Darn you, soda ash!
I usually spray my finished soap with 99% alcohol, but I forgot yesterday. Could that explain why I got soda ash faster than usual? I had read here that with a 35% lye concentration a member never has sofa ash problems.
Does soaping at lower temperatures increase the chances for soda ash? What about pouring the soap at stable emulsion or very light trace?
I read covering your soap helps prevent the reaction, but my soap loaf mold WAS covered with a cardboard piece and unall night...
I’m a bit torn because (especially when I use natural colorants) I want my soap to reach gel phase and from what I understand, water discounting*, soaping at lower temperatures (I was at around 85F), using a slab mold... are all factors that decrease chances of your soap reaching gel phase.
The problem is... I think most of these conditions are necessary to be able to make intricate designs or swirls? Does that mean that it’s hard to reach gel for these soaps, unless you CPOP (the possibility of a soap volcano TERRIFIES me)?
I use the heating blanket method but I’m still not sure if my soaps reach gel phase or not. It might be a stupid question but... how do you know for sure you reached gel phase unless you actually SEE it happen?
Is there a temperature your soap has to reach for it to happen? I know that after one hour on the heating blanket my soap was around 39 Celsius.
I’ve seen those pictures of soap loaves where the center is darker (and kind of translucent) than the edges, but I’ve never actually SEEN it happen because I cover the soap and put it on a heating blanket.
I THINK my indigo ombré soap did because the blue got a lot deeper, but I’m far from sure.
I still have SO MUCH to learn! I’m a pharmacist and microbiologist (so I’m not a complete idiot when it comes to science), I hand spin yarn lace weight yarns, knit complicated lace patterns, make THE most delicious jams (according to my customers)... I have Aspergera syndrome so learning is my passion and I’m pretty fast at it... Yet, I find myself struggling when it comes to soap making.
My admiration goes out to you, experienced soap makers ; your craft is not an easy one to master!
* I read on the lovinsoap website that a 2:1 water:lye ratio is a water discount? I thought it was full water!
Then which lye concentration or water:lye is considered full water? I keep seeing lye concentrations of 31%, 33%... Even Aunty Clara’s high water recipe in the Ghost swirl was 30% NaOH and 70% water (btw, is that what we mean by “30% lye concentration“?)...