Ridingthesoapbubbles
Member
I'm fairly new to soapmaking and have made a several successful recipes, but today's soap was most likely a failure. I was trying out a recipe using coffee. I've read many of the current blog posts about substituting coffee for the water in the lye solution and thought I would give it a try. I'll tell you what I did, and then I'll tell you what happened.
My base recipe:
Avocado oil 8 %
Castor Oil 5 %
Coconut oil 76 22%
Mango butter 20%
Olive oil 45%
1.5:1 coffee water/lye ratio (probably my first mistake for this particular recipe)
2 tsp titanium dioxide dispersed in water
2 tsp cocoa powder dispersed in oil from the recipe
30g peppermint essential oil added at trace
My lye solution was approx. 93°f and the oils were approx 95°f. I mixed until trace then separated out about one cup of batter for the cocoa powder and one cup for the titanium dioxide. I was going for a 3 color swirl.
This is what happened. All the batters accelerated. After adding the cocoa powder, the batter got nearly solid really fast. The one with titanium dioxide became like butter cream. The rest of the batter that was left in the main bowl was very heavy and creamy (no additives). I scooped this one into the mold first, glopped the cocoa mixture on top, which was impossible to smooth out, and then threw the titanium dioxide mixture on top and scraped a design into it with a fork.
I put it away to dry overnight and I'll see what becomes of it when I take it out of the mold tomorrow, but I think I'll chalk this one up to being failed ugly soap.
Please tell me what I did wrong. Why did my batter accelerate?
My base recipe:
Avocado oil 8 %
Castor Oil 5 %
Coconut oil 76 22%
Mango butter 20%
Olive oil 45%
1.5:1 coffee water/lye ratio (probably my first mistake for this particular recipe)
2 tsp titanium dioxide dispersed in water
2 tsp cocoa powder dispersed in oil from the recipe
30g peppermint essential oil added at trace
My lye solution was approx. 93°f and the oils were approx 95°f. I mixed until trace then separated out about one cup of batter for the cocoa powder and one cup for the titanium dioxide. I was going for a 3 color swirl.
This is what happened. All the batters accelerated. After adding the cocoa powder, the batter got nearly solid really fast. The one with titanium dioxide became like butter cream. The rest of the batter that was left in the main bowl was very heavy and creamy (no additives). I scooped this one into the mold first, glopped the cocoa mixture on top, which was impossible to smooth out, and then threw the titanium dioxide mixture on top and scraped a design into it with a fork.
I put it away to dry overnight and I'll see what becomes of it when I take it out of the mold tomorrow, but I think I'll chalk this one up to being failed ugly soap.
Please tell me what I did wrong. Why did my batter accelerate?