Zany_in_CO
Saponifier
ZANY’S LIQUID SOAP - COLD PROCESS FOR BEGINNERS
This is a fun, easy way to experience making liquid soap. It makes 16 oz. of soap base (using 12 oz. oils), and 36-48 oz. of Liquid Soap (depending on the amount of water added at dilution). Plenty for a first attempt.
Making LS is a 3-step process. (1) Make the base (aka “paste”); (2) Dilute the base; (3) Sequester for 2 weeks. You can use any recipe you like but here’s one to get you started.
PART 1 - MAKE THE SOAP BASE (30 minutes)
SoapCalc: (1) KOH (2) Ounces (3) Water:Lye Ratio 2:1 (4) 0% SF
CATHERINE FAILOR’S HIGH-FOAMING COLD CREAM SOAP
8.5 oz. coconut oil 69.4%
2.75 oz. castor oil 22.4%
1 oz. palm or tallow or lard 8.2%
12.25 oz. TOTAL
2.9 oz. (81 grams) KOH (0%)
5.75 oz. distilled water (2 X KOH)
Using normal technique, combine when oils are 160°F (71°C) and lye solution is 140°F (60°C). Stir by hand, then SB (on and off) to trace 10 - 15 minutes, over low to medium-low heat. Maintain temp at 160°F (71°C) until trace occurs. Let sit 5 minutes off heat to make sure it doesn’t separate. If it starts to puff up, that’s a good sign! But don’t hesitate! Take it off heat. Put it in the sink and stir it down. Cover and CURE 1-2 WEEKS.
NOTE: The soap base is opaque at first but becomes translucent and soft, similar in color and texture to vaseline, one week later. I then put it in a ZipLoc and store it in the fridge until I’m ready to dilute. Soap base may be stored in fridge for up to 12 weeks.
OPTION: Add 2% Potassium Carbonate to your lye solution to make the soap base easier to stir during the first stage and easier to dilute later. If you choose this option, you will need to add 1.7% Borax or Citric Acid to your dilution water to neutralize the Potassium Carbonate.
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PART 2 - DILUTION (3-4 hours)
24 - 36 oz. distilled water (i.e., 2-3 times weight of oils. Use less water with high % of coconut oil. Use more water with high % of liquid oil.)
2 tsp. Borax or Calgon (sodium carbonate)
16 oz. soap base (chunked up)
Bring water to boil in a stainless steel pot on range top. Add Borax. Stir to dissolve completely. Add chunked-up soap base. Turn heat to medium low (slow simmer). Cover and cook slowly 3-4 hours, until temp reaches 160°F (71°C) and soap is completely melted. Turn to low if necessary to prevent bubbling. The idea is to get the base to absorb all the water it can with minimal water loss to evaporation. No need to stir, but you may want to break up soap pieces with a spoon (not SB) as needed.
Once the base is completely melted, take it off heat, weigh, and add 2 oz. alcohol* (optional) and enough water to reach your target of 36-48 oz. liquid soap if needed. Cool to 120°F (49°C). You can add fragrance now if you wish. Pour into clear container. Sequester 2 weeks. (*Alcohol helps to clarify and keep nasties at bay, and is not drying at all.)
OPTION: Divide 16 oz. of base into four 4 oz. portions to experiment with different amounts of dilution water and additives of your choice. Each 4 oz. portion requires 6-9 oz. dilution water and makes 10-13 oz. LS. KEEP GOOD NOTES!
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
PART 3 - SEQUESTER
After 2 weeks, depending on the oils/fats/butters/waxes used, you may see “unsaponifiables” settle to the bottom or floating on top. Skim these off the top and remove the clear soap, leaving any sediment on the bottom. Warm LS to 140°F (60°C) add fragrance (1 tsp. per 16 oz.) and color (1-2 drops of food coloring).
I LUV seeing bottles of trial batches lined up in a row in the laundry room -- waiting for their turn at the kitchen sink!
