Because the milk is opacue you can not see through it if there are any lye crystals that remain undisolved. So you strain it to make sure that no lye crystals end up in your soap. The strainer does not take out any fats from the milk.Why do people usually strain the lye-milk mixture. Doesn't doing that take out all the good fats which makes the soap even better?
Because the milk is opacue you can not see through it if there are any lye crystals that remain undisolved. So you strain it to make sure that no lye crystals end up in your soap. The strainer does not take out any fats from the milk.
The fats in the milk can start to saponify when mixing lye with the goat's milk. Therefore it can strain some of it out. I prefer to do the split method and mix my lye with an equal amount of water then add the remainder amount in goat's milk fortified with some powdered goat's milk to make it out at 100% in the end. No worries with clumpy milk, burning etc.
I have no clue why it took me so long to sign up for this forum. thank you guys so much because I have being having the issue with the distorted color! You guys are super helpful....
SO just to make sur3 I have it right... if my recipe requires 20 oz of waster, I would use 10 oz in water to mix the lye solution and use 10 oz in goats milk at light trace....and if I want I would mix 10 oz milk with 10 oz powder to make it 20z milk in the end?
Not quite, say your recipe called for 5.25 oz of lye(should always measure in grams for everything) you would then use 5.25 or a bit more water to mix the lye. The remainder of the liquid for the recipe I would use as milk and just add it to my oils and stickblend well. Then add your lye mixture (cooled). I don't add much of anything at trace.
Under stood. and I agree with not leaving most things at trace. I was just considering that the other day. give you more time to work with the mix. Thank you all very much...
Adonech said:and if I want I would mix 10 oz milk with 10 oz powder to make it 20z milk in the end?
If you want 100% goats milk in the example above you need to turn the 5.25 oz of water you used with the lye into milk. So you use enough GM powder to do that - read the instructions on the container - and mix that into the liquid milk. It probably won't be 5oz of powder.
Enter your email address to join: