SoapOfTheNorth
Active Member
I tried to make a charcoal soap and the soap is fine, but it's really crumbly.
My recipe was small:
6 oz each of coconut, palm and olive oil
6 oz distilled water
2.8 oz lye
1 oz basil EO
1 tsp super fine activated charcoal
I've made this before - with the cheap activated charcoal you get anywhere, the really coarse kind. I grind it up in a mortar and pestle until it's less coarse and it comes out perfect.
However, this really fine charcoal has made the soap really crumbly.
My mixing temp was 100f and I had a quick trace. the EO broke the batter so I mixed again until I had a solid trace. I then let it set for 24 hours until I unpacked it.
Then I saw this.. It's never happened before.
I'm a little confused because I thought the more coarse powder would have had this effect and it didn't - but the fine powder did.
I did not add sodium lactate but I wondered.. I am still using Palm oil so my bars are plenty firm, so I saw no need to add it. Now I wonder.
Any thoughts?
My recipe was small:
6 oz each of coconut, palm and olive oil
6 oz distilled water
2.8 oz lye
1 oz basil EO
1 tsp super fine activated charcoal
I've made this before - with the cheap activated charcoal you get anywhere, the really coarse kind. I grind it up in a mortar and pestle until it's less coarse and it comes out perfect.
However, this really fine charcoal has made the soap really crumbly.
My mixing temp was 100f and I had a quick trace. the EO broke the batter so I mixed again until I had a solid trace. I then let it set for 24 hours until I unpacked it.
Then I saw this.. It's never happened before.
I'm a little confused because I thought the more coarse powder would have had this effect and it didn't - but the fine powder did.
I did not add sodium lactate but I wondered.. I am still using Palm oil so my bars are plenty firm, so I saw no need to add it. Now I wonder.
Any thoughts?