This isn’t just a cleanser — it’s a family argument bottled up. The founders of Youth to the People grew up watching their grandma juice kale in a 1970s cold-press machine.
The real story? They turned a kitchen-table passion into a skincare line to prove their skeptical dad wrong. He thought superfoods were just for eating.
A $38 gel cleanser that promises to clean without stripping. I tried it because they claim it can remove sunscreen — a bold move for a gentle formula.
The Texture
Feels like chilled green juice sliding between your fingers.
The Lather
A light, airy foam — not the suffocating, soapy kind.
The Scent
Pure, crushed spinach and green tea. Zero perfume.
Photo: Renaldo Matamoro / Unsplash
It reads like a smoothie recipe. Kale, spinach, and green tea aren’t just marketing — they’re cold-pressed to preserve antioxidants. That part’s legit.
The surprise? Alfalfa. It’s a nutrient-dense green, but seeing it on a skincare label is weird. In a good way.
- Kale: packed with vitamins C, E & K
- Spinach: loaded with niacinamide & chlorophyll
- Green Tea: antioxidant & calming catechins
- Alfalfa: vitamins & amino acids for skin barrier
First wash — skin feels cool and clean, but not that tight, squeaky feeling. Dries down soft, not parched. It’s refreshing in a way that makes you want to wash your face.
By week two, my morning redness dialed down a notch. The shocker? It took off my mineral sunscreen with one go. Didn’t see that coming from a “superfood” gel.
My congestion didn’t vanish — this isn’t a salicylic acid bomb. But my skin looked calmer, more even. A solid baseline clean.
It delivers on its promise: a genuinely nourishing, effective cleanse. The family story isn’t just fluff — you can feel the intention.