I am no longer convinced that a general recommendation to zap test soap is a great idea.
We often get people who started soaping because of sensitivities, or people who make their own products and ask about oils and gloves, or people who ask how to avoid triggering allergies in either themselves or people they care about.
But we recommend what fundamentally equates to ingesting a tiny amount of soap, by way of a zap test ... to lick a minute amount of watered down soap as a test for free lye (no offence intended to the writer).
https://www.soapmakingforum.com/threads/how-to-properly-safely-conduct-the-zap-tongue-test.63199/
After seeing lung damage that I suspect was due to a zap test, seeing first hand an anaphylactic reaction to a single zap test, and personally knowing someone else who has been formally diagnosed (skin prick test) as being allergic to soap, I am trying to find an alternative to suggest to new soapers.
Any ideas?
We often get people who started soaping because of sensitivities, or people who make their own products and ask about oils and gloves, or people who ask how to avoid triggering allergies in either themselves or people they care about.
But we recommend what fundamentally equates to ingesting a tiny amount of soap, by way of a zap test ... to lick a minute amount of watered down soap as a test for free lye (no offence intended to the writer).
https://www.soapmakingforum.com/threads/how-to-properly-safely-conduct-the-zap-tongue-test.63199/
After seeing lung damage that I suspect was due to a zap test, seeing first hand an anaphylactic reaction to a single zap test, and personally knowing someone else who has been formally diagnosed (skin prick test) as being allergic to soap, I am trying to find an alternative to suggest to new soapers.
Any ideas?