Hello all,
Here's the thing: the problem is my batter going red (i.e. I assume coconut milk burning). Now I know that Shunt, Irish Lass and several others on this forum put their sugar/citric acid solution directly into their oils. And then they add the lye. And they have NO PROBLEMS! I try to do what they do and I have one hand on the thermometer ready to shove the batter into the fridge or freezer. If I keep the lye with the oils stable between 28° and 30° (82.5-86°F) then I pull this tricky operation off. Perhaps. Can I just give all the necessary details?
My masterbatch lye is aloe juice (nothing in it except minuscule amount of CA). A dream. No problem.
For the remaining water, I use coconut milk - frozen into icecubes. Adding the lye/aloe must be done slowly. (Funny thing, those icepacks they leave in the bottom drawer of freezers have suddenly proven useful. I sit the coconut milk container on one of them while pouring in the lye solution.) Oh, and I add the SL.
So now we are entering into the climactic fourth act of this play which will determine the outcome.
The oils are all at room temperature - let's say 28° (82.5°F). Now what Shunt and Irish Lass do is they have already poured the CA/sugar into these oils,when they were still at a higher temperature and if necessary they have stickblended them to make absolutely sure they've all blended. And so they pour the lye solution into this premixed Oil/CA/Sugar.
Now, when I do this (dramatic ominous music in the background), I have to go slowly, slowly, slowly. And I never cry victory too soon because when I think I've pulled it off (batter still not red), suddenly BAM! dark red.
I think I have explored all the variables on this. Because another version, for example, is having carefully and successfully added CA/Sugar to the Aloe/Lye/SL (icepacks galore) and then added this solution carefully into the oils, there again, WHAM, we have the dark red.
Frustratingly, this does not happen all the time. FIVE TIMES OUT OF SIX maybe things go ok, gingerly but ok. Thus the obsession with the 28° C. But I can't reliably keep things in that limited temperature range.
Does anyone have some magic solution that I haven't come up with? Or am I trying to pull off the impossible? I don't quite understand because Aloe has no sugar, and sure, there's sugar in Coconut milk but others also add sugar and coconut milk
PS I'm vegetarian and no-palm, not a militant, just for myself.
Here's the thing: the problem is my batter going red (i.e. I assume coconut milk burning). Now I know that Shunt, Irish Lass and several others on this forum put their sugar/citric acid solution directly into their oils. And then they add the lye. And they have NO PROBLEMS! I try to do what they do and I have one hand on the thermometer ready to shove the batter into the fridge or freezer. If I keep the lye with the oils stable between 28° and 30° (82.5-86°F) then I pull this tricky operation off. Perhaps. Can I just give all the necessary details?
My masterbatch lye is aloe juice (nothing in it except minuscule amount of CA). A dream. No problem.
For the remaining water, I use coconut milk - frozen into icecubes. Adding the lye/aloe must be done slowly. (Funny thing, those icepacks they leave in the bottom drawer of freezers have suddenly proven useful. I sit the coconut milk container on one of them while pouring in the lye solution.) Oh, and I add the SL.
So now we are entering into the climactic fourth act of this play which will determine the outcome.
The oils are all at room temperature - let's say 28° (82.5°F). Now what Shunt and Irish Lass do is they have already poured the CA/sugar into these oils,when they were still at a higher temperature and if necessary they have stickblended them to make absolutely sure they've all blended. And so they pour the lye solution into this premixed Oil/CA/Sugar.
Now, when I do this (dramatic ominous music in the background), I have to go slowly, slowly, slowly. And I never cry victory too soon because when I think I've pulled it off (batter still not red), suddenly BAM! dark red.
I think I have explored all the variables on this. Because another version, for example, is having carefully and successfully added CA/Sugar to the Aloe/Lye/SL (icepacks galore) and then added this solution carefully into the oils, there again, WHAM, we have the dark red.
Frustratingly, this does not happen all the time. FIVE TIMES OUT OF SIX maybe things go ok, gingerly but ok. Thus the obsession with the 28° C. But I can't reliably keep things in that limited temperature range.
Does anyone have some magic solution that I haven't come up with? Or am I trying to pull off the impossible? I don't quite understand because Aloe has no sugar, and sure, there's sugar in Coconut milk but others also add sugar and coconut milk
PS I'm vegetarian and no-palm, not a militant, just for myself.