rainycityjen
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Dec 5, 2013
- Messages
- 238
- Reaction score
- 253
I thought I knew a good bit about CP before diving into it, but there's one thing I had to discover first-hand ... the art of stick blending.
I made two, 2 lb batches this week, both in the same night.
Batch 1 was my first attempt at a milk soap. I dutifully froze a mixture of sheep's milk yogurt (yum!) and water, chopped and partially-melted it into a slush, added lye, and then got my oils ready including some nice mango butter. After I added the lyewater to the oils and then the (beautiful!) forest rain/fir fragrance, I proceeded to stick blend the crap out of it. BOOM, instant concrete. Seized so hard it separated into individual clumps that wouldn't merge in the mold. I hot process hero'd it and ended up with some primitive-looking Irish Spring. So sad.
I was so disappointed with this effort, so I did some research and found that aggressive stick-blending can cause a seize. I had no idea.
Newly-enlightened me made a second soap the same night. This one was coconut milk for water, and a pretty basic coconut/oo/palm recipe. I noticed that the lye was causing the coconut milk to clump, but thought the heat from the reaction would melt the clumps down. I added the lye-milk to my oils and VERY VERY LIGHTLY stirred with my spatula. I may have pulsed my stick-blender once or twice, but I was terrified of seize. I added FO and poured into the mold. Immediately I noticed the little white clumps were still there. 24 hours later, I cut the soap to find lots of fatty-looking tapiocas. Combined with the ash-grey and rose clay, it really looks like some kind of autopsy. I'm horrified.
So learn from me, any beginners who are reading this. Stick blending is like the holy hand grenade of Antioch. You should not lightly blend, but neither should you puree... you should pulse and stir both to trace, remedy ricing as needed, and let the consistency be your guide, rather than your trigger finger...
I made two, 2 lb batches this week, both in the same night.
Batch 1 was my first attempt at a milk soap. I dutifully froze a mixture of sheep's milk yogurt (yum!) and water, chopped and partially-melted it into a slush, added lye, and then got my oils ready including some nice mango butter. After I added the lyewater to the oils and then the (beautiful!) forest rain/fir fragrance, I proceeded to stick blend the crap out of it. BOOM, instant concrete. Seized so hard it separated into individual clumps that wouldn't merge in the mold. I hot process hero'd it and ended up with some primitive-looking Irish Spring. So sad.
I was so disappointed with this effort, so I did some research and found that aggressive stick-blending can cause a seize. I had no idea.
Newly-enlightened me made a second soap the same night. This one was coconut milk for water, and a pretty basic coconut/oo/palm recipe. I noticed that the lye was causing the coconut milk to clump, but thought the heat from the reaction would melt the clumps down. I added the lye-milk to my oils and VERY VERY LIGHTLY stirred with my spatula. I may have pulsed my stick-blender once or twice, but I was terrified of seize. I added FO and poured into the mold. Immediately I noticed the little white clumps were still there. 24 hours later, I cut the soap to find lots of fatty-looking tapiocas. Combined with the ash-grey and rose clay, it really looks like some kind of autopsy. I'm horrified.
So learn from me, any beginners who are reading this. Stick blending is like the holy hand grenade of Antioch. You should not lightly blend, but neither should you puree... you should pulse and stir both to trace, remedy ricing as needed, and let the consistency be your guide, rather than your trigger finger...