I'm posting this to not further hijack the post I first mentioned and because I think this might be useful information for somebody at some point. I'm not sure if this is 'common soaping knowledge' that I just wasn't aware of, but all the recommendations I read about gel and volcano talk about sugar, water and soaping temps, but not about hard oils vs soft oils, so I'm assuming there are more people who don't know about the connection between type of oil and gel/cook/volcano.
A thread about countertop HP prompted me to try this method, which pretty much comes down to adding some sugar and soaping at very high temperatures to let the soap cook/volcano (controlled) without extra heat added to it. The big advantage is that it cooks very quickly and can cut down working time a lot.
In case you're interested, here's the thread:
https://www.soapmakingforum.com/threads/hp-soapers-a-question-for-you.71054/
Trying this on a batch of soap that I was going to HP anyway, did not give the spectacular volcano I had expected. In fact, nothing happened and I had to put the soap in the oven after a while. I had held a big part of my water back to add after the cook to make the batter more fluid and I thought that might have inhibited the soap from gelling/cooking/volcanoing (for more info on the influence of water on soap heating and gelling, see this great post by auntie clara: https://auntieclaras.com/2015/06/overheating-soap/)
So the next morning I got myself some wheat germ oil that I was going to throw out and decided to soap that with a 0% superfat, full water (33% lye solution) and a bit more sugar than with the last try. I also made sure my oils and lye were super hot when mixing (I don't have a thermometer, so my standard for this was practically unable to touch the bowl without oven mitts) This is the recipe:
213g wheat germ oil
27,8g lye
56,9g distilled water
8,8g sugar
Unfortunately, even though I added more water and sugar than last time and I'm assuming enough heat, this recipe did not want to gel at all. First I stick blended to trace, waited, stick blended, waited... Then I decided to put my soaping bowl in a hot water bath.. stick blending, waiting, stick blending, waiting.. nothing. In the end I popped it in the oven, first low heat, slowly more and more heat applied and I never really got beyond apple sauce... After about 1,5 hours I was fed up and dumped all of it in molds. There was still some oil floating to the top if I diluted some soap in hot water, so saponification was not complete. Strangely enough this went worse than the first time, even though I had adapted the recipe to gel easier.
I realized that mulline, one of the posters on the countertop hp thread who had great results and was kind enough to share her recipe had a lot of hard oils in her recipe. Would that do the trick? Hard oils are easier to get to trace, so maybe also easier to gel? I tried to look up information about this on the internet, but didn't find any (maybe I didn't look in the right place? The internet is a big place..)
Anyway, I decided to get some coconut oil and do the exact same recipe with the exact same amounts of lye, water and sugar, so the lye:water ratio and the water as % of oils would be the same in both recipes. That way I was certain the amount of water would not influence the gelling/cooking speed of the soap. It made for a 28,5% superfat in the coconut oil soap, but hey, it's going to have to be rebatched anyway..
213g coconut oil
27,8g lye
56,9g distilled water
8,9g sugar (woopsie)
Nothing changed in the process, except it was a different oil. But the speed of saponification was remarkable! Within 30min I had mixed my lye with my oils and everything had cooked without any added heat.
Of course the small batch size might have given some variation on its own and my temperatures weren't very accurate, but the differrence between the two oils is so big that I think it's safe to assume that hard oils saponify faster and gel/cook more easily than soft oils.
A theory why the coconut oil soap gelled so much easier:
Maybe the increased speed of trace of the coconut oil released heat more quickly, which kickstarted the gelling process? Oh... I so want to buy a thermometer now to check gelling temps and repeat the experiment!
A thread about countertop HP prompted me to try this method, which pretty much comes down to adding some sugar and soaping at very high temperatures to let the soap cook/volcano (controlled) without extra heat added to it. The big advantage is that it cooks very quickly and can cut down working time a lot.
In case you're interested, here's the thread:
https://www.soapmakingforum.com/threads/hp-soapers-a-question-for-you.71054/
Trying this on a batch of soap that I was going to HP anyway, did not give the spectacular volcano I had expected. In fact, nothing happened and I had to put the soap in the oven after a while. I had held a big part of my water back to add after the cook to make the batter more fluid and I thought that might have inhibited the soap from gelling/cooking/volcanoing (for more info on the influence of water on soap heating and gelling, see this great post by auntie clara: https://auntieclaras.com/2015/06/overheating-soap/)
So the next morning I got myself some wheat germ oil that I was going to throw out and decided to soap that with a 0% superfat, full water (33% lye solution) and a bit more sugar than with the last try. I also made sure my oils and lye were super hot when mixing (I don't have a thermometer, so my standard for this was practically unable to touch the bowl without oven mitts) This is the recipe:
213g wheat germ oil
27,8g lye
56,9g distilled water
8,8g sugar
Unfortunately, even though I added more water and sugar than last time and I'm assuming enough heat, this recipe did not want to gel at all. First I stick blended to trace, waited, stick blended, waited... Then I decided to put my soaping bowl in a hot water bath.. stick blending, waiting, stick blending, waiting.. nothing. In the end I popped it in the oven, first low heat, slowly more and more heat applied and I never really got beyond apple sauce... After about 1,5 hours I was fed up and dumped all of it in molds. There was still some oil floating to the top if I diluted some soap in hot water, so saponification was not complete. Strangely enough this went worse than the first time, even though I had adapted the recipe to gel easier.
I realized that mulline, one of the posters on the countertop hp thread who had great results and was kind enough to share her recipe had a lot of hard oils in her recipe. Would that do the trick? Hard oils are easier to get to trace, so maybe also easier to gel? I tried to look up information about this on the internet, but didn't find any (maybe I didn't look in the right place? The internet is a big place..)
Anyway, I decided to get some coconut oil and do the exact same recipe with the exact same amounts of lye, water and sugar, so the lye:water ratio and the water as % of oils would be the same in both recipes. That way I was certain the amount of water would not influence the gelling/cooking speed of the soap. It made for a 28,5% superfat in the coconut oil soap, but hey, it's going to have to be rebatched anyway..
213g coconut oil
27,8g lye
56,9g distilled water
8,9g sugar (woopsie)
Nothing changed in the process, except it was a different oil. But the speed of saponification was remarkable! Within 30min I had mixed my lye with my oils and everything had cooked without any added heat.
Of course the small batch size might have given some variation on its own and my temperatures weren't very accurate, but the differrence between the two oils is so big that I think it's safe to assume that hard oils saponify faster and gel/cook more easily than soft oils.
A theory why the coconut oil soap gelled so much easier:
Maybe the increased speed of trace of the coconut oil released heat more quickly, which kickstarted the gelling process? Oh... I so want to buy a thermometer now to check gelling temps and repeat the experiment!
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