₂-extract