Anglezarke
Well-Known Member
Hi, first post and first batch made.
So, I took it real slow, and ordered a copy of Melinda Coss's excellent Natural Soap. I studied the sections on oils, fats and butters, the equipment list, the saponification chart, superfatting theort section and of course the recipes. I then bought the bits I needed - a new stick blender and dedicated crock pot (or slow cooker as they are called here).
I watched and re-watched the excellent Homemaking on the Homestead video and decided that I would adapt a Natural Soap CP recipe and go crockpot HP.
I wanted to understand the science so I decided to alter the default recipe I had, which called for an even mix of coconut, palm and olive oils. Instead, one of Melinda's recipes had a good proportion of (sweet) almond oil, which was said to give a white bar. Besides, I didn't have any olive oil and was keen to start. So I went for a mix of:
400g Coconut Oil
300g Palm Oil
300g Sweet Almond Oil
I ran through Soap Queen's lye calculator and decided to superfat at 3% after considering Melinda's take on this. This gave me:
330g Water
150g Lye
I used tap water that I let stand overnight to evaporate any residual chlorine.
I then planned oils and did a few tests of blends on paper. One I found online which blended great was a three way blend which I read can be maxxed at 15ml per batch.
5ml Neroli
5ml Bergamot
5ml Geranium
For accuracy, I used a dropper into the essential oil bottles and decanted into a small measuring jug / shot glass thing, which is almost to the ml. The essential oils were the only ingredients I didn't weigh, because I understand that's wrong.
I did the lye bit outside and used laboratory beakers and full face and arm protection. Wow it gets hot quick! It didn't go "clear", it still looked a little milky after a lot of stirring?
My first trace seemed to happen quick - maybe 5 minutes max of blending. It might not be quick, I don't know I was expecting 20 minutes, I don't know why (inexperience I guess).
I followed the video to a tee, did a roll in the finger test and a zap test and got a little zap, so cooked some more and got zero zap.
I poured into a couple of empty dry Tetra Pak juice containers for moulds because the silicone one I ordered online hasn't arrived yet.
So, they cured overnight and I cut some big bars and some small bars. The Tetrapaks held up well (they were cheaper than Pringles!!) and I chopped the bars with a knife but I have a wire slice on order.
The bars came out a solid creamy white, and feel pretty solid already.
I've tried the small bars (letting the large ones cure for 1-2 weeks minimum) and they lather up great and smell amazing.
I'll try olive oil next time but I do like the sweet almond result.
Lessons learnt (mistakes on the way!):
Prepare a production line. I did have things organised but when I was stirring and blending, I realised I didn't have a good laydown area for utensils. Luckily I didn't damage my worktop. Next time I'll have a plastic sheet down.
Get thicker gloves. These things get hotter than I expected.
Anyway I enjoyed myself and am really happy with the result.
Then I found this place and am going to learn from your experiences I hope
So, I took it real slow, and ordered a copy of Melinda Coss's excellent Natural Soap. I studied the sections on oils, fats and butters, the equipment list, the saponification chart, superfatting theort section and of course the recipes. I then bought the bits I needed - a new stick blender and dedicated crock pot (or slow cooker as they are called here).
I watched and re-watched the excellent Homemaking on the Homestead video and decided that I would adapt a Natural Soap CP recipe and go crockpot HP.
I wanted to understand the science so I decided to alter the default recipe I had, which called for an even mix of coconut, palm and olive oils. Instead, one of Melinda's recipes had a good proportion of (sweet) almond oil, which was said to give a white bar. Besides, I didn't have any olive oil and was keen to start. So I went for a mix of:
400g Coconut Oil
300g Palm Oil
300g Sweet Almond Oil
I ran through Soap Queen's lye calculator and decided to superfat at 3% after considering Melinda's take on this. This gave me:
330g Water
150g Lye
I used tap water that I let stand overnight to evaporate any residual chlorine.
I then planned oils and did a few tests of blends on paper. One I found online which blended great was a three way blend which I read can be maxxed at 15ml per batch.
5ml Neroli
5ml Bergamot
5ml Geranium
For accuracy, I used a dropper into the essential oil bottles and decanted into a small measuring jug / shot glass thing, which is almost to the ml. The essential oils were the only ingredients I didn't weigh, because I understand that's wrong.
I did the lye bit outside and used laboratory beakers and full face and arm protection. Wow it gets hot quick! It didn't go "clear", it still looked a little milky after a lot of stirring?
My first trace seemed to happen quick - maybe 5 minutes max of blending. It might not be quick, I don't know I was expecting 20 minutes, I don't know why (inexperience I guess).
I followed the video to a tee, did a roll in the finger test and a zap test and got a little zap, so cooked some more and got zero zap.
I poured into a couple of empty dry Tetra Pak juice containers for moulds because the silicone one I ordered online hasn't arrived yet.
So, they cured overnight and I cut some big bars and some small bars. The Tetrapaks held up well (they were cheaper than Pringles!!) and I chopped the bars with a knife but I have a wire slice on order.
The bars came out a solid creamy white, and feel pretty solid already.
I've tried the small bars (letting the large ones cure for 1-2 weeks minimum) and they lather up great and smell amazing.
I'll try olive oil next time but I do like the sweet almond result.
Lessons learnt (mistakes on the way!):
Prepare a production line. I did have things organised but when I was stirring and blending, I realised I didn't have a good laydown area for utensils. Luckily I didn't damage my worktop. Next time I'll have a plastic sheet down.
Get thicker gloves. These things get hotter than I expected.
Anyway I enjoyed myself and am really happy with the result.
Then I found this place and am going to learn from your experiences I hope