Sheabutter Cottage Murumuru Butter 100g
Rs.17.95
- Price in reward points: 200
Inclusive All Tax
Shipping: Free
Model: MME
Availability: In Stock
Manufacturer: Procter & Gamble
This rich Amazonian butter helps to promote glossy hair and moisturised skin. High in vitamin A. it improves hair flexibility and also helps to improve skin elasticity.
The nuts are harvested between January and May and cold pressed + filtered to yield a cream coloured butter. Murumuru butter has a very impressive content of lauric acid (closer in composition to coconut oil). A solid butter, murumuru melts at 33°C and it is also rich in myristic acid.
Murumuru butter can be used for lip balms, soaps, creams, hair products and body butters.
Our purchase of murumuru butter from remote indigenous communities throughout the Amazon River basin area helps to preserve the natural habitat and directly improves local economic conditions and sustainability.
SAP VALUES:
.165(NaOH) .232 (KOH)
UNDERSTANDING BUTTERS:
Most butters and oils are made up of two components - olein (liquid) and stearin (stearic). This is why some butters easily melt depending on the amount of olein and some solidify under colder temperatures depending on the amount of stearin. This does not affect the product in anyway.
Butters are mainly naturally occurring. However, there are new butters emerging within the cosmetic industry due to market trends. These butters are vegetable oils which are hydrogenated. Hydrogenation yields a saturated butter and these include:
Almond butter, Avocado butter, Coffee butter, Hemp butter, Macadamia butter, Olive butter, Ricebran butter, ..... the list goes on
Naturally occurring butter on the other hand are normally pressed from seeds and do not go through any hydrogenation:
Cocoa, Cupuaçu, Kombo, Mango, Murumuru, Shea, etc.
These are all solid at room temperature depending on both the palmitic and stearic acid content and need heat to melt.
Cocoa butter has 33% stearic and 25% palmitic acid compared to shea butter with 40% stearic and 4% palmitic acid. Looking at these two profiles, cocoa butter is more of a solid butter than shea which makes the latter more easy to apply. However, due to the high stearic content of shea, the butter becomes quite solid in very cold temperatures.
Unlike most butters, the texture of shea changes during the year. Much softer in summer and much harder in winter. This does not affect the natural properties of the butter.
We sell our range of butters by weight. Since most of these butters are not re-melted for sale, we use slightly bigger jars - eg. you would receive a 50g butter in a 125ml jar, a 100g butter in a 250ml jar and so on.
UNREFINED VIRGIN MURUMURU BUTTER: BRAZIL
(Astrocaryum murumuru)