I have two cold process batches of soap under my belt, and I must say, my processes have been much different than the people with experience that I've studied on Brambleberry and YouTube! I have spent way too much time the past few days reading through posts here, trying to learn answers to the million questions I have and wondering how I'm going to ask them all without making eyes roll. "Oh, it's HER again!"
My first batch was an apple sage kit from Brambleberry. I watched the tutorials, read the directions and followed them exactly with one exception. I substituted frozen goat milk cubes, ounce for ounce, instead of the water, again following Brambleberry's tutorial for mixing lye with milk. I spent a full 20 minutes mixing the lye and kept the milk under 85°F. The lye solution thickened considerably with the milk, which I was prepared for. The lye and oils were within 10 degrees of each other when I mixed them. Still, that soap batter thickened FAST! I suspect I stick blended it way too much. By the time I added the fragrance oil it was THICK, and it glopped into the mold instead of pouring nicely. I forgot to tap it on the counter and I forgot to spritz it with alcohol in my haste to get it in the refrigerator and stop it from gelling. Hokey smoke, I never want to put fresh goat milk soap in the refrigerator again. Everything in the fridge tasted like apple sage soap and it STUNK! I had to put it out in the shop to cure because it smelled so bad and gave everyone in the house a headache. 5 weeks later the stink is gone and it smells pleasant, thank goodness! However, the bars still appear a little darker in the middle than around the edges, and seem to be developing a flaky appearance. Did I still get a partial gel phase? Is any of this possibly from over mixing?
In this picture, the bar on the left is from the middle of the loaf and the one on the right is an end piece. Any comments or advice on how I can improve my next batch are much appreciated!
My first batch was an apple sage kit from Brambleberry. I watched the tutorials, read the directions and followed them exactly with one exception. I substituted frozen goat milk cubes, ounce for ounce, instead of the water, again following Brambleberry's tutorial for mixing lye with milk. I spent a full 20 minutes mixing the lye and kept the milk under 85°F. The lye solution thickened considerably with the milk, which I was prepared for. The lye and oils were within 10 degrees of each other when I mixed them. Still, that soap batter thickened FAST! I suspect I stick blended it way too much. By the time I added the fragrance oil it was THICK, and it glopped into the mold instead of pouring nicely. I forgot to tap it on the counter and I forgot to spritz it with alcohol in my haste to get it in the refrigerator and stop it from gelling. Hokey smoke, I never want to put fresh goat milk soap in the refrigerator again. Everything in the fridge tasted like apple sage soap and it STUNK! I had to put it out in the shop to cure because it smelled so bad and gave everyone in the house a headache. 5 weeks later the stink is gone and it smells pleasant, thank goodness! However, the bars still appear a little darker in the middle than around the edges, and seem to be developing a flaky appearance. Did I still get a partial gel phase? Is any of this possibly from over mixing?
In this picture, the bar on the left is from the middle of the loaf and the one on the right is an end piece. Any comments or advice on how I can improve my next batch are much appreciated!