Kittish
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I think I'm noticing a trend regarding soap developing ash. The last two batches I've made I mixed to med-thick trace before pouring. Absolutely minimal ash on both of them. Other soaps that I've had accelerate or also got mixed to a thicker trace also didn't develop ash, or not much.
By comparison, soaps that I've poured at thin trace almost all have developed ash. The thinner the trace, the thicker the ash.
DeeAnna's most excellent explanation of the dynamic nature of soap has got me to thinking, might ash be the in part the result of those dynamics, where Na molecules and ions react with the air at the interface or that has gotten mixed in with the soap (such as by swirling)? Thinner soap batter would allow more circulation and more easily absorb air. This might also partially explain why people have such various results with methods intended to reduce or prevent ash.
I suppose the thing to do would be test my theory. Make two batches of soap to the same recipe, mix one to thin trace and pour, mix the other to thick trace and pour and see what happens.
By comparison, soaps that I've poured at thin trace almost all have developed ash. The thinner the trace, the thicker the ash.
DeeAnna's most excellent explanation of the dynamic nature of soap has got me to thinking, might ash be the in part the result of those dynamics, where Na molecules and ions react with the air at the interface or that has gotten mixed in with the soap (such as by swirling)? Thinner soap batter would allow more circulation and more easily absorb air. This might also partially explain why people have such various results with methods intended to reduce or prevent ash.
I have already edited this post and added it to my "soapy stuff" articles: http://www.soapmakingforum.com/showpost.php?p=634104&postcount=51. I'd forgotten about the post I wrote explaining why soap is alkaline -- http://www.soapmakingforum.com/showpost.php?p=394531 -- I need to add that it to my articles too. I see at the time this thread was active that I was still in love with shampoo bars, but I've since changed my tune. I eventually cut off a bunch of my hair even though I was using an acid rinse. The rinse slows down the damage, but doesn't stop it. I think I also have another post where I talk about the saponification party -- I'll see if I can hunt it up on my hard drive.
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As far as the idea that superfat added after a hot process (HP) cook will then remain unchanged in the soap forever 'n ever -- this idea is not entirely correct from the bits and pieces I've put together.
In the second link I gave above, I talk about a dynamic equilibrium:
"...The resulting bar of soap is not a boringly static, unchanging block of stuff.... The chemistry going on ... is constantly changing -- it's like a huge party where all kinds of microscopically tiny people are circulating around. Some people "hook up" with each other and some just cruise. Some may hook up, but later unhook, cruise for awhile, and hook up with someone different.
"In chemistry terms, all this partying and circulating is called a "dynamic equilibrium". Obviously, many soap particles are created when the fatty acids and the sodium ions "hook up" more or less permanently to form the chemically neutral molecules we call soap. But there are also the chemical loners who circulate in the watery liquid inside the soap structure -- these include some sodium ions (Na+), some fatty acid ions (Ste- [stearic acid] and others), and the H+ and OH- [hydrogen and hydroxide] ions released by the lye and the fatty acids...."
This dynamic equilibrium also affects the fats remaining in the soap. Remember that soaping fats have three fatty acids and a glycerin. An alkali such as NaOH can break off the fatty acids reasonably easily -- we call this chemical reaction "saponification" and the result is soap. It turns out something as simple as water can break a fat molecule apart too. The chemical reaction of fat with water is called "hydrolysis" (hi-draw-luh-sis). The ultimate result of hydrolysis is a mix of free fatty acids, glycerin, and partly deconstructed fat.
Hydrolysis under normal conditions is slower than saponification, but it still happens. If the fat happens to be the superfat in a bar of soap, that super-duper deluxe expensive miracle oil you originally added to the soap will not stay intact. It will be gradually changed by hydrolysis into simpler chemicals that aren't anything like the original fat.
How fast does this transformation happen? As with so many soapy things, the answer is "it depends." Saturated superfat and monounsaturated superfat are more likely to remain mostly intact for a longer time; polyunsaturated superfat probably won't last as long (many exotic miracle fats are polyunsaturated). Anything that slows down rancidity (DOS) will also slow down hydrolysis, so antioxidants and chelators (ROE, EDTA, citrate, etc) and cool, dry, dark storage conditions may all help.
The bottom line is superfat added to HP soap after the cook will remain more or less in its original form for awhile, but it will not remain intact forever.
I suppose the thing to do would be test my theory. Make two batches of soap to the same recipe, mix one to thin trace and pour, mix the other to thick trace and pour and see what happens.