I've been trying to imagine what people are talking about when they say their soap volcanoed. I think I know now. I've made a total of 8 or 10 batches of soap, most of them in a 4" mold. I started off trying not to gel my soaps because I use fresh goat milk in all of them, but after a lot of reading here I decided to try gelling. I've insulated the past couple batches, but haven't seen anything that looks like gel phase as far as color and opaque-ness goes. The last soap I insulated looks beautiful and smooth, so I decided to gel this coffee garden soap. I did several things different from my normal process. Recipe as follows:
Castor oil - 5%
Coconut oil - 25%
Olive oil- 35%
Goat tallow - 35%
Water : lye ratio - 2.7 : 1
Superfat - 5%
For a 4" mold (16 oz oils) I used 2.26 oz. of NaOH and 6.11 oz. liquid in the form of 3 oz distilled water and 3.1 oz. cold, raw goat milk. I added 1 1/2 tsp. fine coffee grounds to the water and dissolved the lye into the coffee water. I combined the cold goat milk with the oils before adding the lye/coffee water. Both the oils and lye solution were 97°F when I combined them.
The batter took a long time to come to trace. I am still inept at recognizing emulsion vs trace, and figured I was probably at light trace, so I added 1/2 oz. of a blend of rosemary, clary sage and lavender essential oil. I still stick blended and stirred for another 5-10 minutes before it reached what I now think was light trace and poured it into the mold. The batter was up to 114°F when I poured it. I spritzed it with alcohol, covered it with a cardboard box and a towel and tucked it away on the counter. Half an hour later I checked it and the temp was down to about 100°. I checked it again a couple hour later and it was over 135°, purple in the middle and had a little volcano in the center! 8 hours later it's still 105°.
So, to figure out what happened. I did two things different than I had before. First, I changed the water : lye ratio from my normal 2 : 1 to 2.7 : 1, hoping to slow down trace. That seemed to have worked, but I'm guessing it also contributed to overheating. Secondly, I had never brewed coffee in a lye solution before, always mixing my lye with 100% frozen goat milk cubes. Does coffee produce heat, too?
I assume volcanoed soap is fine to use, it'll just have a hole in the middle? I have been learning so much about soapmaking and realize I have barely made a dent in the possibilities! I'm dreaming soap dreams at night. This is so much fun!
Castor oil - 5%
Coconut oil - 25%
Olive oil- 35%
Goat tallow - 35%
Water : lye ratio - 2.7 : 1
Superfat - 5%
For a 4" mold (16 oz oils) I used 2.26 oz. of NaOH and 6.11 oz. liquid in the form of 3 oz distilled water and 3.1 oz. cold, raw goat milk. I added 1 1/2 tsp. fine coffee grounds to the water and dissolved the lye into the coffee water. I combined the cold goat milk with the oils before adding the lye/coffee water. Both the oils and lye solution were 97°F when I combined them.
The batter took a long time to come to trace. I am still inept at recognizing emulsion vs trace, and figured I was probably at light trace, so I added 1/2 oz. of a blend of rosemary, clary sage and lavender essential oil. I still stick blended and stirred for another 5-10 minutes before it reached what I now think was light trace and poured it into the mold. The batter was up to 114°F when I poured it. I spritzed it with alcohol, covered it with a cardboard box and a towel and tucked it away on the counter. Half an hour later I checked it and the temp was down to about 100°. I checked it again a couple hour later and it was over 135°, purple in the middle and had a little volcano in the center! 8 hours later it's still 105°.
So, to figure out what happened. I did two things different than I had before. First, I changed the water : lye ratio from my normal 2 : 1 to 2.7 : 1, hoping to slow down trace. That seemed to have worked, but I'm guessing it also contributed to overheating. Secondly, I had never brewed coffee in a lye solution before, always mixing my lye with 100% frozen goat milk cubes. Does coffee produce heat, too?
I assume volcanoed soap is fine to use, it'll just have a hole in the middle? I have been learning so much about soapmaking and realize I have barely made a dent in the possibilities! I'm dreaming soap dreams at night. This is so much fun!