HAPPY LIQUID SOAPING!
Zany in CO, May 23, 2007
This is a fun, easy way to experience making liquid soap. It makes 16 oz. of soap base (using 12 oz. oils), and 36-48 oz. of Liquid Soap (depending on the amount of water added at dilution). Plenty for a first attempt.
Making LS is a 3-step process. (1) Make the base (aka “paste”); (2) Dilute the base; (3) Sequester for 2 weeks. You can use any recipe you like but here’s one to get you started.
PART 1 - MAKE THE SOAP BASE (30 minutes)
SoapCalc: (1) KOH (2) Ounces (3) Water:Lye Ratio 2:1 (4) 0% SF
CATHERINE FAILOR’S HIGH-FOAMING COLD CREAM SOAP
8.5 oz. coconut oil 69.4%
2.75 oz. castor oil 22.4%
1 oz. palm or tallow or lard 8.2%
12.25 oz. TOTAL
2.9 oz. (81 grams) KOH (0%)
5.75 oz. distilled water (2 X KOH)
Using normal technique, combine when oils are 160°F (71°C) and lye solution is 140°F (60°C). Stir by hand, then SB (on and off) to trace 10 - 15 minutes, over low to medium-low heat. Maintain temp at 160°F (71°C) until trace occurs. Let sit 5 minutes off heat to make sure it doesn’t separate. If it starts to puff up, that’s a good sign! But don’t hesitate! Take it off heat. Put it in the sink and stir it down. Cover and CURE 1-2 WEEKS.
NOTE: The soap base is opaque at first but becomes translucent and soft, similar in color and texture to vaseline, one week later. I then put it in a ZipLoc and store it in the fridge until I’m ready to dilute. Soap base may be stored in fridge for up to 12 weeks.
OPTION: Add 2% Potassium Carbonate to your lye solution to make the soap base easier to stir during the first stage and easier to dilute later. If you choose this option, you will need to add 1.7% Borax or Citric Acid to your dilution water to neutralize the Potassium Carbonate.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
PART 2 - DILUTION (3-4 hours)
24 - 36 oz. distilled water (i.e., 2-3 times weight of oils. Use less water with high % of coconut oil. Use more water with high % of liquid oil.)
2 tsp. Borax or Calgon (sodium carbonate)
16 oz. soap base (chunked up)
Bring water to boil in a stainless steel pot on range top. Add Borax. Stir to dissolve completely. Add chunked-up soap base. Turn heat to medium low (slow simmer). Cover and cook slowly 3-4 hours, until temp reaches 160°F (71°C) and soap is completely melted. Turn to low if necessary to prevent bubbling. The idea is to get the base to absorb all the water it can with minimal water loss to evaporation. No need to stir, but you may want to break up soap pieces with a spoon (not SB) as needed.
Once the base is completely melted, take it off heat, weigh, and add 2 oz. alcohol* (optional) and enough water to reach your target of 36-48 oz. liquid soap if needed. Cool to 120°F (49°C). You can add fragrance now if you wish. Pour into clear container. Sequester 2 weeks. (*Alcohol helps to clarify and keep nasties at bay, and is not drying at all.)
OPTION: Divide 16 oz. of base into four 4 oz. portions to experiment with different amounts of dilution water and additives of your choice. Each 4 oz. portion requires 6-9 oz. dilution water and makes 10-13 oz. LS. KEEP GOOD NOTES!
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
PART 3 - SEQUESTER
After 2 weeks, depending on the oils/fats/butters/waxes used, you may see “unsaponifiables” settle to the bottom or floating on top. Skim these off the top and remove the clear soap, leaving any sediment on the bottom. Warm LS to 140°F (60°C) add fragrance (1 tsp. per 16 oz.) and color (1-2 drops of food coloring).
I LUV seeing bottles of trial batches lined up in a row in the laundry room -- waiting for their turn at the kitchen sink!
HAPPY LIQUID SOAPING!
Zany in CO, May 23, 2007