Hello all,
I'm new to soap making and looking for advice. About 3 weeks ago, I made two batches of cold process soaps and added fragrance oil as scents.
Today, I tried it and was kind of disappointed. While it washed well like a regular soap with pretty good lather, it smelled different.
Before I used it, it smelled pretty good. The fragrance oils (coffee and deep forest) I added have developed and mellowed out a bit. But when I used it, it smelled rancid with only a very faint trace of the fragrance. It smelled rather like oil, and the rancid smell was left on the soap as well after using it. Could anyone tell me what could cause this? I attached my recipe here in case there is something anyone can point out or suggest some adjustments.
Note: I didn't use the the hard coconut oil that you have to melt. I used the coconut cooking oil that's always liquid. It's not yellow; that's the color of the bottle. But I can tell that it tastes and smells less pleasant than the hard oil counterpart. The very yellow oil is the rice bran oil I used. Every oil except the shea butter and olive pomace are cooking oils you find at a supermarket.
Note 2: I left them to cure out on the porch for a week or two before I wised up and realized I should've moved them inside to avoid sunlight.
Thanks!
I'm new to soap making and looking for advice. About 3 weeks ago, I made two batches of cold process soaps and added fragrance oil as scents.
Today, I tried it and was kind of disappointed. While it washed well like a regular soap with pretty good lather, it smelled different.
Before I used it, it smelled pretty good. The fragrance oils (coffee and deep forest) I added have developed and mellowed out a bit. But when I used it, it smelled rancid with only a very faint trace of the fragrance. It smelled rather like oil, and the rancid smell was left on the soap as well after using it. Could anyone tell me what could cause this? I attached my recipe here in case there is something anyone can point out or suggest some adjustments.
Note: I didn't use the the hard coconut oil that you have to melt. I used the coconut cooking oil that's always liquid. It's not yellow; that's the color of the bottle. But I can tell that it tastes and smells less pleasant than the hard oil counterpart. The very yellow oil is the rice bran oil I used. Every oil except the shea butter and olive pomace are cooking oils you find at a supermarket.
Note 2: I left them to cure out on the porch for a week or two before I wised up and realized I should've moved them inside to avoid sunlight.
Thanks!