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7 Warning Signs that Your Argan Oil is Impure

Hi everyone!  I am so glad you found this page.  It was posted way back in December of 2011, and since then, we have been happy to have had so many of you read it and find the information useful.  However, you might notice that this information has been reincarnated many times across the internet.  But know that if you are here, you are actually reading the original!  And for those of you wanting content for your blogs and YouTube videos please give us at Saadia Organics proper credit for this information.  Thank you!  

With Argan Oil gaining in popularity, there are a lot of products popping up on the internet and even in stores claiming to be "Pure Argan Oil". Unfortunately, there are a lot of brands that you want to avoid. If you've read our story, you'll know that even getting your Argan Oil in Morocco doesn't guarantee it's authenticity. As it is so difficult and time-consuming to produce, a lot of Argan Oil is completely fake, diluted or over-processed.  So here are a few ways to decide if a particular brand is worth investing in or not.

1.  The Ingredients

The ingredients list should be very short.  It should just say 100% Argan Oil or 100% Argania Spinosa Kernel Oil.  For best results, if it has anything else listed you don't want it.  

2. The bottle

We are wary of Argan Oil sold in clear or plastic bottles. Both can make the oil deteriorate, and most producers of quality Argan Oil wouldn’t put this liquid gold in anything other than a dark coloured glass bottle (amber or cobalt blue, for example).  Aluminum or stainless steel can work well, too.  Light breaks down the oil's best properties and keeping it inside something dark is the best way to store Argan Oil.

3. The price

Argan Oil is very difficult to make.  It takes hours of manual labour and that does not come free.  So there is no such thing as cheap Argan Oil.  $10 for 2 ounces/60 ml seems like a bargain, but if it's just vegetable oil in that bottle?  It's no bargain at all.  You might as well just step into your kitchen and use whatever you've got in the cupboard. This is not to say that the most expensive Argan Oil is the best either.  You might just be paying for elaborate packaging and extensive marketing. Sometimes you can find authentic CULINARY Argan Oil at a more economical price. But know that even though this oil will taste amazing, it will not produce the best results on your skin, hair and nails.  Raw, cosmetic-grade oil is from unroasted Argan fruits, and it is much more difficult to extract oil from raw materials.

4. The scent

Strong-smelling Argan Oil that smells absolutely awful should obviously be avoided.  It most likely has gone rancid.  (To ensure freshness, keep the cap or dropper screwed on to your bottle well!)

Also, if the Argan Oil you have is very fragrant and so delicious smelling enough that you want to eat it, it very well could be Argan Oil intended for culinary use.  The Argan kernels for this type of oil have been toasted first.  And this means great things for your salad, but it won't give the results you want on your skin and hair.

Argan Oil that smells like absolutely nothing might be suspicious, too.  It could be entirely fake, or at least diluted beyond olfactory recognition.  Or, it could be machine-made and possibly even put through a "deodorization" process.  However, with this said, some of the batches we get (particularly in the spring and summer) have a very, very light aroma.  Fall and winter seem to bring oil that has a deeper natural scent.

Genuine, raw, cosmetic-grade Argan Oil can smell unique to the uninitiated nose.  Most say it smells 'nutty'.  My daughter thinks it smells like popcorn.  I used to think it smelled a bit like a rubber band.  Now I just think it smells like pure luxury.  (But remember, some batches have a lighter scent than others.) If you do get a bottle that is a bit more aromatic, after a couple of days you become used to the scent and know what results the use of this oil brings, so you savour that raw, green, nutty aroma.  Even if you never learn to love that smell, the scent always disappears after a few minutes on your skin, as true Argan Oil absorbs so quickly and beautifully.

However, many brands do put their precious Argan Oil through damaging heating and deodorization processes.  If a brand consistently smells like ABSOLUTELY NOTHING, then it is possible that their oil is consistently deodorized.  This process strips the oil not only of any smell it might have had, but also of some of its healing, restorative properties. Sometimes chemical solvents are used to pull the oil from the Argan kernels.  And frequently during the refining process the oil is heated to a very high temperature (up to 375-400 degrees F for 30-60 minutes). But as mentioned, light and heat break down the oil's best properties, so we firmly believe it's best to leave this precious oil alone in its most natural state. Again, we stress that the scent of raw, hand-pressed Argan Oil varies from batch to batch.  Sometimes the scent is lighter, sometimes it is a quite a bit more aromatic.  In our experience, the smell of the oil most definitely varies with the seasons.

5. The texture

Argan Oil should be smooth and silky.  Disappearing into your skin.  It should not feel slimy, sticky or watery.  It should not sting.  Even on uncomfortable skin conditions, Argan Oil should bring a soothing effect, not a painful one.

