Everyone’s bathroom shelf has this green bottle. It’s the kale smoothie of cleansers.
But ‘superfood’ is a marketing term, not a skincare one. We need to talk about what that actually means for your face.
It’s a $38 gel cleanser from Youth to the People. The claim? That kale and spinach can clean as well as they nourish.
Vegan & Cruelty-Free
Certified by Leaping Bunny, which is the gold standard.
Recyclable Packaging
The bottle is 100% post-consumer recycled plastic.
Cold-Pressed
Key greens are cold-pressed to preserve nutrients—like a juice bar for your sink.
Photo: Chalo Garcia / Unsplash
The hero ingredients are kale, spinach, and green tea. They’re antioxidants, which fight environmental stressors. Not a magic eraser.
- Kale Extract: Fights free radicals (like pollution)
- Spinach Extract: Provides vitamins C, E, & K
- Green Tea: Soothes and reduces redness
- Alfalfa: Contains amino acids to support skin’s barrier
Texture is a slick gel—smells like a fresh-cut lawn. Lathers into a thin, green-tinged foam. Not stripping, but you feel clean. Really clean.
After two weeks, my skin was balanced. But a surprise: it didn’t magically “detox” anything. It’s just a solid, gentle cleanser. The hype is louder than the results.
My congestion didn’t vanish, but my skin felt consistently calm. No tightness. A reliable reset button, not a transformation.
It’s a great cleanser trapped in a ‘superfood’ narrative. Not greenwashing, but the branding does the heavy lifting.