For today's life lesson I learned the hard way (like everything else!), allow me to introduce everyone to the differences in powdered vs granulated citric acid.
Once upon a time, as a young-ish, fresh-faced bath bomb enthusiast, gobbling up every bit of knowledge I could, I very rarely came across anyone talking about the different types (styles?cuts?) of citric acid. Some blogs mentioned it when asked, or included a single sentence about what they use, but very few delved into the why, and I never realized what a huge difference there was.
I'm here today to share my citric acidy woes after my usual supplier (walmart, lol!) drastically upped their price while simultaneously reducing the size (8$ for 11oz), when I was paying $5 for 14oz less than a year ago.
Firstly, I love Ball Citric acid, but cannot find it locally anymore. Walmart carries a new brand, and Ball on Amazon is way too much. I figured, it can't be that hard, right? Citric acid is citric acid.
Well... there's a reason people recommend soap/bath suppliers, but even that isn't foolproof. If anyone is wondering, Aztec sells granulated, not powdered, since they don't list that anywhere in the description.
Every Amazon listing I came across for 5-10lbs had the term "powdered" in their description, typically accompanied by a photo of the powdery product I was used to, with beautiful smooth bath bombs in the product photos. What I learned from taking a risk and buying a bag, and reading tons of reviews for other products, is that most are actually not powdered, they're granulated. Now, granulated is okay, but the recipes I've formulated are based on the powder version and what I'm used to, and personally, I think it looks a lot better visually.
I figured why not? Amazon says free returns, what do I have to lose?
Well, I bought a 6 lb. bag. There were no photos of the actual product or bath bombs in the reviews, just some pictures of the bag it came in. There were a few positive reviews from people making bath bombs, so I figured why not?
I got my citric acid, and it's not what I wanted. Unlike the description, it's not powdered. So I hit return, and get "this item is not returnable." A ten minute phone call later, I did get a refund, but it made me much more weary of ordering from Amazon with the mindset of "I can return it if it's not right."
Amazon let me keep it, so I figured hey, free citric acid! I'll grind it in my food processor and it'll look great! Well, kinda... it looks better, for sure, but still not the smooth texture I like. I'm sure it will be fine for using in CP and cleaning and for home use, but I give these away to family for gifts, so I want them to look nice. I'm not out any money (other than my time), but man, what a journey.
I discovered my recipe, formulated for high humidity, does not play well with granulated. It crumbles, probably because I don't use water/have enough liquid in the humid months, and generally just looks rather shabby compared to my usual creations. I'm curious how it'll work in the warmer months when I use a wetter recipe because my house is hot and dry, and will do my best to update once I make the switch.
My ramblings aside, here's the pictures of my "experiments," using shower steamers. I hope I've learned my lesson
Once upon a time, as a young-ish, fresh-faced bath bomb enthusiast, gobbling up every bit of knowledge I could, I very rarely came across anyone talking about the different types (styles?cuts?) of citric acid. Some blogs mentioned it when asked, or included a single sentence about what they use, but very few delved into the why, and I never realized what a huge difference there was.
I'm here today to share my citric acidy woes after my usual supplier (walmart, lol!) drastically upped their price while simultaneously reducing the size (8$ for 11oz), when I was paying $5 for 14oz less than a year ago.
Firstly, I love Ball Citric acid, but cannot find it locally anymore. Walmart carries a new brand, and Ball on Amazon is way too much. I figured, it can't be that hard, right? Citric acid is citric acid.
Well... there's a reason people recommend soap/bath suppliers, but even that isn't foolproof. If anyone is wondering, Aztec sells granulated, not powdered, since they don't list that anywhere in the description.
Every Amazon listing I came across for 5-10lbs had the term "powdered" in their description, typically accompanied by a photo of the powdery product I was used to, with beautiful smooth bath bombs in the product photos. What I learned from taking a risk and buying a bag, and reading tons of reviews for other products, is that most are actually not powdered, they're granulated. Now, granulated is okay, but the recipes I've formulated are based on the powder version and what I'm used to, and personally, I think it looks a lot better visually.
I figured why not? Amazon says free returns, what do I have to lose?
Well, I bought a 6 lb. bag. There were no photos of the actual product or bath bombs in the reviews, just some pictures of the bag it came in. There were a few positive reviews from people making bath bombs, so I figured why not?
I got my citric acid, and it's not what I wanted. Unlike the description, it's not powdered. So I hit return, and get "this item is not returnable." A ten minute phone call later, I did get a refund, but it made me much more weary of ordering from Amazon with the mindset of "I can return it if it's not right."
Amazon let me keep it, so I figured hey, free citric acid! I'll grind it in my food processor and it'll look great! Well, kinda... it looks better, for sure, but still not the smooth texture I like. I'm sure it will be fine for using in CP and cleaning and for home use, but I give these away to family for gifts, so I want them to look nice. I'm not out any money (other than my time), but man, what a journey.
I discovered my recipe, formulated for high humidity, does not play well with granulated. It crumbles, probably because I don't use water/have enough liquid in the humid months, and generally just looks rather shabby compared to my usual creations. I'm curious how it'll work in the warmer months when I use a wetter recipe because my house is hot and dry, and will do my best to update once I make the switch.
My ramblings aside, here's the pictures of my "experiments," using shower steamers. I hope I've learned my lesson