melstan775
Well-Known Member
Thanks for the history lesson about the definition of castille soap. I like stuff
Like that. Awesome facts are awesome.
Like that. Awesome facts are awesome.
_________________Hi
Would adding sugar to Castile rebatch - (made with just Olive Oil) make a difference with lather & that slimy feel?
I love my Castile Soap, but I think some of my customers would prefer more lather. I don't want to refer to the lather as slimy.
I'm not sure how to describe the lather in Castile Soap - calling it slimy doesn't sound too appealing, but I feel like I should let my customers know the lather isn't the same as soaps with coconut oil in them.
Any ideas?
Thank you,
lily
How about a nicer way to say slimy?
Hello from Greece
According to Greek law you can call your soap a) Pure Castile type only if contains 100% Extra virgin olive oil, no color, no scent. It’s just lye and and extra virgin olive oil.
b) You can call your soap Castile type only if contains 100% olive oil (no pomace), no color, no scent. It’s just lye and and olive oil
c) You can call your soap “olive oil soap” only if it contains more than 60% olive oil.
So when you use pomace in your soap, even if it’s 100% pomace, you can’t call it castile type. It’s just an olive soap. All these according to Greek law of course…..
Has anybody try to add salt and sugar to a castile type soap? Do we have better lather and harder soap this way????
I wonder why pomace is excluded? I use pomace olive oil, and the tin says it's mixed with extra virgin. I know pomace is extruded a bit differently though so maybe that's it.
Olive oil is extracted from the fruit of the olive tree. There are different types, grades and uses of olive oil, depending on how the original oil is extracted. Pomace oil is a lesser grade and quality than olive oil due to the way in which it is extracted and the chemicals used in the process.
Virgin olive oil is a superior quality, grade and overall product than pomace oil.
I understand that pomace tastes terrible, but for soaping it's great. It seems to be a waste of money to use extra virgin olive oil for soaping when it's better to eat it. Does olive oil quality really honestly matter for soap making?