ResolvableOwl
Notorious Lyear
I'm a bit puzzled over the strong reactions that mentioning dairy/milk butter as a soaping fat has evoked in another thread.
There is that mentioning of a “vomit” smell that the soap would exert and leave on the skin.
In contrast to this, my own experiences with cow's milk butter were a lot less dramatic. One batch made from pure butter (i. e. with residual buttermilk etc.) had an ammoniacal/fishy odour for a few weeks (from decomposing proteins), but after that had gone, the smell was not exactly unpleasant at all even after months of curing. Slightly cheesy at worst, and definitely nothing sticking on the skin I would be alarmed about. I don't know if I would dare give it away, but the natural smell of the soap wouldn't be the most important reason for this. In another recipe, I put 50% butter (pure butter fat), and I didn't notice anything special about it. After curing, it was easier to distinguish from a different test batch by its colour, not its odour.
Did I just have luck? Or is there quite some exaggerated alarmism and thoughtlessly passed-down urban myths (or worse) floating around for dairy butter in soapmaking? Are there any good sources for that “vomit smell” story? Yes, butter is partly made up from butyrate, and butyric acid smells like vomit, but a soap isn't supposed to consist of free fatty acids, but their (non-volatile, hence odourless) salts. To add another perspective: everyone is putting tons of coconut oil and goat milk in their soaps, with mid-chain fatty acids (caproic/caprylic/capric) at much higher levels (15%) than the 3…4% of butyric acid in cow's milk butter. These don't exactly smell pleasant either, but where are the complaints about them … ?
I cannot and do not want to question experiences from others, but in return I expect everyone to keep up some healthy level of professional confidence into evidence. There is just no way how some random hearsay can invalidate contradicting experiences, this simply helps nobody. Each advice and every warning likely contains some scientific rigor, some artisan's experience, and some dubious esotericism – and each time we have to decide how we like to balance these.
There is that mentioning of a “vomit” smell that the soap would exert and leave on the skin.
In contrast to this, my own experiences with cow's milk butter were a lot less dramatic. One batch made from pure butter (i. e. with residual buttermilk etc.) had an ammoniacal/fishy odour for a few weeks (from decomposing proteins), but after that had gone, the smell was not exactly unpleasant at all even after months of curing. Slightly cheesy at worst, and definitely nothing sticking on the skin I would be alarmed about. I don't know if I would dare give it away, but the natural smell of the soap wouldn't be the most important reason for this. In another recipe, I put 50% butter (pure butter fat), and I didn't notice anything special about it. After curing, it was easier to distinguish from a different test batch by its colour, not its odour.
Did I just have luck? Or is there quite some exaggerated alarmism and thoughtlessly passed-down urban myths (or worse) floating around for dairy butter in soapmaking? Are there any good sources for that “vomit smell” story? Yes, butter is partly made up from butyrate, and butyric acid smells like vomit, but a soap isn't supposed to consist of free fatty acids, but their (non-volatile, hence odourless) salts. To add another perspective: everyone is putting tons of coconut oil and goat milk in their soaps, with mid-chain fatty acids (caproic/caprylic/capric) at much higher levels (15%) than the 3…4% of butyric acid in cow's milk butter. These don't exactly smell pleasant either, but where are the complaints about them … ?
I cannot and do not want to question experiences from others, but in return I expect everyone to keep up some healthy level of professional confidence into evidence. There is just no way how some random hearsay can invalidate contradicting experiences, this simply helps nobody. Each advice and every warning likely contains some scientific rigor, some artisan's experience, and some dubious esotericism – and each time we have to decide how we like to balance these.