For context: I am interested in various kinds of antique (mostly Victorian) cosmetics recipes, and since I got into soapmaking I've also started perusing the soap chapters of the various old books that contain cosmetics recipes. Now, most of those recipes are hot process and a lot of them are also made with tallow, which I haven't been able to source where I live yet. However, one of the books I've found (Encyclopedia Of Practical Receipts And Processes, 1872) contains an entire section on CP soapmaking, including this recipe:
Now, after consulting several tables I've determined that 36° Baumé is roughly equal to a 23% lye concentration; and after playing around on a soap calculator a bit I've come to the conclusion that the quantity of lye given would give a 21-24% superfat.
I then recalculated the recipe to be a somewhat more reasonable quantity (I'm sure someone out there might need 70 kg of soap but I certainly don't):
Thoughts on this recipe? Is it worth trying out as-is? I'm beginner enough at this that just looking at a recipe doesn't tell me that much about how soap will behave, lol - it seems to have more water than and a higher superfat than most recipes, but what is the practical effect of that?
Also, is it worth trying without a stick blender? I'm still waiting on the one a colleague promised to give me, and I do not want to sacrifice my food-making stick blender to the soap gods (thus far I've successfully made pure coconut oil soap using just a whisk but I have no idea how fast a mostly lard-based soap will reach trace)
596. Paris Toilet Round Soap. 25 pounds cocoanut oil, 75 pounds lard, 50 to 52 pounds caustic soda lye of 36° Baumé, will produce 150 pounds of the soap.
Now, after consulting several tables I've determined that 36° Baumé is roughly equal to a 23% lye concentration; and after playing around on a soap calculator a bit I've come to the conclusion that the quantity of lye given would give a 21-24% superfat.
I then recalculated the recipe to be a somewhat more reasonable quantity (I'm sure someone out there might need 70 kg of soap but I certainly don't):
Thoughts on this recipe? Is it worth trying out as-is? I'm beginner enough at this that just looking at a recipe doesn't tell me that much about how soap will behave, lol - it seems to have more water than and a higher superfat than most recipes, but what is the practical effect of that?
Also, is it worth trying without a stick blender? I'm still waiting on the one a colleague promised to give me, and I do not want to sacrifice my food-making stick blender to the soap gods (thus far I've successfully made pure coconut oil soap using just a whisk but I have no idea how fast a mostly lard-based soap will reach trace)