Astro
Active Member
Hi
I tried the CPOP yesterday and, following some general guidelines, it failed miserably - I tried the "preheat oven at 170 degrees and cook for one hour then turn off the oven and leave overnight" method which resulted in a lovely gooey overflowing bubbly mess after 45 mins which I scraped up and into the crockpot to complete HP. It seems to have turned out fine.
But this exercise has brought up other questions. From the way I understand it, Hot Process takes the soap through all the stages in a couple of hours and can generally be removed from the molds and dries a lot quicker and can be used straight away (though "curing" hardens the soap as more water evaporates). Cold Process needs to go through the stages in the mold and takes longer before it can be removed, cut and cured, with at least 4 to 6 weeks before it can be used.
But, doing research, both here on SMF and soapmaking tutorials on the web, I am now totally confused about what curing means. In some tutorials (the majority that I have seen), the explanation is that with CP the curing time is for the excess lye to neutralize before the soap can be used. However a post here on SMF says that CP soap can be used almost immediately it is removed from the mold as it has gone through all the stages and the lye has been neutralized by then, and if a soap is lye heavy no amount of time will "cure" that and it will always be lye heavy.
So is curing just a case of allowing more water to evaporate to harden to soap or have I researched myself into complete confusion and lost the plot?
If it is true that CP can be used straight away, is it possible then to do a partial hot process to allow more artistic freedom with colours and techniques with a still pourable batter and also speed up the set? Do you have to get to the zap test point before molding?
Please help me clear up my confused little brain - information overload has me flummoxed
I tried the CPOP yesterday and, following some general guidelines, it failed miserably - I tried the "preheat oven at 170 degrees and cook for one hour then turn off the oven and leave overnight" method which resulted in a lovely gooey overflowing bubbly mess after 45 mins which I scraped up and into the crockpot to complete HP. It seems to have turned out fine.
But this exercise has brought up other questions. From the way I understand it, Hot Process takes the soap through all the stages in a couple of hours and can generally be removed from the molds and dries a lot quicker and can be used straight away (though "curing" hardens the soap as more water evaporates). Cold Process needs to go through the stages in the mold and takes longer before it can be removed, cut and cured, with at least 4 to 6 weeks before it can be used.
But, doing research, both here on SMF and soapmaking tutorials on the web, I am now totally confused about what curing means. In some tutorials (the majority that I have seen), the explanation is that with CP the curing time is for the excess lye to neutralize before the soap can be used. However a post here on SMF says that CP soap can be used almost immediately it is removed from the mold as it has gone through all the stages and the lye has been neutralized by then, and if a soap is lye heavy no amount of time will "cure" that and it will always be lye heavy.
So is curing just a case of allowing more water to evaporate to harden to soap or have I researched myself into complete confusion and lost the plot?
If it is true that CP can be used straight away, is it possible then to do a partial hot process to allow more artistic freedom with colours and techniques with a still pourable batter and also speed up the set? Do you have to get to the zap test point before molding?
Please help me clear up my confused little brain - information overload has me flummoxed