gigisiguenza
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Jul 11, 2015
- Messages
- 1,391
- Reaction score
- 917
I was playing with an idea in my head and I'm curious about the way things are absorbed into the soap as it sets up (after pouring, but before unmolding and cutting).
I know that if you grease the sides of your molds with any fat (Pam, oil, lard, etc) it will be saponified and sort of glue your loaf to your mold. And I know that the reason mica swirls work is because the soap will absorb and saponify the oil the mica is suspended in.
Would the same principle work with glycerin? If I wanted to suspend a colorant in glycerin and use it for a swirl (like the mica swirl), would the soap absorb it the way it does the oils? Or would it cause a problem?
TIA
I know that if you grease the sides of your molds with any fat (Pam, oil, lard, etc) it will be saponified and sort of glue your loaf to your mold. And I know that the reason mica swirls work is because the soap will absorb and saponify the oil the mica is suspended in.
Would the same principle work with glycerin? If I wanted to suspend a colorant in glycerin and use it for a swirl (like the mica swirl), would the soap absorb it the way it does the oils? Or would it cause a problem?
TIA