eric said:
Hi,
but for starters I'm wanting to work more on the fundamentals. I'd like to correct/counterbalance whatever the weaknesses of tallow would be. Lindy, you mentioned using coconut oil and olive oil along with tallow. I know different ingredients provide different qualities/attributes to the soap, but I don't really understand the differences. Could any of the other ingredients I have at hand (e.g. dairy, honey, lard) provide any of the same kind of attributes as coconut or olive oil?
Thanks!
Eric
Hi Eric and welcome.
I use tallow quite often but have never made a soap with 100% tallow yet. The highest I go is 65% and it makes a beautifully hard soap. The thing with tallow, though, is that if you are used to bathing with soaps that have copious lather and big bubbles that easily bubble right up the second you apply even the slightest friction, you might be disappointed with the kind of lather you get from high amounts of tallow, unless you add other oils to it to boost it up, that is. Tallow lather is harder to work up and it is more on the creamy side with smallish bubbles. If you like that kind of lather, that's wonderful, but if not, here are some oils that add bubbliness:
1. Coconut oil
2. Palm Kernel Oil (PKO)
3. Babassu Oil
These oils also are very cleansing, so the trick is to get the right balance so the finished soap is not too drying for you.
To add a bit of conditioning, olive oil is great to use, and so is castor oil. Castor has the added advantage of lending bubbliness, too.
Regarding dairy, honey and lard- while each one of those adds nice qualities to soap, none of them can really be substituted for the more copious lather that you'll get from oils like coconut. Dairy adds a luxurious, dense creaminess; honey adds a humectant factor and also boosts bubbles to an extent, but should only be used in small amounts as large amounts will cause your soap to bleed honey as well as to overheat while saponifying. Lard is similar to tallow with the differences that it is more conditioning and makes for a slightly softer soap. The lather is similar to tallow, though.
This is my tallow soap recipe. I've posted it here before:
-Tallow 65%
-Castor Oil 23% (that might seem high for castor, but with 65% tallow, it balances it out quite nicely)
-Oilve Oil 12%
For extra bubbly fun, I like to toss a bit of cured, chunked up soap to this recipe at trace that I had previously made from the famous 100% coconut oil/20% superfat recipe. It makes for a great, hard, gentle soap with very nice, bubbly lather.
IrishLass