How does this look. Using 1/2 coconut milk and 1/2 frozen pumpkin puree. Adding 2 T pumpkin puree, yogurt and salt after cook.
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I used pumpkin spices in the olive oil and 1T cinnamonAlthough the cleansing number is way too high for my skin, it looks like a nice recipe. Also, even though you added the ACV after the cook, hopefully you adjusted the lye calculation for that. My understanding is that even after saponification is complete, the lye molecules can still be "rearranged" by addition of post-cook oils, acids, and other substances that react to NaOH.
Anyway, how did it turn out? Did you an any FO or EO to create the pumpkin spice scent?
Yes pleaseI put the image in the first post. Would it be alright to delete all the posts about not seeing the image?
Yikes, was that ground cloves, or clove EO? If the latter, then double-check the safe usage rate for that EO blend on EOCalc.com. Clove EO is a very "hot" oil that can cause serious skin burns. Even the dry spices in soaps can be super irritating to sensitive skin.I used pumpkin spices in the olive oil and 1T cinnamon
1T orangex10
1/2 T patchouli
1/2 T clove
The rebatch I added about1/4 cup instant coffe
Wait, I've never heard this before. So you're saying after full saponification, there is still active lye?Although the cleansing number is way too high for my skin, it looks like a nice recipe. Also, even though you added the ACV after the cook, hopefully you adjusted the lye calculation for that. My understanding is that even after saponification is complete, the lye molecules can still be "rearranged" by addition of post-cook oils, acids, and other substances that react to NaOH.
Not exactly. What I understand from things shared by Kevin Dunn (the soap scientist guy) is that the lye molecule (or more accurately, the component that separated from the lye molecule) that is now attached to a fatty acid, can still separate from that fatty acid and react instead to other substances that are present, including different fatty acids, or other forms of acid such as citric acid and acetic acid. That's why the term "post-cook superfat" is a bit euphemistic. By adding something post-cook, you evidently increase the likelihood of it remaining in its whole state, but you cannot guarantee it.Wait, I've never heard this before. So you're saying after full saponification, there is still active lye?
I did check on eo calc and used less then what was in the green. I used spoon measurements because I don’t have a scale for small stuff(next on my shopping list). What little bit I used wouldn’t even have moved the scale.Yikes, was that ground cloves, or clove EO? If the latter, then double-check the safe usage rate for that EO blend on EOCalc.com. Clove EO is a very "hot" oil that can cause serious skin burns. Even the dry spices in soaps can be super irritating to sensitive skin.
I'm sure these smell fantastic, but for future, it's really important to measure EOs by weight, not volume, and to make sure the blends are skin-safe.
The cure time is the same or longer for hot process, because more water is used. Lots of folks are confused about that because the conflate saponification with curing. Saponification is done at the end of the cook for hot process, and usually within 72 hours for cold process. But curing is about water evaporation and the soap becoming milder over time - and that doesn't change based on how the soap has been made.
Thanks very much for your inputI did check on eo calc and used less then what was in the green. I used spoon measurements because I don’t have a scale for small stuff(next on my shopping list). What little bit I used wouldn’t even have moved the scale.
Not exactly. What I understand from things shared by Kevin Dunn (the soap scientist guy) is that the lye molecule (or more accurately, the component that separated from the lye molecule) that is now attached to a fatty acid, can still separate from that fatty acid and react instead to other substances that are present, including different fatty acids, or other forms of acid such as citric acid and acetic acid. That's why the term "post-cook superfat" is a bit euphemistic. By adding something post-cook, you evidently increase the likelihood of it remaining in its whole state, but you cannot guarantee it.
It's entirely possible I didn't say that correctly, so hopefully @DeeAnna can chime in to clean up after me.
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