Could you give ANY information on the recipe and amounts that you are talking about here? You talk about other additives - what other additives did you use and how much?
I have heard that too much SL actually causes the soap to get softer once it passes a certain amount. How much do you usually use?
As for brittle, many can get that way if they harden up too fast for when you usually cut it. Salt in itself doesn't cause brittleness, but trying to cut a salt soap after too much time and you have a brittle soap on your hands. I waited too long to cut my Castile (no additives at all, not even sugar) and it was brittle, to the point where bars were breaking rather than being sliced.
Most people believe that oil amounts under 5% don't really do much for the soap. The only one I could think that might be the exception in steric or beeswax.
You really don't need added steric in CP soap, use a higher amount of lard, tallow or palm and your soap will be plenty hard.
One of my favorite soaps is. It makes a nice hard bar that has plenty of thick creamy lather. Add in soap aloe juice and get even better lather.
50% lard or palm
25% olive oil
20% coconut
5% castor
I am new to making soap. I have about 6 loafs under my belt, but two of those recipes flopped. They are all a variation of your recipe, using milk in place of water (I use the frozen milk cubes and add dry lye crystals to the cubes, the milk stayed nice and white the whole process):Most people believe that oil amounts under 5% don't really do much for the soap. The only one I could think that might be the exception in steric or beeswax.
You really don't need added steric in CP soap, use a higher amount of lard, tallow or palm and your soap will be plenty hard.
One of my favorite soaps is. It makes a nice hard bar that has plenty of thick creamy lather. Add in soap aloe juice and get even better lather.
50% lard or palm
25% olive oil
20% coconut
5% castor
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