First pump hit my hand and I literally paused. This isn’t watery like every other essence — it’s almost milky, slippery, and disappears into skin in about 10 seconds flat.
That’s the trick. Most essences sit on top. This one dives in and leaves zero sticky residue. My morning routine just got 3 minutes shorter.
It’s Ma:nyo‘s flagship essence — 97% galactomyces ferment filtrate, runs about $22-28 depending on where you grab it. I bought it because everyone kept whispering “glow” and I’m a sucker for a good ferment.
Ferment First
Ferment filtrate is the first ingredient — not water. Rare in this price range.
No Fragrance Oils
Smells like fresh yeast and nothing else. No fake floral cover-up.
One Pump Does It
One pump covers my whole face. This bottle will last 3+ months easy.
Photo: Rosa Rafael / Unsplash
Three things doing the heavy lifting here: galactomyces for texture smoothing, niacinamide for brightness, and adenosine for fine lines. No filler nonsense — the ingredient list is stupid short.
- Galactomyces Ferment Filtrate (97%): Smooths texture, boosts barrier
- Niacinamide: Fades dark spots, controls oil without drying
- Adenosine: Anti-aging peptide, softens fine lines
- Sodium Hyaluronate: Hydration that actually sinks in
Photo: Laura Chouette / Unsplash
Texture is like watered-down milk — thin enough to glide, thick enough to feel substantial. You pat it in and your skin goes from dry to plump in one application. The yeast smell fades in 20 seconds, but I kinda like it.
Two weeks in, my pores look smaller. Not gone — they’re not magic erasers — but the crater-ish texture around my nose? Way smoother. Biggest surprise: it calmed a random breakout patch without drying me out.
Photo: Aleksandrs Karevs / Unsplash
My skin looks more even — the red patches around my chin faded maybe 40%. No new breakouts. Still have my usual dry patches on my cheeks, but they’re less angry. It’s not a total transformation, but it’s a noticeable upgrade.
Best ferment essence under $30 I’ve tried. Simple, effective, and doesn’t pretend to be something it’s not.