Whisky ●
TL;DR. This ingredient is used mainly as a fragrance or masking component, and secondarily as a solvent for aromatic materials. It can also contribute a light astringent skin feel because of its ethyl-alcohol content.
What does Whisky do in a cosmetic formula?
This ingredient is used mainly as a fragrance or masking component, and secondarily as a solvent for aromatic materials. It can also contribute a light astringent skin feel because of its ethyl-alcohol content.
Is Whisky clean?
Clean-beauty frameworks usually treat it as acceptable but not especially simple, since it brings ethyl alcohol plus trace aroma compounds that may bother very reactive skin. It is not commonly singled out on restricted lists, but its fragrance-like role and potential for dryness create some clean-standard friction.
Is Whisky sustainable?
This material is typically grain-derived and renewable, but crop inputs, water use, and distillation energy shape its footprint. Its main constituents are readily biodegradable and not expected to persist in water systems.
Is Whisky COSMOS-approved?
It can align with COSMOS when sourced and processed through permitted agricultural fermentation and distillation routes, with organic status depending on certified feedstock. From a Green Chemistry view, it has advantages in renewable sourcing and biodegradability, offset by the energy demand of distillation.
How does Whisky work chemically?
Chemically, this ingredient is a complex water and ethyl-alcohol mixture with low-level congeners such as organic acids, esters, aldehydes, and phenolic compounds from processing and aging. In formulas it is generally used at low fragrance-type levels or as part of an extract phase, and it is volatile, water-miscible, and more noticeable on compromised skin at higher alcohol loads.
Last updated 2026-05-15