Folklore Dark Tonic™️
Natural Goat Milk Soap
Dark Stout Beer Soap with Coffee & Vanilla Essential Oils
Somewhere between the barn kitchen and the Folklore Apothecary shelf sits a bar of soap that smells like it was brewed instead of poured.
Folklore Dark Tonic is made with dark stout beer, coffee essential oil, and vanilla essential oil for a scent that’s warm, deep, and just a little old-world ....the kind of thing you could imagine sitting in a wooden cupboard beside jars with handwritten labels… or being handed across the fence by someone who knows a few remedies the books forgot to write down.
Around here, the goats and pigs insist the best cures don’t always come from a store.
Some come from the barn kitchen.
Some come from the apothecary shelf.
And some, if you listen to the older goats, come from the hedge spirits and wood sprites that live out past the far fence of the hollow.
The stout gives the soap a rich, creamy lather, while coffee has long been used for its natural deodorizing and exfoliating qualities. Vanilla adds a smooth, comforting note and is known for its soothing, skin-loving properties.
Like all our soaps, it’s made with fresh goat milk here at Tilton Hollow Farm. Goat milk is naturally high in vitamins and gentle fats that help leave skin feeling clean, soft, and never dried out.
This is the kind of soap that feels like it belongs in an old wooden cupboard next to jars of salves, tonics, and things the goats swear work better if you don’t ask too many questions about where the recipe came from.
✔ Made with fresh goat milk
✔ Dark stout beer for a creamy, conditioning lather
✔ Coffee essential oil for its cleansing and deodorizing qualities
✔ Vanilla essential oil for a warm, soothing finish
✔ Handcrafted at Tilton Hollow Farm
✔ The Best Soap in the World
No potions.
No nonsense.
Just good soap… with a little folklore mixed in.
Approx 4.5 oz bar (most are a bit more)
Raw goat milk, saponified oils of coconut, olive, avocado, shea butter, Guinness dark stout, coffee & vanilla essential oils…
…and whatever the goats learned from the hedge spirits.