Final update on the 100% sunflower DOS experiment. I won't show more pictures of the eggs, because they're honestly gross...
Results
Soaps without any pennies:
1. Adding salt was unambiguously the best anti-DOS. The body of the soap stayed white, and the DOS that formed was very light
2. The next best was citric acid; the body stayed stark white, and the DOS that formed was localized.
3. Baking soda turned the soap a light cream color, the DOS was fairly limited, although not drammatically better than the control
4. Jojoba oil was maybe marginally better than the control, but not meaningfully different
5. control
6. Beeswax also had a creamy body, and the DOS was darker than on the control
- Sugar was weird. Top stayed stark white, bottom formed colored DOS spots
Soap with pennies:
- All additives did marginally better than the control, except salt, which did noticeably worse
- when removing the penny, citric acid was almost pristine underneath, baking soda, sugar and salt were dark brown, the others were old-penny-colored.
Soap test:
- All soaps produced medium delicate bubbles at first pass, and with more rubbing, turned creamy/milky
- The salt soap was the only one a little different, with the final cream made of more tight bubbles
Shaving soap test:
- Control soap easily produced foam, but it collapsed 50% after 5 minutes
- Salt soap made a worthy shaving-cream foam, nice tight bubbles and slippery, took some more effort to build up though. Lasted intact the 5 minutes
- salt sunflower performed almost as well as commercial proraso wet shave soap.
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Final recommendations:
- use salt as an anti-DOS if you don't have fancy chemicals like ROE, but be wary if there's other additives; it might be worse. In which case, use citric acid (adjusting the lye!)
- consider sunflower and salt in shaving soap
Possible tips:
- if you can dehydrate your soaps quickly, and then wrap in cellophane/plastic, you may not get DOS at all