Description
Lanolin Liquid לנולין
2oz- Screw Cap glass bottle
Kosher from Israel
If you are vegan this oil is not for you. See alternatives like our Pomegranate Seed CO2 oil or Hemp Seed oil
Psalms 23:5 You set a table before me in the presence of my adversaries; You anointed my head with oil; my cup overflows.
This is a soft waxy oil derived from the wool of domestic sheep that graze in the Judean and Samaria hills, Upper galilee region, and in the valleys of Southern Israel, lanolin offers numerous natural skin-supportive benefits.
This waterproof waxy oil helps keep water from soaking into the wool of the sheep and is believed to help protect the sheep’s skin and wool from environmental factors. It is extracted when freshly sheared wool (no sheep is harmed) is pressed between rollers before it is processed into textiles such as yarn used for tzitzits and wool felt.
Now you can support your skin’s health and help to protect it from the environment naturally with this Pure Liquid Lanolin! A luxurious emollient, our liquid lanolin supplies deep moisture to dry, chapped skin.
It helps to naturally protect your skin from the elements it comes into contact with every day, such as wind, sun and weather. Promote your skin’s natural beauty from head to toe when you add our Pure Liquid Lanolin to your daily routine! Liquid Lanoline Oil can also be used for the hair. Add to creams and salves
Wash the skin or hair with soap and warm water, then pat dry with a soft towel. Apply a medium amount of our pure Liquid Lanolin to the skin and gently massage until absorbed. This non-greasy formula is suitable to wear beneath sunscreen and make-up. Helps relieve trouble skin issues such as psorisis and excema.
From Orthodox Union on Kosher Status
“Because of its soothing and healing quality, lanolin is a common additive in creams, lotions and moisturizers. More important to the kosher consumer, because of lanolin’s restorative quality, it is also commonly present in lip balms, and is an important source for Vitamin D3. By law, Vitamin D must be added to pasteurized milk, and it is often extracted from lanolin. Since lanolin is an animal secretions oil, what is its kosher status?
It seems clear that lanolin is kosher based on a Mishnah in Bechoros (1:2) that states that whatever emanates from a kosher animal is kosher. Shach (YD 81:12) explains that this includes secretion oil from kosher animals.
Rav Belsky zt”l offered an additional proof that lanolin is kosher. The Gemara Shabbos (49a) states that one may not insulate a hot pot of food for Shabbos with wool that is naturally wet, because it will warm up the pot.
Rav Belsky explained, that naturally wet wool refers to wool that is greasy with lanolin. It is clear from this Gemara that there is no kashrus concern with getting wool wax oil on a kosher pot, and it is only an issue because of Shabbos.
The OU accepts the position that lanolin is kosher.”