chefinblue
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- Jul 30, 2010
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Hazel, I can answer that: it's more about consistency than anything else. Also, the cure time, due to the slow reaction of the lye in the finished product, is about 7-10 days. So it's not something you can use right away and making sure you used up all of the lye is pretty much impossible to tell unless you use some and see how your skin reacts. If anyone has figured out a way around this please let me know. :wink: You can also thicken the mixture if your liquid oils were too warm by sticking the base of your bowl in an ice bath for a few seconds...just make sure you get to the bottom of the bowl well so you don't end up with cold lumps.
I made a bunch of chocolate shipped soap using Nizzy's recipe and lard (can't say that I liked that part but it was cheap to test the recipe with) about a month ago and I was ultra cautious and didn't let anyone use it for two weeks just to be on the safe side. But when they did they all loved it.
Other neat thing about whipped soap is that it floats!
I made a bunch of chocolate shipped soap using Nizzy's recipe and lard (can't say that I liked that part but it was cheap to test the recipe with) about a month ago and I was ultra cautious and didn't let anyone use it for two weeks just to be on the safe side. But when they did they all loved it.
Other neat thing about whipped soap is that it floats!