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Entries in Bleu Distillery (2)

Thursday
Feb242011

Sanoflore Organic Product Review

Last summer I fell in love with an organic French beauty brand named Sanoflore.  The brand came recommended to me by an actual French lady who studied with me on my aromatherapy course.  Luckily she told me about it when we were travelling in Provence together and I stocked up with everything I could get my hands a hold of at the Bleu Distillery in Nyons, France.    These were my 3 favorite products:

Masque Aromatique Purifiant – A purifying clay mask with kaolin, thyme and lemon essential oils.  I love this as a bi-weekly cleansing treatment.  The smell can only be described as really clean and like it’s really good for you, which it is!  It left my skin feeling soft and overtime less spotty.

Crème Gommante Aromatique – An aromatic cream scrub with diatom micro-grains, rosemary essential oil, and apricot kernel oil.  I really enjoyed using this scrub because the grains are really fine and you can really spend time massaging them into your skin without worrying about over stripping or scratching your skin.

Fluide Hydra-Matifiant Aromatique – A hydra-mattifying aromatic fluid – this is a great lightweight moisturizing fluid for oily or combination skin.  It worked really well for my skin which is on the oily side but with a bit of dryness on my cheeks.

Sanoflore products are ECOCERT organic certified.  Unfortunately I wasn’t able to get an ingredient list to do an analysis of the formulations but based on the effects alone I think these are gentle and effective products.  Sanoflore, j’taime!

Sunday
Jul182010

Provence Day 2

You haven’t seen a panorama until you’ve seen the one at the top of Mt Ventoux.  Well above tree-line, you can see its brown peak from all around the region.  The mountain features heavily in the Tour de France cycling race each summer because of its harsh steep climb.  We were disappointed to learn that the mountain had been excluded from the route this year but it was nonetheless still packed with tourists. 

In the afternoon we visited the Bleu Distillery, Museum of the Olive Tree, and Botanical Gardens in Nyons (the “s” is pronounced although I miss-pronounced it in the video).  The highlight for me on this day (aside from visiting Mt Ventoux) was visiting the vineyard of Domaine Viret.  Here they use all kinds of alternative methods of organic farming and winemaking.  For example, instead of pesticides, herbacides, and fertilizer, they spray their plans with essential oils (custom tailored to each different type of grape).  The building was constructed from blocks in the style of the Egyptian pyramids and on the inside it has a vaulted cathedral ceiling.  The central feature of the interior is a giant quartz crystal which is there to create the best possible energy for the fermenting grapes.  Finally (wait for it if I haven’t lost you already) the farmers place rocks in specific formations in the fields based on astrological star signs.  My university French wasn’t up for the challenge of understanding why they do this when they explained as I think I my mind was still processing the use of essential oils, crystals, and pyramids.

Here’s an excerpt from their website describing “cosmoculture”:

According to the ancient Mayan and Inca civilizations, cosmoculture is based on exchanges between cosmic and telluric energies. On the ground, beacons of cosmic energy situated at precise points are used to support the close relationship that exists between the sky and the earth, and to recreate an environment where the vine can defend itself naturally.

The wine itself is pretty interesting, like nothing I’ve ever tasted, and my words will fail to describe.  I think you need to experience it yourself.