Curlysoaps
Member
- Joined
- Apr 13, 2018
- Messages
- 14
- Reaction score
- 8
Hello,
I have recently been trying coconut milk soap, and was wondering if I could pick all your brains for some suggestions! My difficulty has been that the soap becomes thick really quick - I am wondering if it is type of coconut milk, too high a % of hard oils, or stage at which I add the coconut milk?
I have been using canned coconut milk, so more like a thick cream, 6% SF. My latest experimental recipe is:
25% olive oil
20% coconut
20% palm oil
20% rice bran
7.5% shea butter
7.5% cocoa butter
I divided total water in half, and used half water and half coconut milk, dissolved lye in water, allowed lye water and oils to cool to 95 degrees and mixed at that point, adding coconut milk to oils just before lye water.
I completed some piping on top, which started off well but then quickly became too hard and I burst my piping bag, at which point I threw all my left over quickly hardening soap in a box lined with freezer paper that I guess I will re-batch/grate and add to soaps or find some other way of incorporating (does everyone else have tubs of soapy mistakes?! Mine are growing lol).
I love colors and swirls so I would really like to be able to do this with coconut milk soap. I look at soap to buy and see that it has coconut milk in and people do beautiful things with it, so I know its possible, I just can't get my process/recipe correct. I have heard of using 5% coconut milk, using carton coconut milk that you would drink rather than the more cream type I have been using, or adding at trace. Would any of these help?
Thank you in advance, and I am excited to be part of this soaping making forum
I have recently been trying coconut milk soap, and was wondering if I could pick all your brains for some suggestions! My difficulty has been that the soap becomes thick really quick - I am wondering if it is type of coconut milk, too high a % of hard oils, or stage at which I add the coconut milk?
I have been using canned coconut milk, so more like a thick cream, 6% SF. My latest experimental recipe is:
25% olive oil
20% coconut
20% palm oil
20% rice bran
7.5% shea butter
7.5% cocoa butter
I divided total water in half, and used half water and half coconut milk, dissolved lye in water, allowed lye water and oils to cool to 95 degrees and mixed at that point, adding coconut milk to oils just before lye water.
I completed some piping on top, which started off well but then quickly became too hard and I burst my piping bag, at which point I threw all my left over quickly hardening soap in a box lined with freezer paper that I guess I will re-batch/grate and add to soaps or find some other way of incorporating (does everyone else have tubs of soapy mistakes?! Mine are growing lol).
I love colors and swirls so I would really like to be able to do this with coconut milk soap. I look at soap to buy and see that it has coconut milk in and people do beautiful things with it, so I know its possible, I just can't get my process/recipe correct. I have heard of using 5% coconut milk, using carton coconut milk that you would drink rather than the more cream type I have been using, or adding at trace. Would any of these help?
Thank you in advance, and I am excited to be part of this soaping making forum