Whew! What a lot to take in. I would love to have a mixture that is as slow to trace as yours is. Anyhoo, an interesting observation I made recently when making a coconut milk soap...
I have made a total of four batches of coconut milk soap in my life, and the the first three all came to trace very quickly and I had to move swiftly. I always assumed it was the coconut milk, until I made the most recent batch when it took forever to come to trace. So what was different? In my previous recipes I had used the split method - to 1kg of oils I used 150g coconut milk, 150g water and 139g lye.
I don't quite know what planet I was on when i made the most recent batch, but I used ( to 1kg of oils) 160g coconut milk, 210g of water and 136g of lye.
In both cases the lye to oils concentration was pretty much the same, but in the latter I had more water. And this was the one that took forever to trace. I enjoyed the experience, it was so foreign to me : )
I have made a total of four batches of coconut milk soap in my life, and the the first three all came to trace very quickly and I had to move swiftly. I always assumed it was the coconut milk, until I made the most recent batch when it took forever to come to trace. So what was different? In my previous recipes I had used the split method - to 1kg of oils I used 150g coconut milk, 150g water and 139g lye.
I don't quite know what planet I was on when i made the most recent batch, but I used ( to 1kg of oils) 160g coconut milk, 210g of water and 136g of lye.
In both cases the lye to oils concentration was pretty much the same, but in the latter I had more water. And this was the one that took forever to trace. I enjoyed the experience, it was so foreign to me : )