Ruth Gregory
Member
I’m trying to make an extremely hard soap. I have used coconut oil, beeswax and babassu oil, unfortunately the soap I’m making still isn’t hard enough. I’ve love it if anyone has some suggestions.
Thank you
Thank you
Or use vinegar as your water for the lye solution.Have you tried adding salt? I believe the recommended ratio is 1 tsp/PPO but it's one of the methods I'm trying next for a harder bar. That, and tallow.
Coconut, babassu, and palm kernel oil (not palm oil) are pretty much interchangeable as far as the type of soap they make. Due to cost, I'd save the babassu for leave-on products. Use CO oil or PKO for soapmaking, and consider limiting those to about 20% of your total oils. Otherwise, your soap is likely to be very cleansing, that is, stripping the skin and drying it out.I’m trying to make an extremely hard soap. I have used coconut oil, beeswax and babassu oil, unfortunately the soap I’m making still isn’t hard enough. I’ve love it if anyone has some suggestions.
Thank you
Thank you so much for that information. That’s so usefulCoconut, babassu, and palm kernel oil (not palm oil) are pretty much interchangeable as far as the type of soap they make. Due to cost, I'd save the babassu for leave-on products. Use CO oil or PKO for soapmaking, and consider limiting those to about 20% of your total oils. Otherwise, your soap is likely to be very cleansing, that is, stripping the skin and drying it out.
Also, coconut oil makes a very hard bar of soap, but that hardness dissolves quickly when water is added. That means a bar high in coconut oil isn't a long-lasting bar even though it is physically hard.
For a physically harder bar of soap that also lasts longer, use ingredients that add palmitic and stearic fatty acids. The most common options include palm oil, soy wax, cocoa butter, shea butter, lard, and tallow.
Olive oil makes a very hard bar of soap, but takes a long time to cure unless it is combined with other oils. You could also try 2% of beeswax. Much more than that really dampens the lather and makes the soap feel waxy.
Not yet but I’m going to give it a go. ThanksHave you tried a long cure time?
Have you tried a long cure time?
Thank you for that. Mine aren’t perhaps I need to leave them longer to cure . ThanksMy 100% coconut oil dish soaps are hard as a rock. Not sure if that is what you are looking for. Pretty sure I could lay them out on my road as speed bumps. lol
Thank you very much for that info. I will have a good read of your link. ThanksLink from my notes file (have not reread it, but the notes say its good!): https://www.soapmakingforum.com/threads/recipe-for-a-really-hard-bar.67389/#post-694039
ETA: just reread that link, it *is* a good thread! In part because it talks about the fact that many of the oils that increase hardness also increase the cleansing/stripping factor, so it will make your skin dryer. Also, I have never used babassu personally but often read that since it is so much more expensive and so close to CO in the resulting soap it's not really worth it to use in soap if you can sub CO.
Sorry I should have been more clear. I mean physically a hard bar of soap because I want to use it in a particular way and it need to be rock hard.@Ruth Gregory -- Do you mean hard as in physically hard-like-a-rock? Or hard as in the soap being long lasting in the bath? People tend to confuse the two. While they're related properties, they're not really the same thing.
If you share the recipe that you're currently working with, people might be able to help you more effectively.
It’s a bit difficult to explain but I want to use it in a particular way and it needs to be really hard, but not necessarily long lasting. ThanksI second @DeeAnna’s question about your definition of hardness. And I have a follow up question that’s related. What is your purpose in creating a hard bar of soap?
...The recipe I have tried is 2% beeswax, 10% babassu oil and the rest coconut oil. Thanks
I haven’t, I will give that a go. Thank youOr use vinegar as your water for the lye solution.
Thank you, I will give that a goHave you tried adding salt? I believe the recommended ratio is 1 tsp/PPO but it's one of the methods I'm trying next for a harder bar. That, and tallow.
Sorry, I’m new to soap making. I’m using 5g beeswax,25g babassu oil, 220g Coconut oil,95g water and 43g of lye. I hope that’s more useful.That's your blend of fats, but that isn't a recipe. The recipe should also list everything else you put into the soap. Maybe you're using more water than necessary? Or superfat isn't ideal? Or some other issue?
It's best to provide all ingredients in weights, not percents, if you want troubleshooting help.
Are you going to use this as a bath soap? Or do you have in mind a purpose other than a person‘s body? Like maybe soap for keeping drawers from sticking or ???I want to use it in a particular way and it needs to be really hard, but not necessarily long lasting.
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