Hi,
I'm completely new here and I'm also new to soap making. I'm a graduate student in biochemistry, although my project is really more about genomics. I'm also an avid horseback rider. And I have two Siamese cats. I love animals. I live in New England, in the countryside.
I've recently had a great failure with my first batch of soap. It all started out back in early August of this year. I got the recipe from a little book just called Soap by Tatyana Hill. It said to first make a batch of cold process soap:
615g coconut oil
670g sunflower oil
670g olive oil
295g lye
930mL mineral water
Unfortunately, I had bought the ingredients for this a long time before I actually got around to making it and I didn't remember that I needed to buy more of some of them. So I ran out of some of the oils like the coconut and sunflower oil. So I substituted with I believe vegetable oil.
The soap never really seemed to trace despite my best efforts and lots of patience so I finally gave up and poured it into the mold anyway. And it did harden and turn into something that looked like real soap.
It cut it into big bars and there it say for many months. Actually until Sunday night when I decided to do something with it. It was quite hard by then but when I started grating it up to re-melt it, I noticed that it was really bothering my nose and lungs. This soap has been sitting since August, surely that's long enough for the curing process right?
Undaunted, I decided to go ahead with the recipe anyway. Same book and everything:
800g grated soap
320mL mineral water50g powdered green algae
70g bladderwrack
50g Iceland moss
juice of one lemon
15g bergamot oil (is there any particular reason soap people don't believe in volumetric measurements of liquids?!)
20g patchouli oil
1tsp lime oil (I guess for this volume is acceptable?)
So I melted the soap until the string phase in a double boiler. I added the supplements according to the recipe. It turned into a giant green mess. ok.
Poured it into a PVC tube (yes I can watch youtube videos!) and then crossed my fingers.
Next day. I took it out and under the bergamot smell that caustic smell was still there. But now it looked like that foam padding you put under carpeting. It's green and white and well just ugly. Not at all like the picture in the book.
My main concern is what's with the caustic problem? I still have quite a lot of the shredded soap. Is there something I can do to fix this during the re-melting process? Or should I scrap it and start over?
I'm completely new here and I'm also new to soap making. I'm a graduate student in biochemistry, although my project is really more about genomics. I'm also an avid horseback rider. And I have two Siamese cats. I love animals. I live in New England, in the countryside.
I've recently had a great failure with my first batch of soap. It all started out back in early August of this year. I got the recipe from a little book just called Soap by Tatyana Hill. It said to first make a batch of cold process soap:
615g coconut oil
670g sunflower oil
670g olive oil
295g lye
930mL mineral water
Unfortunately, I had bought the ingredients for this a long time before I actually got around to making it and I didn't remember that I needed to buy more of some of them. So I ran out of some of the oils like the coconut and sunflower oil. So I substituted with I believe vegetable oil.
The soap never really seemed to trace despite my best efforts and lots of patience so I finally gave up and poured it into the mold anyway. And it did harden and turn into something that looked like real soap.
It cut it into big bars and there it say for many months. Actually until Sunday night when I decided to do something with it. It was quite hard by then but when I started grating it up to re-melt it, I noticed that it was really bothering my nose and lungs. This soap has been sitting since August, surely that's long enough for the curing process right?
Undaunted, I decided to go ahead with the recipe anyway. Same book and everything:
800g grated soap
320mL mineral water50g powdered green algae
70g bladderwrack
50g Iceland moss
juice of one lemon
15g bergamot oil (is there any particular reason soap people don't believe in volumetric measurements of liquids?!)
20g patchouli oil
1tsp lime oil (I guess for this volume is acceptable?)
So I melted the soap until the string phase in a double boiler. I added the supplements according to the recipe. It turned into a giant green mess. ok.
Poured it into a PVC tube (yes I can watch youtube videos!) and then crossed my fingers.
Next day. I took it out and under the bergamot smell that caustic smell was still there. But now it looked like that foam padding you put under carpeting. It's green and white and well just ugly. Not at all like the picture in the book.
My main concern is what's with the caustic problem? I still have quite a lot of the shredded soap. Is there something I can do to fix this during the re-melting process? Or should I scrap it and start over?