I guess I ment if you were going to make 'avocado soap ' which route would y'all be more inclined to use?
Not all avocados are high in fat which is why I use them as liquid replacement and I use avocado oil for the fat. There are many varieties of avocados. I love making avocado soap with avocado puree and avocado oilI used the puree.
It saponifies as it is high in fat. It is the best choice, in my opinion *depending*. It made a wonderful soft creamy soap. Use as water replacement, however, not a fat or oil since I can not find the sap value anywhere. I used 1/3 water with lye, 1/3 GM concentrate into the oils after adding lye water, and 1/3 avocado puree added the same time as the GM in that soap. Too much inhibits lather, and for the batch it made the perfect amount being 1/3 the water. I may experiment when they go cheap and try 50/50 water to puree, but probably not too much more as a water addition. I added lemon juice to the puree and froze. it remained bright green throughout the process, and a month or so after freezing when I went to use it again.
From www dot avocadosource dot com
pdf doc- requejolc1999 dot pdf
Avocados:
The usual shorthand nomenclature for fatty acids shows two numbers; the length of the chain and the number of double bonds. For example, “18:2” denotes a fatty acid of 18 carbon chain length and 2 double bonds eg linoleic acid. Similarly, a saturated fatty acid, such as palmitic acid will be shown as “16:0”. Usually saturated (S) fatty acids are found in foods of animal origin while monounsaturated (M) and polyunsaturated (P) fatty acids are mostly found in foods of plant origin.
Triacylglycerols may contain a wide variety of fatty acids, although only five or six are usually present in significant amounts in avocado fruit. These are the saturated fatty acids palmitic acid (16:0) and stearic acid (18: 0), the monounsaturated fatty acids oleic acid (18:1) and palmitoleic acid (16:1) and the polyunsaturated fatty acids linoleic acid (18:2) and linolenic acid (18:3). Oleic acid is the predominant fatty acid, representing close to 60% of the total lipids (Mazliak, 1965a; Kikuta and Erickson, 1968; Luza et al., 1990). In general, the combination of fatty acids in the triacylglycerol fraction determine the physical and nutritional characteristics of the lipid. To date the changes in fatty acid makeup have not been studied in New Zealand since most maturity studies have concentrated on total lipid content.
There's this great chart further down the pdf that's showing the average of each fatty acid during the harvest months of September through April.
It states an average of
60% oleic
20% palmitic
15% linoleic
5% plametoleic
And nominally linolenic
Now the avocado oil has Per naturesgardencandles dot com on their document titled sapoils dot pdf
53% oleic
21% palmitic
6% lenoleic
2% lenolenic
10% stearic
And that's it. This is the avg of all the sites except
Www dot essential oils dot co dot za/avocado-analysis dot htm
They have a totally off range that DOES include palmetoleic whereas no one else includes this fatty acid. It is the predominant fatty acid in macadamia nut oil and is supposedly an awesome component for many reasons. Haven't researched enough as of yet, but I have read it's creamy and we'll absorbed and excellent for aging skin. Now I don't know about all THAT, but it seems an excellent addition.
So to the point lol.
A simple or your regular recipe? Add avocado puree for an awesome addition! Want a luxurious expensively awesome soap for awesome people? Use avocado oil hehe. Avocado butter, meh. Don't know much but after all the additional things in it others have said are involved, I am not too impressed with it. I'd rather use cocoa or shea as a butter personally.
Oh, and remember...Avocado puree is 70-80, but averages 74% water. So it's much better as a water addition and adds a small amount of palmetoleic acid the oil may not.
Been trying to type this all afternoon....sorry. football and all :twisted:
Are you using 3 for the soap? You certainly can but even one is nice in soap. If you have a restaurant supply you can usually buy frozen avocado puree, which can be treated like gm. Just slowly add lye to the frozen puree and useThis is an old post, I know, but since y'all are still regulars here, I want to say thanks for the info. This is exactly what I was looking for today. I'm finally going to "waste a perfectly good avocado" to use it for soap. I bought four on sale and will sacrifice one to test this avocado soap y'all are always talking about. Getting out the food processor now and weighing the three remaining avocados. (Yes, that fourth was delish!!) The smallest will be the sacrifice. (And the rest will have huge pits with no pulp when I cut them. Because that's my life!)
This is an old post, I know, but since y'all are still regulars here, I want to say thanks for the info. This is exactly what I was looking for today. I'm finally going to "waste a perfectly good avocado" to use it for soap. I bought four on sale and will sacrifice one to test this avocado soap y'all are always talking about. Getting out the food processor now and weighing the three remaining avocados. (Yes, that fourth was delish!!) The smallest will be the sacrifice. (And the rest will have huge pits with no pulp when I cut them. Because that's my life!)
Are you using 3 for the soap? You certainly can but even one is nice in soap. If you have a restaurant supply you can usually buy frozen avocado puree, which can be treated like gm. Just slowly add lye to the frozen puree and use
50-100% puree for your lye. I can imagine it is probably hard for you to sacrifice avocados to soap, I on the other hand live in avocado heaven
I commend you. I don't think I could do that. I would get pummeled by the cries of my avocado addict of a child. She really loves her guacamole. Takes some pics for me! :mrgreen:
I'll try the frozen stuff from the grocery store. (If I like the way this turns out.) Somehow using frozen puree doesn't seem like blasphemy so much as fresh...
The ONLY reason is because they were on sale for .68 each. And I'm only using 69 grams of puree, that leaves a lot left over for guacamole and sandwiches. :smile:
But, I still can't believe I'm wasting a perfectly good avocado to make soap. This really is an addiction. I. Must. Seek. Help. Or not...
Can't wait to see the pictures of your soap!
I don't know if this is at all relevant to avocado in soap because I haven't tried it but my pumpkin and carrot soap was a darker colour and stayed that colour longer when I used the purée straight away. For one soap I left the purée in the fridge overnight and the colour wasn't as good and has started to fade around the edges a bit. My pumpkin soaps are only a month old so this may not be relevant as they all may fade eventually. [emoji24]
Very best of luck can't wait to hear how it goes. I really like Avocado oil in soap.
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