ResolvableOwl
Notorious Lyear
This nifty Lego brick silicone mould is new in my collection. To inaugurate it, I made a straight HO sunflower castile soap. Pure high-oleic sunflower oil, NaOH lye with 39% concentration, with 1.4%ppo lactic acid (equivalent to 2.9%ppo 60% sodium lactate). With a saponification value of 0.135, this means a fairly low lye discount of 1.25%. I am aware of multiple tricks to avoid typical castile notorieties, but I decided to keep things simple.
To little surprise, it was a pain to thicken up. More than a day after casting, the batter still had a “thick trace” texture … unmolding was just barely possible after three days, lactate addition to little avail … and “a bit” more patience to be expected until fully cured …
For a small part of the batter, I intended a slightly less minimalistic fate: A month ago, I had mixed some coconut oil with erva-mate chimarrão (that bright green yerba mate powder from southern Brazil), kept it liquid at a warm place, and filtered the leaf powder off the coconut oil a few days ago. This dark green macerate went into part of the HO sunflower batter, adding 12% coconut oil, and lifting the superfat accordingly.
The pure soap is the lightest in colour I've ever made so far, and I wouldn't be surprised if it becomes even brighter with curing. That makes it the ideal matrix to judge what happens to the yerba mate colour. Everyone who knows yerba mate knows how terribly hard to clean the dark green stains are that it leaves everywhere, particularly around the kitchen sink. However, these are water-soluble, and here I have a fatty macerate, i. e. I expect it to be more similar to most other green plant dyes.
Adding yerba mate powder to soap as a whole (without the oil extraction step) is possible (it adds a mild peeling effect), but I haven't found a dosage yet where it turns completely black (but the lather becomes bright green!). But this is a story for another time.
In any case, I'll keep you updated, particularly about the development of the white and green colours.
To little surprise, it was a pain to thicken up. More than a day after casting, the batter still had a “thick trace” texture … unmolding was just barely possible after three days, lactate addition to little avail … and “a bit” more patience to be expected until fully cured …
For a small part of the batter, I intended a slightly less minimalistic fate: A month ago, I had mixed some coconut oil with erva-mate chimarrão (that bright green yerba mate powder from southern Brazil), kept it liquid at a warm place, and filtered the leaf powder off the coconut oil a few days ago. This dark green macerate went into part of the HO sunflower batter, adding 12% coconut oil, and lifting the superfat accordingly.
The pure soap is the lightest in colour I've ever made so far, and I wouldn't be surprised if it becomes even brighter with curing. That makes it the ideal matrix to judge what happens to the yerba mate colour. Everyone who knows yerba mate knows how terribly hard to clean the dark green stains are that it leaves everywhere, particularly around the kitchen sink. However, these are water-soluble, and here I have a fatty macerate, i. e. I expect it to be more similar to most other green plant dyes.
Adding yerba mate powder to soap as a whole (without the oil extraction step) is possible (it adds a mild peeling effect), but I haven't found a dosage yet where it turns completely black (but the lather becomes bright green!). But this is a story for another time.
In any case, I'll keep you updated, particularly about the development of the white and green colours.