How to Make Rose Water

Katie Wells Avatar

Reading Time: 6 minutes

This post contains affiliate links.

Read my affiliate policy.

How to make rose water for perfumes cooking and skin care
Wellness Mama » Blog » Beauty » How to Make Rose Water

Rose water is not only beautifully fragrant but extremely versatile. It has an extensive range of uses including facial toner, hair perfume, cooling mist, and linen freshener. Rose petals are edible and rosewater has a place in the culinary world as well.

I use rose water to replace some or all of the water in recipes for like soap, hair rinse, and hair detangling spray. (As a side note, it will have little impact on the final color of your soap and will definitely not turn it pink!)

How to Make Your Own Rose Water From Scratch

If you like making DIY beauty products or exotic food recipes and have access to garden-grown roses, you have to try this recipe!

There are two relatively easy ways to make rose water at home:

Simmering vs. Distilling

The easiest and quickest way is by simmering rose petals (dried or fresh) in water. The result is a fragrant, rose-colored water. This method is suited best for recipes and uses that will not sit around very long as it has a limited shelf life.

The distilling method technically makes a hydrosol. It is also quite easy to make, albeit slightly more time-consuming. A rose hydrosol is clear and much more shelf-stable.

Choosing Rose Petals

There are over a hundred different varieties of roses. If you are lucky enough to have roses growing in your garden you can use them to make rose water. If you will be picking your own roses, do so in the early morning when the blossoms are the most fragrant.

You can also purchase roses but they should be from an organic source. It is important to use pesticide-free rose petals so your finished rose water is not full of chemicals.

It’s possible to use dried petals. I like these. They are from the Damask Rose and are very fragrant, as well as edible.

Another option is to use lavender flowers. Follow the directions below for the dried petals and use the lavender water in place of the rose water in the following recipes.

Uses for Rose Water

There are so many ways to use rosewater. Here are some of my favorites.

Perfumed Sprays

One thing many people miss after they have made the switch to healthy options in beauty care is the scented aspect of commercial products. Often times those artificial fragrances are the selling point for perfumes, soaps, and shampoos, but they are also one of the more dangerous ingredients used in these products.

Rose water makes a wonderful base for making substitutes for perfumed sprays. Natural shampoo, for example, leaves your hair clean and protects the natural balance of oils in your scalp, but doesn’t leave a lasting perfumed scent. You can make a simple hair perfume to add a touch of a floral scent to your hair. You can also just dab rose water on your wrists and neck for a light hint of perfume.

Hair Perfume: Mix 1 teaspoon pure vanilla extract with essential oils in a 4 oz glass spray bottle and fill to the top with rose water. Spritz on your hair as it is drying and style as usual. This is also great for second (or third) day hair. Spritz a bit on to freshen up. Store in the refrigerator. My current favorite combination is:

  • 3 drops Patchouli
  • 4 drops Ylang Ylang
  • 3 drops Rosemary
  • 4 drops Cedarwood
  • 5 drops Lavender
  • 4 drops Grapefruit
  • 4 drops Bergamot

Linen Freshener: Make a linen freshener by putting rosewater in a spray bottle. You can also add a couple drops of rose or lavender essential oil. Mist on your sheets before going to bed in the evening.

Skin Care

Another excellent use for rose water is in your skin care routine. Rose water helps balance the skin’s PH, reduces redness and irritation, tightens pores, and helps cool and soothe hot skin.

  • Facial Toner: Store rose water in a dark colored glass bottle. Add a drop or 2 of lavender or rose essential oil and apply to your face with a cotton ball after you shower or wash your face.
  • Cooling Mist: Store rose water in a dark colored bottle with a fine mist spray top. You can keep it in your purse for on-the-go use or keep it in the refrigerator for extra cooling. Mist on face to cool skin and freshen up.
  • Sunburn Relief: Mix equal parts rose water and apple cider vinegar in a spray bottle and spray onto sunburned skin for relief.

