So I decided to go shopping at Honey World at Marina Square, and after picking up a bottle of Manuka Honey UMF +20 at a 20% discount (final price about S$68), my eyes fell on this box that mentioned TOOTHPASTE. Now I’ve heard of people brushing their teeth with natural/homemade soap bars (apparently they’re glycerin free and way more effective than commercial toothpaste), and I admit, I was tempted to try, except there it was sitting all exotic and expensive – Doctor Burt’s Cinna Mint Toothpaste – 100% Natural!

Doctor Burt's Cinna Mint Toothpaste
Immediately my brain fired up a question – why use natural soap bars when you have natural toothpaste? I picked the box up, examined the packaging and ingredients, and to my dismay found the words “plant glycerin” printed on the length of the box. But because of the word “plant”, I was willing to close an eye, and bought it for experimental purposes. I’ve since tried it an hour ago for the first time, and of course I can’t report on any long-term effects, but here are a few things I did notice on first usage:
It was harder (dryer?) than commercial toothpaste. I don’t know if the tube was left on the shelf for a long time, or if it’s meant to be this dry, but whatever it was, it produced very little foam on brushing. I used Braun’s Oral B electric toothbrush, if this is of any importance to you. In my experience electric toothbrushes produce way more lather than manual ones with just a small amount of toothpaste, so I wouldn’t be surprised if people using manual ones find that Doctor Burt’s toothpaste produced no lather at all. I’m pretty convinced the dryness is intentional, since the tube’s opening was sealed with foil and it would be impossible for any kind of evaporation. I attribute the dryness to one of its key ingredients, sodium bicarbonate (or baking soda), which is dry and chalky on its own already.
So, being dryer than usual, I was not used to spreading the stuff over my front teeth. After I got them evenly out on every tooth, I switched the toothbrush on, and immediately made a flying mess of white spots on the mirror facing me. Yeah, it’s that un-foamy. The thing about commercial toothpaste is that they produce so much lather, they cling on and mix around with your saliva, so it’s easier to control the residue and spit. Doctor Burt’s? No such control. I guess I should say I didn’t get a kick out of brushing, because hurhur, I love soap lather and bubbles!
After brushing, it was easy to rinse out – and this I feel is due to it being un-foamy (surprise!). I don’t know how I should say this, but you know it usually takes a few rounds to thoroughly get rid of the slippery, alkaline feel commercial toothpaste produce? Doctor Burt’s one felt clean with just two rinses. It’s like they’re forcing you to choose between inconvenience first (Burt’s), or inconvenience after (commercial toothpastes). Burt’s one also had less of the overwhelming mint flavour found in commercial toothpaste – just a light, natural peppermint breath. It’s fresh, but not sickeningly fresh. This first try was after a meal before bedtime, so I don’t know how this light peppermint breath would fare faced with the crazier morning-breath one. We all know that one’s hell.
As for the actual cleanliness, well, my teeth look clean, and feel clean. No, actually, they feel better than clean! They feel polished. And the best part of everything? My mouth doesn’t feel at all dry. I’m convinced it’s all in the subtle power of being less foamy, because – and I say this without scientific proof – I feel that the lather is the culprit drying up my mouth. Maybe the artificial mint smell backs it up too. Now we all know a dry mouth is a bad idea and the main cause of bad breath, so Burt’s toothpaste scores big time on being 100% natural. I’ll update this post again tomorrow morning to see how it deals with the morning stink. (!)
Meanwhile here are the details of where I got this item:
Location: Honey World (6 Raffles Boulevard, #02-260 Marina Square, Singapore 039594)
Price: S$18 (I got it at 25% off during a sale, so it was S$13.50)
Ingredients: Purified water, vegetable glycerin, calcium carbonate, bentonite, peppermint oil, spearmint oil, cassia oil, sodium bicarbonate, yucca schidigera extract, chlorophyll, parsley oil, xanthan gum
Physical description: Dry-ish, hardened greenish-white paste (not gel). Tube has a large screw-on cap, packaged in a red box. Comes in two flavours: lavender mint and cinna mint. I have cinna mint. And according to the Doctor Burt’s official website, they have discontinued with its production for some reason. Some shops still sell it, but don’t count on it..
P.S.: Upon further reading on the www, I’ve to admit I’m confused about the glycerin issue, because it seems like natural soapmakers are insisting that glycerin is good and that commercial soaps remove it from their products. I don’t believe this is true because I’ve recently checked Dove and Dettol soaps, and they both have glycerin as part of the listed ingredients.





