AshleyR
Well-Known Member
I'm about to make some goat milk soap, and I'm hoping to prevent gel. I use a 5 lb log mold, and I'll be soaping at room temp. with ice cold lye water (my goat milk is in the form of powder and I'll be mixing it with some of the oils and adding at trace).
Is it possible to prevent gel in a wooden log mold? I'm thinking of putting the whole thing out in the snow with some plastic wrap on top - but I'm wondering - is it okay to technically "freeze" the saponifying soap? Will the reaction still occur properly? It is about -24 C (or -11 F) outside. If I leave it out there long enough I'm thinking it might actually freeze.
I'd probably leave it out there for a few hours, and then bring it in and put it in my cool basement (or the fridge?) for the night.
Is this a bad idea?? I just don't want a partial gel!
Is it possible to prevent gel in a wooden log mold? I'm thinking of putting the whole thing out in the snow with some plastic wrap on top - but I'm wondering - is it okay to technically "freeze" the saponifying soap? Will the reaction still occur properly? It is about -24 C (or -11 F) outside. If I leave it out there long enough I'm thinking it might actually freeze.
I'd probably leave it out there for a few hours, and then bring it in and put it in my cool basement (or the fridge?) for the night.
Is this a bad idea?? I just don't want a partial gel!