Experiment Report
So one soap cycle ago, I tried this shaving soap recipe, because it looked so unusual:
- Coconut oil 25%
- castor oil 20%
- cocoa butter 15%
- Shea butter 15%
- soy wax 15%
- avocado oil 10%
NaOH:liquid 1:1.5
9% superfat
And the liquid was 50 g water, 30 g glycerin.
I was specifically curious about what the glycerin did; most of the advice I saw on the internet was not to bother adding it because glycerin is created anyway with saponification. The author of the recipe says it “helps build up a good lather”.
So I did one batch 100% water, and the other 50/30 split with glycerin in the recipe.
First observation, the glycerin reacts with the lye by forming a puck of something solid almost immediately, so you have to add the lye gradually and stirring constantly.
But finally, after 2 months, I got to try them. As a shaving soap, the 100% water did ok; it created a fairly stable foam with tight bubbles. Better than normal soap, but not quite as good as commercial dual-lye shaving soap (Proraso).
The glycerin soap took forever to buildup a decent foam, but when it did, it was quite interesting; very firm and stable, my boyfriend described it “like ricotta”.
But that “took forever” was notable, making it completely unusable as a shaving soap. When I then try to use either soap as actual hand soap, the water one does just fine, whereas the glycerin soap does not lather! Trying my best (soaking the soap for a bit, rolling it for several minutes), I get a tiny little pouf of medium bubbles, but few enough that you can count them individually.
So unless anyone has experience otherwise, I’d say definitely don’t add glycerin to soap unless you can fix the lather problem.
So one soap cycle ago, I tried this shaving soap recipe, because it looked so unusual:
- Coconut oil 25%
- castor oil 20%
- cocoa butter 15%
- Shea butter 15%
- soy wax 15%
- avocado oil 10%
NaOH:liquid 1:1.5
9% superfat
And the liquid was 50 g water, 30 g glycerin.
I was specifically curious about what the glycerin did; most of the advice I saw on the internet was not to bother adding it because glycerin is created anyway with saponification. The author of the recipe says it “helps build up a good lather”.
So I did one batch 100% water, and the other 50/30 split with glycerin in the recipe.
First observation, the glycerin reacts with the lye by forming a puck of something solid almost immediately, so you have to add the lye gradually and stirring constantly.
But finally, after 2 months, I got to try them. As a shaving soap, the 100% water did ok; it created a fairly stable foam with tight bubbles. Better than normal soap, but not quite as good as commercial dual-lye shaving soap (Proraso).
The glycerin soap took forever to buildup a decent foam, but when it did, it was quite interesting; very firm and stable, my boyfriend described it “like ricotta”.
But that “took forever” was notable, making it completely unusable as a shaving soap. When I then try to use either soap as actual hand soap, the water one does just fine, whereas the glycerin soap does not lather! Trying my best (soaking the soap for a bit, rolling it for several minutes), I get a tiny little pouf of medium bubbles, but few enough that you can count them individually.
So unless anyone has experience otherwise, I’d say definitely don’t add glycerin to soap unless you can fix the lather problem.