I love your posts and value your expressive way of communicating @ResolvableOwl ! I’ve always wanted to ask you what you do for a living or did for a living? Or your background? I’m brave enough now to ask I think as we are getting to know each other. I must add ——I was made to stay after school one day when I was in high school, because rather than listening to my biology teacher lecture, I was passing a note around questioning other students where our teacher might have bought her fuzzy clip on collar with furry Pom Pom balls..My €0.02:
- (All this experience is not based on the glorious GW415 soy wax, but from the variant of canola wax that I'm using and that appears to be very similar in most respects. I still used the term “soy wax” to avoid botanical cluttering)
- I've found that 20% soy wax is the maximum above which a soap (ungelled) tends to develop a chalky, floury consistency and becomes brittle. I usually use 10–15% soy wax in conjunction with butters (mango, cocoa) and/or palmitic oils (palm, RBO, japan wax).
- In direct comparison to other (very) hard oils, it does perform on par. In retrospect, I should have added a “control” batch with a medium-hard oil like shea butter or lard, to have better comparison at the lower end of the spectrum. Take-away:
- I can only discourage actually performing the “experiment” of @Zany_in_CO (single-oil soap from hard soy wax). GW415 and friends are soft soy waxes, but like mentioned above, still bring agreeable hardness. Fully hydrogenated vegetable oils are strict HP ingredients. As in: Rapid, concrete-like false trace below some 60°C/140°F.