Mood Improvement

Rose water is also a wonderful mood enhancer. You can mist it on yourself in the same way you use the cooling spray and breathe in the scent to lift your mood. For a calming bath, add 1-2 cups to your bath water.

Culinary Uses

  • In Tea: Add rose water to taste to your herbal tea.
  • Flavor Yogurt: Start with a teaspoon of rose water for 1 cup of yogurt and add more to taste.
  • Lemonade: Add a splash to your lemonade for a complex flavor enhancer.
How to make rose water for perfumes cooking and skin care
Print
3.89 from 17 votes

How to Make Rose Water Recipe

Learn how to make rose water as a fragrant natural ingredient for beauty recipes like perfume, soap and hair products and for cooking and cleaning. Use the simmering or distillation method.
Prep Time10 minutes
Cooling Time45 minutes
Author: Katie Wells

Materials

Simmering Method

Distillation Method

Instructions

Simmering Method

  • In a small saucepan, combine the rose petals and water.
  • Cover and bring to a boil.
  • Reduce the temperature to the lowest setting that still allows the water to simmer.
  • Simmer until the color of the rose petals has faded. Mine became almost colorless. This only took about 5-10 minutes.
  • Leave the lid on and cool completely.
  • Pour the water and petals through a cheesecloth into a dark, clean bottle. You can use a funnel or strain into a measuring bowl with a pour spout and then pour into your dark bottle if needed.
  • Store in the refrigerator for several weeks or on the counter for up to one week.

Distillation Method

  • Place a clean brick (a real brick from a house) in the center of a large stock pot. I used an 8 quart stock pot and an average sized brick.
  • Put a metal bowl or heat-safe glass bowl on top of the brick.
  • Sprinkle the rose petals around the brick making sure not to get any into the bowl.
  • Pour water into the pot over the petals until it comes almost to the top of the brick.
  • Invert the lid and place it over the stock pot. This will allow the steam to collect and drip down to the center of the lid and eventually drip into the bowl.
  • Put ice on the top of the lid to encourage the steam to condense and subsequently drop into the bowl. You can put it directly on the lid and suck the water off with a turkey baster as the ice melts or you can put the ice in a ziplock bag so it is easy to pull off and replace. You want to keep in as much steam as possible because the steam is actually your rosewater.
  • Bring the water to a boil and then reduce to the lowest heat possible that still allows the water to simmer.
  • Simmer for at least 30 minutes, replacing the ice as it melts.
  • Remove the pot from heat and let it cool completely.
  • Very carefully lift the lid so that none of your melted ice water falls into the pot.
  • Carefully pour the rosewater that has collected in the bowl into your dark bottle.
  • This will last much longer at room temperature (up to 6 months, although it doesn’t stick around that long in my house), but you could always store it in the refrigerator to be sure it keeps well.

Notes

After using the distillation method I had some water left in the bottom of the pot when I was done. I strained out the petals and used this in a batch of soap. It didn’t have as strong of a smell but I couldn’t stand the thought of throwing it out.

Make your own natural rose water for skin care - perfume- culinary uses

Have you ever made rose water? What is our favorite way to use it?

Learn how to make rose water is a fragrant natural ingredient for beauty recipes like perfume, soap and hair products and for cooking and cleaning.

Katie Wells Avatar

About Katie Wells

Katie Wells, CTNC, MCHC, Founder of Wellness Mama and Co-founder of Wellnesse, has a background in research, journalism, and nutrition. As a mom of six, she turned to research and took health into her own hands to find answers to her health problems. WellnessMama.com is the culmination of her thousands of hours of research and all posts are medically reviewed and verified by the Wellness Mama research team. Katie is also the author of the bestselling books The Wellness Mama Cookbook and The Wellness Mama 5-Step Lifestyle Detox.

Comments

97 responses to “How to Make Rose Water”

  1. Kellie Avatar

    What type of water should be used? Also, is there a way to dilute the water. I did it wrong and now I have ‘rose water’ with a very mild rose smell and another smell I’m not sure how to discribe

  2. Nikki Avatar

    Hello!! If I use distilled water doing the simmer method will that give the same shelf life as distilling it with the brick/strainer method?

