I CPOP everything, have never had a problem even though my oven only goes down to 170 degrees F. I preheat, turn oven off, put soap in, leave overnight or all day. I use BB silicone single cavity molds. They don't last forever, but that's fine with me, I love CPOP. Unmold soap in a few days, clean up, stamp, and cure.
I've read that some put their goat milk soap in a low temp oven (170) then turn off. Does this take the soap through the gel phase (like CPOP) and the soap is ready for use quicker?
KristaY
I also use silicon molds and have no problem but I only heat the oven to 100* F. No problem with blisters.
I've tried using single cavity silicone and loaf silicone for CPOP and I get silicone blisters EVERY time. I even bought an oven thermometer to make sure my oven temp wasn't off by 50 degrees or something else crazy. The last time I tried it I stood over it like a mother hen and pulled it out as soon as I saw gel to the edges (about 90 min I think). Sure enough, blisters galore. Do you have a magic trick to avoid it paillo? Or am I just cursed.....
Well CPOP is the method you described initially. It can be done to any soap including GM to ensure gel phase. Do you think CPOP is something different?I've read that some put their goat milk soap in a low temp oven (170) then turn off. Does this take the soap through the gel phase (like CPOP) and the soap is ready for use quicker?
Are you saying you get silicon blisters when you just wrap it in a towel and don't put it in the oven?
Although I do not rejoice in the fact you get blisters, I just wanted to say that I'm glad I'm not the only one that gets them. Actually, I only get them in the silicone loaf molds that I bought from Essential Depot, no matter what precautions I've taken to prevent them (the blisters). I have another silicone loaf mold that I bought from Woodfield's that doesn't give me blisters. Because of that fact, I truly believe it has something to do with the quality of the silicone from which the molds are made. The silicone that my Woodfield's is made from (pink and floppy) is totally different from the silicone of my ED molds (neutral colored and much stiffer).
IrishLass
IrishLass makes a good point about the quality of the silicone. I've never had a blister with my Brambleberry molds, and that's all I use.
Yes, that's exactly what I'm saying. I routinely get blisters if I'm not diligent in watching it go through gel. I've realized though that it happens with speedy and over-heating FO's, like florals and water scents, so I watch those like a hawk. Slower scents like certain EO blends are just fine. Lately I've been playing a game with soap to find the sweet spot between partial gel and blisters. I'm sad to say the soap has a few points up on me.
My go-to molds are from BB so that's interesting. I routinely use my 10" silicone loaf molds and those are the ones I have to hover over. So now I need to think about my recipes and what may be contributing to the problem (other than speedy, naughty FO's).
That is weird because I only have BB silicone molds and I have never had (touch wood) blisters and I always do a 100 degree then turn it off CPOP.
I have used honey too.
Maybe it is the FO's?
I've tried using single cavity silicone and loaf silicone for CPOP and I get silicone blisters EVERY time. I even bought an oven thermometer to make sure my oven temp wasn't off by 50 degrees or something else crazy. The last time I tried it I stood over it like a mother hen and pulled it out as soon as I saw gel to the edges (about 90 min I think). Sure enough, blisters galore. Do you have a magic trick to avoid it paillo? Or am I just cursed.....
KristaY,
What do your blisters look like?
Someone else posted a photo of their soap and it sort of looked like blisters but it was really unmolding their soap too early. Some recipes takes a while to firm up in silicone. Do you think that could be your problem?
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