Rachel M.
Member
Has anyone had good luck with using Crisco in soap making? I'm trying my best to make soap without spending a ton of money since it's just for family and friends as gifts.
Ditto. I love lard soap and I think you will too if you give it a try! I have also begun rendering my own tallow and, frankly, like it even better than lard.Crisco has soybean oil in which has a short shelf life. If you use too much in your soap, it could make it go rancid.
I used a lot of crisco when I first started, I also threw out a lot of bad soap. I use lard now at 50%, its cheap and makes great soap.
Yup...this is what the can looks like now. Found it in the baking section with the Lard, Crisco, etc.Walmart replaced the palm/tallow with a tallow/lard blend. I have used it and it makes a nice hard bar. I was actually surprised how much I liked it. I just used the GV shortening value on soap calc and had no issues at all.
I just used this For the first time today. I used it at 40%. Will have to keep an eye on it and see how it does. I have never used tallow before so was curious and wanted to give it a try. Bummed to hear this could develop DOS down the road...must be the soybean.I have used the WalMart Shortening and the Vegetable Shortening with good luck for teaching classes. I use it at 25-30% of the recipe, and they typically have a shelf life of about 14 months. Unfortunately they do develop DOS in the 14-18 month range.
Maybe. I used soybean at 30% when I first started soaping 6 years ago and I still have some of those soaps without DOS. I suspect it has a lot to do with what else is in the soap, some oils pair together better than others.Bummed to hear this could develop DOS down the road...must be the soybean.
The soy is a small percentage of the oil in the mix and I add ROE to every batch of soap I make, regardless of the oils used, to avoid DOS.I have used the WalMart Shortening and the Vegetable Shortening with good luck for teaching classes. I use it at 25-30% of the recipe, and they typically have a shelf life of about 14 months. Unfortunately they do develop DOS in the 14-18 month range.
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