Hii everyone!
Every time I make soap, ever since I started soapmaking, I have never had a thin trace batch like the one you see in the videos. The close-to water kind of trace. The moment I add my lye to my oils and pulse stickblend for just a second, the mixed part is already thick. Once I was using a whisk just after adding my lye because I also added some goatsmilk and after a minute whisking by hand I already had trace :Kitten Love:.
I have tried all kinds of recipes, even my 100% olive oil is never thin.
This is what my latest recipe looked like:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/76053405@N08/9898771493/
(The picture link doesnt seem to work so I hope this works)
I've switched to rice bran recently since the store wasn't currently selling my brand of olive oil. Didn't have enough rice bran so had to use some olive oil on this one.
I wanted to try that dandelion zebra swirl out yesterday but again my soap batter got thick fast, like medium trace after 30sec of stickblending. This is before I added my FO. It's the same with whatever additive I add, clay, goatsmilkpowder, beeswax,... With of without, no difference.
I've soaped at a warm temperature 60°c and at a low temperature. Yesterday's was oil 33°c and lye 30°c. There where I learned the beginnings of soapmaking they said that they had to less then 5°c apart. Same place suggested tap water and that there was no reason not to use tap water. (Source was a forum in my own language) Never heard anyone on that forum complain on the tap water.
I asked another soapmaker yesterday if she has the thin trace shown in the video and she told me that she has. This really made me think that I'm doing something wrong, what that is, I do not know. That's why I'm asking if you guys have an idea of what it can be because I really, really (!!) want to atleast once make a soap with those pretty swirls that would actually go as planned.
Hoping for some ideas for which I'd be forever gratefull!
Thank you for reading!
Every time I make soap, ever since I started soapmaking, I have never had a thin trace batch like the one you see in the videos. The close-to water kind of trace. The moment I add my lye to my oils and pulse stickblend for just a second, the mixed part is already thick. Once I was using a whisk just after adding my lye because I also added some goatsmilk and after a minute whisking by hand I already had trace :Kitten Love:.
I have tried all kinds of recipes, even my 100% olive oil is never thin.
This is what my latest recipe looked like:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/76053405@N08/9898771493/
(The picture link doesnt seem to work so I hope this works)
I've switched to rice bran recently since the store wasn't currently selling my brand of olive oil. Didn't have enough rice bran so had to use some olive oil on this one.
I wanted to try that dandelion zebra swirl out yesterday but again my soap batter got thick fast, like medium trace after 30sec of stickblending. This is before I added my FO. It's the same with whatever additive I add, clay, goatsmilkpowder, beeswax,... With of without, no difference.
I've soaped at a warm temperature 60°c and at a low temperature. Yesterday's was oil 33°c and lye 30°c. There where I learned the beginnings of soapmaking they said that they had to less then 5°c apart. Same place suggested tap water and that there was no reason not to use tap water. (Source was a forum in my own language) Never heard anyone on that forum complain on the tap water.
I asked another soapmaker yesterday if she has the thin trace shown in the video and she told me that she has. This really made me think that I'm doing something wrong, what that is, I do not know. That's why I'm asking if you guys have an idea of what it can be because I really, really (!!) want to atleast once make a soap with those pretty swirls that would actually go as planned.
Hoping for some ideas for which I'd be forever gratefull!
Thank you for reading!