KeepItSimpleSoap
Well-Known Member
Hello to all of you. About three years ago I started thinking about making soap. I had been putting all of our cooking oils, grease etc. in an old pickle jar. But that mixture didn't look very appealing. When the jar would get full I would put the lid on it and then put it in the garbage. Then I started saving just the bacon grease. Now I have one of those dorm room size refrigerators full and then some. I looked on the internet back then and my search didn't yield any results. I wanted just a simple recipe like great grandma use to use. About 5 weeks ago I started searching again and found the info on how to do it including the LYE calculator. I had to purchase a few inexpensive tools, SS bowl, SS wisk. I already had a candy thermometer and Digital scale from my beer making stuff. I also rounded up a small plastic bowl for water and a 4 oz plastic cup for the 100% LYE which I purchased at my local hardware store. I also ordered 2 6 cell MIC silicone molds.
Here is my current recipe that fits in my 12 cells.
25.25 oz of rendered bacon grease (lard)
multiply that by .1388 and it equals 3.5049 os of LYE
then multiply 3.5 times 2.3 to get the water measurement which is 8.05 oz of water
I rounded the LYE down to 3.5 oz and the water to 8 oz
I looked at several recipes an couldn't come up with the amount of water but twice I read that I should use a little more than twice the weight in water to LYE.
You may ask why I capitalize LYE? I have been writing it that way on all equipment involved so that it won't get mixed up with the food dishes.
Currently I'm not using distilled water. Our water here seems to work and has a PH of about 6.8. I call it the best water in the nation. Same type that Jack Daniels TSM is made from.
Here are the results of my first three attempts. Keep in mind that I don't have an electric mixer. Yet!
I rendered my grease in a 2 quart pot equal parts water and bacon grease. The first time that I boiled it I put in a tablespoon of salt. I let the grease congeal in the fridge then drained the water out from under the grease cake, added fresh water and boiling again and then doing that a 3rd time. I only used salt the first boil.
When everything was ready I put 8 oz of cold water in my plastic bowl, carefully poured 3.5 oz of LYE in to the water. I already had the grease heated up to about 150*F. When the grease and the LYE/water got down to ~120* I mixed them together. I hand stirred for several minutes and wasn't getting any change in the mix.
I would stir off an on through the hour. After an hour and ten minutes I finally got to the trace stage and the it quickly turned to pudding. It was setting up as I got the mix in to the molds. It took over a day to set up and after 5 days I put it in the freezer for several hours to get it to come out of the molds without damaging the soap bars.
A week later the 2nd batch. It took 1.5 hours to trace
The 3rd batch took 2 hours and ten minutes to trace
I have 3 questions:
Does the water have to be distilled or is mine good?
And is the fact that I am hand mixing vs. a stick type mixer matter? It seems as if I can whip air in to it, it traces faster.
Also I read somewhere that I can add a chemical to make it set up faster. What is it called?
Thanks for any input
Here is my current recipe that fits in my 12 cells.
25.25 oz of rendered bacon grease (lard)
multiply that by .1388 and it equals 3.5049 os of LYE
then multiply 3.5 times 2.3 to get the water measurement which is 8.05 oz of water
I rounded the LYE down to 3.5 oz and the water to 8 oz
I looked at several recipes an couldn't come up with the amount of water but twice I read that I should use a little more than twice the weight in water to LYE.
You may ask why I capitalize LYE? I have been writing it that way on all equipment involved so that it won't get mixed up with the food dishes.
Currently I'm not using distilled water. Our water here seems to work and has a PH of about 6.8. I call it the best water in the nation. Same type that Jack Daniels TSM is made from.
Here are the results of my first three attempts. Keep in mind that I don't have an electric mixer. Yet!
I rendered my grease in a 2 quart pot equal parts water and bacon grease. The first time that I boiled it I put in a tablespoon of salt. I let the grease congeal in the fridge then drained the water out from under the grease cake, added fresh water and boiling again and then doing that a 3rd time. I only used salt the first boil.
When everything was ready I put 8 oz of cold water in my plastic bowl, carefully poured 3.5 oz of LYE in to the water. I already had the grease heated up to about 150*F. When the grease and the LYE/water got down to ~120* I mixed them together. I hand stirred for several minutes and wasn't getting any change in the mix.
I would stir off an on through the hour. After an hour and ten minutes I finally got to the trace stage and the it quickly turned to pudding. It was setting up as I got the mix in to the molds. It took over a day to set up and after 5 days I put it in the freezer for several hours to get it to come out of the molds without damaging the soap bars.
A week later the 2nd batch. It took 1.5 hours to trace
The 3rd batch took 2 hours and ten minutes to trace
I have 3 questions:
Does the water have to be distilled or is mine good?
And is the fact that I am hand mixing vs. a stick type mixer matter? It seems as if I can whip air in to it, it traces faster.
Also I read somewhere that I can add a chemical to make it set up faster. What is it called?
Thanks for any input
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