G
Guest
Started things out last night with a simple recipe:
17 oz. Extra virgin olive oil
5 1/2 oz. Organic coconut oil
3 1/8 oz. Sodium Hydroxide
7 3/4 oz. Distilled water
This recipe was superfatted at 6%. No essential oils or fragrance.
Just after pouring into a makeshift mold -- a baking pan. Will be making a proper pine mold later.
I covered the mold with a towel and put it in the oven (unheated). This is how it looked when I checked it about an hour later: chalky and opaque. It smelled like lard. I zap tested it just for the hell of it and definitely got the 9 volt battery effect on my tongue!
A few hours later. The appearance of the soap had changed slightly to look more "swirly" and clear:
Here's the finished soap after I cut it into bars this morning. Zap tested it: no zap. The smell had mellowed out to a natural, "plain" soap smell. I tested out a small piece to wash my hands -- awesome lather, very fluffy, creamy and cleansing. Sweet!
I cut the soap into bars and put them away to cure.
Results of first batch: success!
Next batch: will introduce essential oils and fragrance oils to this recipe.
17 oz. Extra virgin olive oil
5 1/2 oz. Organic coconut oil
3 1/8 oz. Sodium Hydroxide
7 3/4 oz. Distilled water
This recipe was superfatted at 6%. No essential oils or fragrance.
Just after pouring into a makeshift mold -- a baking pan. Will be making a proper pine mold later.
I covered the mold with a towel and put it in the oven (unheated). This is how it looked when I checked it about an hour later: chalky and opaque. It smelled like lard. I zap tested it just for the hell of it and definitely got the 9 volt battery effect on my tongue!
A few hours later. The appearance of the soap had changed slightly to look more "swirly" and clear:
Here's the finished soap after I cut it into bars this morning. Zap tested it: no zap. The smell had mellowed out to a natural, "plain" soap smell. I tested out a small piece to wash my hands -- awesome lather, very fluffy, creamy and cleansing. Sweet!
I cut the soap into bars and put them away to cure.
Results of first batch: success!
Next batch: will introduce essential oils and fragrance oils to this recipe.