I use up to 1 tbs spoon ppo for TD. Sugar I use 2 tbs ppo
How does one go about adding sugar or salt to soap? Do you dissolve in the water? Could you not dissolve them and use them as exfoliants ( if they don't dissolve during the cook). If sugar makes more bubbles what does salt do? Thanks in advance!
If you'd like to dissolve your salt or sugar just add it to your water and let it dissolve, then add your lye.
You can add 30-100% salt directly to your oils/batter as well. That makes a "salt bar". It doesn't really exfoliate but it will be a nice hard silky bar. Because salt inhibits lather most people use a high coconut oil recipe with salt bars.
Adding sugar directly to your batter makes a spongey bar. I'm not entirely sure what the other benefits may be, I've never tried it myself. Others might chime in!
Salt adds to the bar's hardness and sugar increases bubbles. Both have to be dissolved in water before lye is added to get the stated benefits
Yup I just couldn't remember what kind of effects you get from adding sugar directly to your batter.
How does one go about adding sugar or salt to soap? Do you dissolve in the water? Could you not dissolve them and use them as exfoliants ( if they don't dissolve during the cook). If sugar makes more bubbles what does salt do? Thanks in advance!
I add the sugar to the water (or aloe vera juice, in my case) and let it dissolve completely before adding the lye. I've been trying powdered sugar for my last 2 batches thinking that the powder would dissolve better/faster than the granulated sugar but I'm seeing the opposite; the powder dissolves slower. The last little bit of powdered sugar dissolves only after the lye generates the heat. That being said, I don't notice any crystallization of the undissolved powdered sugar when the lye is added. I've poured the lye water through a strainer to make sure and so far nothing.
I can't comment about salt as I've never used it.
Blame the cornstarch. part of the reason why you have to cook any pastry cream or some custards is because cornstarch needs heat to do its thing, generally speaking. At the very least you would need very warm water to at least start dissolving powdered sugar. It's easier just to use the regular granulated sugar (personal theory).
Do you notice a differences with bars that have powdered sugar vs regular sugar?
I wish I could still edit my original post to add more - I guess it's no longer an option. :-?
It would be better to create a Google doc that everyone can access. That way it can be updated without editing your original post. Something like the Fragrance Oil Review thread/link.
I've been playing around with indigo and have had only one successful attempt in getting the color to stay. The soap was a bit of a fail and had to be rebatched though.
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