I slathered this on at 11 PM. By 11:01, my forehead was already shiny—not greasy, just… reflective. Like I’d buffed it with a silk cloth.
The real test? Waking up at 3 AM with the heat blasting and no flake patches. That never happens with my usual creams.
It’s a $20-ish moisturizer from Beauty of Joseon that claims to “revitalize dry skin” with fermented rice bran and ginseng. I bought it because a friend swore it fixed her winter lizard skin.
Ginseng root extract
Not a drop of water in the top 5 ingredients—oil-based instead, which makes sense for dry types
Shea butter
Thick enough to feel like armor, thin enough to spread in one pump
Squalane
Mimics your skin’s natural oils so it doesn’t just sit there like a mask
Photo: Rosa Rafael / Unsplash
Hanbang herbs sound fancy, but the real workhorses are the ferment and the butter. Two percent niacinamide brightens without peeling—but don’t expect a glow bomb if you’re already using vitamin C.
- Ginseng saponins: boosts circulation so your skin looks alive, not just moisturized
- Rice ferment: literally feeds your microbiome like a probiotic for your face
- Shea butter: clogs zero pores despite being thick as hell
- Squalane: absorbs in 10 seconds flat, no slick residue
Photo: Rosa Rafael / Unsplash
First pump—feels like whipped butter. Warm it between your fingers and it melts into a silky oil. Dries down in 30 seconds. My T-zone stayed matte-ish, cheeks felt hugged.
Week 3 surprise: My usual foundation clung to dry patches less, but if you’re combo-oily in summer, this will feel like a blanket in July. Unexpected win—it calmed my retinol redness overnight.
Photo: Poko Skincare / Unsplash
Morning flakiness? Gone. Midday tightness? Reduced by 70%. But my nose still peels if I skip a night. This is maintenance, not magic.
Not a magic bullet, but a solid workhorse for dry skin that hates fuss. If you want hydrated skin without 12 steps, this is your one-and-done.