JakeBlanton
Active Member
I wanted to try to make some soap from some old used cooking oil that I had saved. Just a low cost (i.e. just the cost of the lye) experiment to see what would happen. I normally just mix a bit of this with my dogs' dry dog food as a treat, but since I had it, I was curious what would happen if I tried to make soap from it. I had 482 g of this very well used (i.e. black) oil. I also had 303 g of some milk that had gone sour.
Running this through the soap calculator (assuming 50% soybean oil and 50% canola oil) resulted in a suggested lye weight of 61.54 g and 183.16 g of water. So, I used 62 g of lye and 183 g of the sour milk.
I heated it in a crock pot, stirring with a stick blender until it got too thick to use the stick blender anymore. It's a 500W stick blender, so it had plenty of power, but the mixture got thick enough that the stick blender blades would just cavitate instead of moving the material around. I allowed it to volcano 3 times, stirring it down each time it reached the upper edge of the crock pot. Total time was about 90 minutes. A dash of Pine-Sol was added as a fragrance at the end. I doubt it will make much of a difference though. The rest of the sour milk was also added between volcano #2 and #3. The crock pot was on high during the entire process.
It hasn't cooled off / solidified yet, but when I was cleaning the utensils and crock pot with water, it most definitely felt like soap. While cooking it, there was a smell of fried corn meal in the house, but I could not smell it in the soap. That might just be because my nose had become de-synthesized to the smell during the cooking process. I also don't smell the Pine-Sol.
For a mold, I used a plastic shopping bag lined Pyrex bread loaf baking dish.
Mainly, I wanted to do this so that I could see the stages that the soap goes through during the cooking process and to see if it was possible to have a use for very old fry oil and sour milk. Figured it might be an interesting experiment. I'll post photos after it has cooled off and hardened.
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Running this through the soap calculator (assuming 50% soybean oil and 50% canola oil) resulted in a suggested lye weight of 61.54 g and 183.16 g of water. So, I used 62 g of lye and 183 g of the sour milk.
I heated it in a crock pot, stirring with a stick blender until it got too thick to use the stick blender anymore. It's a 500W stick blender, so it had plenty of power, but the mixture got thick enough that the stick blender blades would just cavitate instead of moving the material around. I allowed it to volcano 3 times, stirring it down each time it reached the upper edge of the crock pot. Total time was about 90 minutes. A dash of Pine-Sol was added as a fragrance at the end. I doubt it will make much of a difference though. The rest of the sour milk was also added between volcano #2 and #3. The crock pot was on high during the entire process.
It hasn't cooled off / solidified yet, but when I was cleaning the utensils and crock pot with water, it most definitely felt like soap. While cooking it, there was a smell of fried corn meal in the house, but I could not smell it in the soap. That might just be because my nose had become de-synthesized to the smell during the cooking process. I also don't smell the Pine-Sol.
For a mold, I used a plastic shopping bag lined Pyrex bread loaf baking dish.
Mainly, I wanted to do this so that I could see the stages that the soap goes through during the cooking process and to see if it was possible to have a use for very old fry oil and sour milk. Figured it might be an interesting experiment. I'll post photos after it has cooled off and hardened.
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