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Detailed Product Description |
Specifications:
Do not use on any part of the body because
of sensitizing potential. Lemongrass oil is produced
from two distinctly different botanical species of cymbopogon. One is a native
of east India where it grows wild
and is now cultivated over a comparatively limited area in the western parts of
India. The plant is cymbopogon
flexuasus and only cultivated plants are used for steam distillation. The other
plant, cymbopogon citratus, is
possibly a native of ceylon and parts of east India, but it is now found only
under cultivation. Unlike c. Flexuosus,
the citratus is widely distributed all over the world and it has been given the
somewhat confusing name west Indian
lemongrass. Lemongrass oil is steam distilled from the fresh or partly dried
leaves of the above grass and occasionally,
it is water and steam distilled. Outside of India, the west Indian grass is
distilled in Africa, belgian Congo, angola,
equatorial Africa, Madagascar, comoro islands, etc. In Central America, in the
west indies, Haiti, Jamaica, in south
America and in formosa, indochina, Indonesia, malaya, etc. Lemongrass oil is a
yellow or amber somewhat viscous
liquid with a very strong, fresh grassy iemon type, herbaceous or tea like odor.
The oil is often turbid when it arrives
from the producers, but care should be taken that it be kept dry since it is
able to keep 2 1/2 or 3% of water clearly
dissolved at room temperature. This water content is definitely harmful to the
citral which decomposes rapidly in the
presence of water, air and daylight. The water is conveniently chilled out under
stirring of the oil and it separates as
a bottom liquid layer.
