I finally caved and bought the jar. For science.
The real shock? It’s not the price — it’s the weight. The jar is heavy. Feels like you’re holding a tiny, expensive brick.
It’s the original Crème de la Mer from La Mer. $390 for 2 oz. The claim? A “miracle broth” that heals and transforms skin.
The Broth
Fermented sea kelp — the whole brand mythos is built on this.
The Ritual
You have to “warm” it between your fingers to activate it. Feels fancy, feels fussy.
The Jar
No pump. You dip your fingers in. For $390, I wanted a pump.
Yes, the Miracle Broth™ is fermented seaweed. It’s an antioxidant, soothing ingredient. But the formula is surprisingly… simple? Basic emollients do a lot of the heavy lifting.
- Seaweed (Algae) Extract: The fermented hero — calming and reparative
- Mineral Oil: Classic occlusive — locks in moisture, can feel heavy
- Petrolatum: Vaseline’s cousin — a powerful barrier repair agent
- Citrus Peel Oil: For scent — smells luxe, but a potential irritant for some
Thick. Opaque. Like cold, whipped butter. The “warming” ritual turns it translucent — it becomes an oil-serum texture. Absorbs in about 90 seconds, leaves a satin-finish veil.
Week 3: My skin was definitely hydrated. But the real surprise? My husband’s razor burn on his neck healed overnight when he stole some. That’s the “healing” claim in action.
Plumper, calmer skin? Yes. A miraculous transformation? No. My fine lines didn’t vanish. It’s a superb barrier repair cream — if you’re irritated, wind-burned, or over-exfoliated, it’s magic. For daily plumping, there are cheaper options.
It’s an excellent, over-engineered healing balm in heavy packaging. You’re paying for the myth, the ritual, and the feel — which, let’s be honest, is part of luxury.