  3. Erika Avatar

    Hi, I simmered the rose water for 20 minutes and it’s still pink. What am I doing wrong.

  4. Baidehi Avatar
    Baidehi

    do you need to strain the mixture in the simmering method through a cheesecloth since I do not have one

  5. Wendy Avatar

    First time maker here. Simmered until the petals lost color, but the water is green. Is it supposed to do that?

  6. Kathy Avatar

    Hi everyone, I want to make the rosewater and add it to an aura cleansing spray for misting around me. If I add in some vodka as a sort of preservative to the mix, any ideas on how long the mixture will keep? Thanks

  7. Luisa Avatar

    Hello! I have made rosewater by distillation and kept the simmering water too. The simmering water, rose water, which I kept in the fridge, has developed some sort of mother, like the one homemade apple cider vinegar develops. Is this normal?? I’ve looked on line a+but cannot find an answer to this… Thank you so much in advance!!

  8. melanie Avatar
    melanie

    Katie, sweet woman this is awesome. I live in British Columbia, and (sorry neighbours…)have been picking roses for bouquets because they smell. So. Damn. Good.

    Today I thought to make my own rose water & your site explains how, perfectly. Thank you!

    Warmly,
    Melanie
    (Also, your last name is so cool for your company name ??)

  9. Rhiana Avatar

    Hi! Thank you so much for these recipes. I’ve been wanting to make my own Rosewater. Do you happen to have a video tutorial, or would you ever be willing to do one? I’d love to try the distillation method, but I’m afraid I’ll mess it up!

  10. Emily Avatar

    Hey! Can I use the pretty pink leftover rose water (not the distilled stuff in the bowl) for anything cosmetic? I’d hate to toss it!

  11. Tawanda Avatar

    Hi, I was wondering can you just use distilled water to boil the petals in? Can this replace the distillation method?

  12. Deborah Avatar

    I tried to make some rose water from dried rose petals and it basically turned brown did I not let it cook enough

  13. Isa Avatar

    I have dried rose petals in vases for more than a year. They still look good. Can those be used to make rosewater?

  14. Elizabeth Schwartz Avatar
    Elizabeth Schwartz

    I tried the simmer method but my rose water came out bitter. Is that normal?

  15. Dan Yoder Avatar
    Dan Yoder

    Rosewater can be very expensive and difficult to find in bulk. I appreciate the fact that you provided 2 different ways to produce rosewater along with the pros and cons of each. As a Pastry Chef, I use it for middle eastern desserts. Egyptian dishes such as Basbousa and Kanafeh both call for rosewater. I have even seen recipes for Baklava that called for small amounts of rosewater. Sadly, finding it by the gallon is very difficult. Thank you for sharing your information.

  16. Emma Avatar

    I have tried to make rose water twice now and the end result is beautiful, and rosy pink, but completely scentless. I don’t know what I’m doing wrong. I picked them this morning at 8am, and used only enough water to cover the petals. Help!!

  17. jill Avatar

    Katie, How bad is the commercial bottled rose water than you can buy? I think it is intended to be ingested, so I was hoping that it was not so bad (full of chemicals). I found this when I was searching around, hoping to find a recipe for perfume that used commercial bottled rose water as one of the ingredients (maybe plus some vodka/ever clear and essential oils that blend well with rose sent.

  18. Pamela Avatar

    Simmering is the way I go, I think I was born without patience. LOL. We’ve been in the heat since February down here in the Deep South and I have roses blooming everywhere. Made my rose oil this morning and ready to make my rose water. Do you know any way to prolong the shelf life of the rose water? Thanks.

  19. Lisa Avatar

    I know fresh is better, but can dried rose hips be used instead to petals?
    All recipes I have found use petals, but I have a ton of hips I’d like to use up.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recipe Rating