6.  The sediment

Authentic Argan Oil often has a tiny bit of sediment at the bottom of the bottle and it appears a bit "cloudy".  The highly refined or fake oil will not have this sediment and will look very clear.  Saadia Organics Argan Oil does have a few traces of sediment in some of our bottles.  Don't be alarmed if you do spy a wee bit.  Just let it settle and enjoy knowing that you have the real thing. Our oil is also cloudy and pale yellow in colour.  We do not heat the oil at all, and it is run through a simple strainer, rather than put through a rigourous filtration system.  In our opinion, the less the oil is messed with and manipulated, the better.  When you see clear, bright yellow Argan Oil you know that heat and machines have been involved in the manufacturing process.

7. The results

As they say, "the proof is in the pudding". Every single day we get people telling us how much they love our product.  Telling us they've tossed other things they were using for skin care, hair care and baby care.  Some even have stopped using prescription medications* as our pure, raw Argan Oil works better on their psoriasis or on their child's eczema.  (Without the cost, potentially questionable ingredients or side effects.) A handful of reviews are posted here and some others are here.   Feel free to comment and add your own!

THE TEST

You might know that a woman named Saadia is our Production Manager over in Morocco. Not one drop of Argan Oil is imported without her stamp of approval.  She is highly suspicious of fake, impure and refined Argan Oil. Recently, I took Saadia's son, (my husband!) to check out a brand of Argan Oil found in one chain of stores. He seems to have inherited her discerning ways.**  

So let's run through our checklist of 7 warnings:

1.  The ingredients list just said: 100% Argan Oil.  Check.

2.  Nice dark amber glass bottle.  Check.

3.  The price.  On the high end.  $58 (before tax)

4.  The scent.  Zero.  It smelled like cooking oil, if anything.  It has probably been deodorized.

5.  The texture.  Slimy.

6.  No sediment as far as we could see.  And the oil was crystal clear, not the least bit cloudy.

7.  The results.  Unsure.  After failing tests 4, 5 and 6 we would be unwilling to buy this product to bother testing it.  

I hope you found this informative!  We just want you to make an informed decision as you attempt to purchase this rather elusive oil only made in a rather elusive country. If you want to check out our amazing, authentic, hand-pressed Argan Oil, take a look!

joèl~            

*Speak with your doctor before discontinuing use of prescription medications.

** The view expressed in the video is just one by a person who grew up with Argan Oil.   It is not the official view of Saadia Organics.

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  • Saadia Organics on

    We haven’t heard anything about extra customs charges… but be warned that packages leave Canada quickly, but slow down a fair bit once they arrive in India. 4-5 weeks is standard delivery time.

  • Al on

    Very helpful post!
    I was wondering if the oil I got is pure… it comes in a dark bottle and it says 100% pure and cold-pressed. The ingredient only lists Argan oil. However, it’s quite cheap at $17 for 50 ml. Also, it kinda smells like fresh olives? I’ve read that it’s supposed to smell like that if it’s machine cold-pressed and it’s closest to hand extraction. Haven’t used it to know how it absorbs etc. It’s also made in Canada, and it doesn’t say imported from Morocco etc. The brand is Afragreen. People who’ve used it reported good results. Any thoughts?
    Thank you!

  • Saadia Organics on

    Hello!

    This is quite strange…. Raw materials (ie, Argan fruit, pits or kernels) are not allowed to be exported from Morocco at all. They MUST be pressed into the oil in Morocco only — and then exported. (This makes sense, as they want to keep the work and wages in the country.)

    We manufacture our oil in Essaouira. (We must! And we are glad that we do, as we are able to employ women in Morocco who would not be able to find good employment otherwise.) We do bottle it in Canada however.

    If that company is manufacturing their oil here in Canada, then there is no way it could be Argan Oil.

  • Al on

    Thanks for the reply!
    I thought that was strange too. What do you think of the smell and price? It doesn’t smell like olive oil to me and I know what a really strong smelling cold pressed olive oil smells like. This honestly smells like fresh green olives. I’ve read from some websites that argan oil sometimes smells like olive and nutty??
    How is it legal for a company to label a product 100% argan oil if it’s entirely something else?
    Thanks for your help :)

  • Saadia Organics on

    Well, it is definitely cheap if it is indeed derived from Argan fruit (although machine pressing with extreme heat and solvents bring the cost down a fair bit). But if it is a mix of oils? It is not worth nearly that much.

    The smell? Some say true Argan Oil smells a bit olive-ish. It really depends on the nose.

    Unfortunately, there are a lot of fakes out there. We know that there is an astronomical amount of oil out in the world that is being called “Argan Oil”, but the fact of the matter is — not enough trees grow in the entirety of Morocco to product that much oil in a year to send out. So it is a mathematical impossibility. Something else is in many bottles.

    As for the company you are asking about. I really know nothing about them… perhaps they are buying materials from Israel to import? Israel has worked very hard to make Argan Trees grow on their soil. They don’t have many, and they used some sort of cross pollination techniques to create the trees… but they are growing some over there now.

    Or perhaps their labels are just misleading? It’s really hard to say.



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