I have been adding aloe vera juice to some of my soaps, but I suspect aloe vera gel might be better. The juice is so watery looking, so I planted an aloe vera in my back yard to grow my own gel. They do well here with all the sunshine. But it is going to take ages to grow big enough--Sigh!
I read up on it a bit and see that aloes have long chain polysaccharides. That's stuff above my pay grade but I'm guessing it is a type of sugar. It is the slimey gel you scrape out, yes? Well, I can get loads of slimey stuff right now for free from the prickly pear cactus that grows like a weed all around me. I researched a bit and discovered the cactus fruit has some good qualities...vitamin C, fiber, carbohydrate, and polysaccharides. It is edible too.
So I did it! Made my own slimey gel stuff from cactus. I picked some beautiful cactus fruit from near my driveway, scooped out the pulp, mashed it, added an equal amount of distilled water, let it seep a few hours, and filtered the result. I got 4 fl oz of viscus looking pale green juice. The skins looked interesting too, so I seeped them in water just to see what would happen. The water turned a lovely pink but I expect the lye will devour that. However, the skins made an even more viscus solution, like really snotty-looking (sorry). I plan to use each one in a different small loaf of same recipe soap. It's worth a try. I will be my own guinea pig. (Gosh, hope these pictures are allowed and not too big.)
I read up on it a bit and see that aloes have long chain polysaccharides. That's stuff above my pay grade but I'm guessing it is a type of sugar. It is the slimey gel you scrape out, yes? Well, I can get loads of slimey stuff right now for free from the prickly pear cactus that grows like a weed all around me. I researched a bit and discovered the cactus fruit has some good qualities...vitamin C, fiber, carbohydrate, and polysaccharides. It is edible too.
So I did it! Made my own slimey gel stuff from cactus. I picked some beautiful cactus fruit from near my driveway, scooped out the pulp, mashed it, added an equal amount of distilled water, let it seep a few hours, and filtered the result. I got 4 fl oz of viscus looking pale green juice. The skins looked interesting too, so I seeped them in water just to see what would happen. The water turned a lovely pink but I expect the lye will devour that. However, the skins made an even more viscus solution, like really snotty-looking (sorry). I plan to use each one in a different small loaf of same recipe soap. It's worth a try. I will be my own guinea pig. (Gosh, hope these pictures are allowed and not too big.)
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