This cleanser started in a kitchen. Two brothers, their grandma’s cold-pressed oils, and a belief that food-grade ingredients belong on your face.
The real story isn’t the kale—it’s the refusal to water it down. They use the same superfood concentrates you’d find in a juice bar. No filler.
A $38 gel cleanser. I was skeptical of the “superfood” hype, but the “cold-pressed” claim got me. That means heat never destroyed the nutrients.
Vegan & Leaping Bunny Certified
No animal anything, and they don’t test on animals.
pH-Balanced (5.5)
Won’t strip your skin’s natural acid mantle like some squeaky-clean gels.
100% Recyclable Bottle
The bottle is made from post-consumer recycled plastic—the pump isn’t, which is annoying.
It reads like a smoothie recipe. Kale, spinach, green tea—all cold-pressed. This isn’t marketing fairy dust; it’s the first third of the ingredient list.
- Kale: Antioxidants to fight environmental stressors
- Spinach: Vitamins C, E, & K for a healthy barrier
- Green Tea: Catechins to calm redness
- Alfalfa: Minerals like iron and magnesium
It’s a vibrant, leafy-green gel that smells like a fresh-cut lawn—in a good way. Lathers into a light, airy foam that feels cleansing, not suffocating.
After two weeks, my skin felt balanced. Not “tight” after washing. The surprise? It removed my light makeup, but I’d never trust it with waterproof mascara.
My congestion improved. No dramatic glow, but my skin just looked… calm. It’s a reliable reset button, not a miracle worker.
It’s the cleanser for people who think about what they put in *and* on their body. The Youth to the People story isn’t a gimmick—it’s in the formula.