Baking soda equal to oils? Isn't it too much?I've done it & many other soapers have done it and it works just fine. I used baking soda equal to my soap oils. I added it at light trace. Make sure you sift your baking soda first so there's no lumps. It makes the soap very hard, like a salt bar. It also is kind of exfoliating.
It would be good to know how much lye can "eat" 1 gram of baking soda...That actually makes sense, I think. At trace there would be some saponification already, and so I would think some of the lye wouldn't be available to react with the bicarb - the soap might end up with a oil discount vs one without the baking soda in it, but the baking soda acts as a buffer, and the free lye could be converted to washing soda, with some baking soda remaining unconverted. I'm guessing here, though. Anyone want to add/correct this? (Buffers are kinda weird chemistry)
I've done it & many other soapers have done it and it works just fine. I used baking soda equal to my soap oils. I added it at light trace. Make sure you sift your baking soda first so there's no lumps. It makes the soap very hard, like a salt bar. It also is kind of exfoliating.
It would be good to know how much lye can "eat" 1 gram of baking soda...
So, can we say that baking soda has a "SAP" (I put it in quotes...) of 39.997 / 84.007 = 0.476 ? Much more than any oil.Yes, it would..... but as I understand the chemistry, although the reaction is one molecule to one molecule (not gram to gram) it is a reversible one, and the baking soda acts as a buffer, which makes things a little more tricky.
NaHCO3+NaOH <---> Na2CO3 +H2O
the weight of 1 mol NaHCO3 (baking soda) is 84.007g
the weight of 1 mol NaOH is 39.997g
So, can we say that baking soda has a "SAP" (I put it in quotes...) of 39.997 / 84.007 = 0.476 ? Much more than any oil.
Sodium Palmate, Sodium Cocoate (OR) Sodium Palm Kernelate, Water, Glycerin, Sodium Bicarbonate, Ethylhexyl Hydroxystearate, Sodium Chloride, Sodium Gluconate, Pumice, Titatnium Dioxide.
Could you tell us how much bakingsoda you use and where you put it - in oils,in water or in trace?I made it and like it.
I first heard of baking soda soap on "the Dish".
Learned there that "baking soda soap" a.o. is used like a deodorant soap, especially in summer.
It has been on the commercial market in the US for more than a century.
Grandpa's Baking Soda Soap
Ingredients :
Could you tell us how much bakingsoda you use and where you put it - in oils,in water or in trace?
thank you.
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