I was wondering if there is a reason for DOS. I have heard all kinds of opinions, but what are they? A reaction of some kind? :-?
The main cause of DOS stems from the oxidation of unsaturated soft/liquid oils in ones formula, especially those with a high linoleic content/short shelf-life, such as hemp oil, grapeseed oil, soybean oil, safflower oil , sunflower oil, the old Crisco formula, etc.... Also- letting ones soap come into contact with metals, such as curing them on uncoated metal curing racks- or using very hard water with a high mineral/ metal content in your formula (instead of distilled) can also cause DOS.
IrishLass
Two oils I use is grapeseed and soybean oils. Just recently I started using sunflower oil. I know this is a crazy thought, but, can soap ash be a part of dos? I just have to ask.
Soda ash is caused by the reaction of your lye with the carbon dioxide in the air. If your oils are saponifying slower so there is more unreacted alkali that is exposed to the air, then yes. But I do not know if those 2 oils are slower to react than the steric or palmic oils. Maybe DeeAnna or TOMH will wander by and comment
Soda ash is caused by the reaction of your lye with the carbon dioxide in the air. If your oils are saponifying slower so there is more unreacted alkali that is exposed to the air, then yes. But I do not know if those 2 oils are slower to react than the steric or palmic oils. Maybe DeeAnna or TOMH will wander by and comment
Interesting, I noticed that when I use Lavender eo, I get dos more. I have had a few on my AC soap; but lavender is the worse. I also use kaolin clay; about a tsp/53 oz of oil, I started doing this a while ago and that's when I noticed the oranges spots. Will do a test batch with no kaolin and see how it does. Thanks. I wondered about the ash because the soap starts out good and as time moves, that's when I began to see them.
I'm not certain about clays -- people don't generally point to them as the culprits for rancidity. I suppose some clays might have certain metals that would trigger spots of DOS perhaps, but I've not heard anything concrete about that issue.
KC -- Fresh lavender EO is fine, but lavender EO can oxidize and oxidized lavender can trigger rancidity/DOS. (As well as cause irritation to the skin!) I have had a link to something by Robert Tisserand and/or Kevin Dunn that touched on this, but I can't find the reference today.
I've seen this for myself in an unintentional experiment I did early on in my soaping misadventures. I scented half of a soap batch with peppermint EO and the other half with lavender EO. Both halves of the batch eventually turned all-over rancid, but the lavender half turned much earlier than the peppermint half. My conclusion is that if rancidity (DOS) is going to happen, lavender EO (and perhaps other EOs that I'm not aware of) can accelerate the process. The use of grapeseed, soybean, and regular (not High Oleic) sunflower do make all-over rancidity more likely.
I'm not certain about clays -- people don't generally point to them as the culprits for rancidity. I suppose some clays might have certain metals that would trigger spots of DOS perhaps, but I've not heard anything concrete about that issue.
KC -- Fresh lavender EO is fine, but lavender EO can oxidize and oxidized lavender can trigger rancidity/DOS. (As well as cause irritation to the skin!) I have had a link to something by Robert Tisserand and/or Kevin Dunn that touched on this, but I can't find the reference today.
I've seen this for myself in an unintentional experiment I did early on in my soaping misadventures. I scented half of a soap batch with peppermint EO and the other half with lavender EO. Both halves of the batch eventually turned all-over rancid, but the lavender half turned much earlier than the peppermint half. My conclusion is that if rancidity (DOS) is going to happen, lavender EO (and perhaps other EOs that I'm not aware of) can accelerate the process. The use of grapeseed, soybean, and regular (not High Oleic) sunflower do make all-over rancidity more likely.
I'm not certain about clays -- people don't generally point to them as the culprits for rancidity. I suppose some clays might have certain metals that would trigger spots of DOS perhaps, but I've not heard anything concrete about that issue.
Interesting, I noticed that when I use Lavender eo, I get dos more. I have had a few on my AC soap; but lavender is the worse. I also use kaolin clay; about a tsp/53 oz of oil, I started doing this a while ago and that's when I noticed the oranges spots. Will do a test batch with no kaolin and see how it does. Thanks. I wondered about the ash because the soap starts out good and as time moves, that's when I began to see them.
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