Kansas Farm Girl
Well-Known Member
question - when you say "those of you who have soft water".... do you mean naturally soft or soft via a water softener, or does it matter?
Yes, but some of us have very hard water and soap just doesn't work well for dishes and laundry. I have tried making my own with homemade liquid soap and cp soap and the grease and soil does not emulsify like it does with a detergent. For those of you who have soft water, it is a great idea to use your own liquid soap or cp soap for dishes and laundry.
Ok, made the liquid soap, did NOT go smoothly. Being knew, I likely bit off more than I should have. Regardless, it worked. I wanted to quite at least 3 times but persevered. It took me somewhere in the neighborhood of 6-8 hours, plus over night rest, and then another couple hours of reheat to fully saponify to tested clarity. Based on the video I was following I was expecting start to washing dishes in 3 hours. I likely will not follow the same method.
So, how does it work- My soap is very thick like honey, in fact it looks like honey. I am sure I could dilute it further however that would involve heating again, and well frankly I am just not going there. This batch and I are done! The "natural" smell is off so highly recommend using a lemon EO. The soap does bubble, but they do not last long. The dishes require a fair amount of rinsing to get the soap residue off, living in CA this is not acceptable to me. The less water the better. So I will continue the quest. Will I make liquid soap again, absolutely, just need to learn the right oils, for my hard water.
Boric acid can neutralize lye, but the false rumor has gotten around that borax will as well; it can't. Borax is what you get from neutralizing boric acid with lye.Liquid soaps are lye heavy on purpose. You add boric acid or borax to neutralize the extra lye after you dissolve the cooked soap in water. It seems to work okay, but mine needs a chance to sit longer.
Why are you using borax (an alkali/base), vinegar (an acid) and cream of tartar (amphoteric, but usually use for acidity)? It would seem you might need one of those to adjust pH, but certainly not all 3, unless you go thru some complicated recipe that requires the pH to be adjusted first one way and then another.I make my own hand dish washing detergent using eco friendly surfactants, than mix that with sweet orange e.o., borax, cream of tartar and white vinegar.
Cream of tartar is in bubble bars as a source of acid, to produce fizz with a carbonate or bicarbonate. It doesn't make "longer lasting bubbles" in the sense of soapsuds. It makes the kind of bubbles that you get in the water (as fizz), not on top of the water (as foam). And it does that only as it's dissolving, won't work in a water-based formula.I'm going to assume it's to help with longer lasting bubbles. That's why it's in bubble bars.
I have not tried this yet, but a someone in a group I belong to posted this one. She swears by it. I plan to try it but have to get some KOH for it.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OLvbOasa2qw
the recipe only is here: http://voices.yahoo.com/handmade-liquid-dish-soap-scratch-advanced-soap-8977729.html?cat=22
I have heard of others who use a straight CO in their liquid soap because of the cleaning properties.
Boric acid can neutralize lye, but the false rumor has gotten around that borax will as well; it can't. Borax is what you get from neutralizing boric acid with lye.
Commercially that's how it's made, but if you do neutralize boric acid with lye, you will make borax. That's the form it will primarily xtalize out as.Sorry, but you are a little bit mis-informed---sodium tetraborate decahydrate (or Sodium Borate- for short) is the chemical name for Borax... which in its natural state is from the mineral Boron.
You do not get Borax from Boric Acid. . . You get Boric Acid from Borax.
How/why does that work? Borax isn't amphoteric, just basic; how do you neutralize alkali with more alkali?Secondly, the rumor is TRUE... you can use Borax to neutralize excess potassium hydroxide in liquid soaps.
I'd suggest you speed it up by using whichever essential or fragrance oils are most problematic in terms of causing seizing when people make solid soaps. You could use alcohol, but it would take a large amount, adding expense.I've been making dish soap that i also use for the clothes washer. It's easy enough, but it takes foreverrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr compared to making cp bars. I'm talking about labor time, not wait time. Even with lots of solid oils (i used coconut and soy the first time, then coconut/pal/soy the other times), it takes forever to reach trace. Like, 20 minutes. Maybe more. Then, you gotta cook it in the crockpot for like 6 hours.
Robert, citric acid is most often used (not cream of tartar), along with sodium bicarbonate to create fizz in bath bombs. Cream of tartar (monopotassium salt of tartaric acid) is added to prolong the life of the bubbles. If you check the manufacturer's formulation specs. of most dishwasher and manual dishwasing detergents you will see that salts are used as a stabilizing agent. Here is a link with an example. Look on page one under "Stability and Dispensing Aids"Cream of tartar is in bubble bars as a source of acid, to produce fizz with a carbonate or bicarbonate. It doesn't make "longer lasting bubbles" in the sense of soapsuds. It makes the kind of bubbles that you get in the water (as fizz), not on top of the water (as foam). And it does that only as it's dissolving, won't work in a water-based formula.
Borax is used as a water softener, vinegar is often used as a rinse agent, cream of tartar is used to prolong the suds. I don't know where you are coming from with your analysis, but this works. I got the original idea from Kitchen Chemistry with Kayla. She used borax, vinegar and cream of tartar with the surfactant mixture from Essential Wholesale. By the way she is the former formulator and owner of Essential Wholesale. If you have more questions, you might contact her for the answers. I am not a chemist. All I know is that this works.Why are you using borax (an alkali/base), vinegar (an acid) and cream of tartar (amphoteric, but usually use for acidity)? It would seem you might need one of those to adjust pH, but certainly not all 3, unless you go thru some complicated recipe that requires the pH to be adjusted first one way and then another.
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