ResolvableOwl
Notorious Lyear
I've gone crazy and ordered hydrogenated coconut oil (“CO92”), which is about to arrive soon.
Not sure if I'll notice any difference to regular/virgin coconut oil (“CO76”) when it comes to soapmaking. There wasn't much to talk about with palm kernel oil, babaçu, or murumuru either (except the price ).
On my grocery shopping list, there is also fractionated coconut/MCT oil.
I'm planning to take the opportunity to challenge some preconceptions for good that are lingering around about lauric/mid-chain oils, regarding hardness, bubbliness, and skin irritation. (This is partly motivated by my recent experiences with ucuuba butter and laurel oil, that happen to be about the only oils with significant C14:0 or shorter FAs, but aren't seeds of palm trees.)
My possible plans (not sure if I'll address all of them) for the lauric oils I have at hand in the near future (CO76, CO92, murumuru):
I'm now a bit angry to myself that I've used up all of my palm kernel oil without need, and this is remarkably difficult to restock around here.
Not sure if I'll notice any difference to regular/virgin coconut oil (“CO76”) when it comes to soapmaking. There wasn't much to talk about with palm kernel oil, babaçu, or murumuru either (except the price ).
On my grocery shopping list, there is also fractionated coconut/MCT oil.
I'm planning to take the opportunity to challenge some preconceptions for good that are lingering around about lauric/mid-chain oils, regarding hardness, bubbliness, and skin irritation. (This is partly motivated by my recent experiences with ucuuba butter and laurel oil, that happen to be about the only oils with significant C14:0 or shorter FAs, but aren't seeds of palm trees.)
My possible plans (not sure if I'll address all of them) for the lauric oils I have at hand in the near future (CO76, CO92, murumuru):
- Make a simplistic, basic recipe (50% HO sunflower, 20% palm stearin, HP) as a “stage” to give 30% of each of these lauric oils a chance to shine in an environment that is close enough to usual balanced recipes.
- Make single-oil bars from said lauric oils, at 20% SF
- Replace 20%, 50%, 100% of lauric oils (probably CO76) by MCT oil, and observe how the batter and the final soap do change upon this modification.
- Acidify some CO92 soap, to check for the presence of MCT fatty acids (smell of sour goat milk). Literature is inconclusive if CO92 is made just by hydrogenation of otherwise unaltered coconut oil, or if it is also fractionated (to remove the precious MCT fatty acids to sell them separately). This is also a good opportunity to titrate the actual SAP of the CO and compare it to the literature values.
I'm now a bit angry to myself that I've used up all of my palm kernel oil without need, and this is remarkably difficult to restock around here.