Hi folks!
I am now making my first ever liquid soap. The paste is now in the bowl covered with a towel. And I'm not lying when I tell you I spent 2,5 hours just to get it to trace! And I'm not lying when I tell you I had so bad separation it would never come together again. Eventually it did. That was what I spent the hours on, making the soap come together again. My poor stickblender, yes, it is a miracle that it survived. I guess they make good stickblenders in Congo, where mine is made. It did heat up so badly it started to smell burnt plastic.
My plan was to make cold processed liquid soap. But it would never trace, and I got impatient, and threw the bowl into the microwave to give it some heat. After that, it started to separate. I have had separation before in hot process, so I knew it was just to stickblend it together again. But not this separation, no! I stickblended as much as I could, threw the bowl in the microwave again, handstirred with a whisk (because I had to give my stickblender some cooling. But really didn't cool). I was almost giving up. At the edge of nervous breakdown, I threw the bowl in the microwave again, and really nuked it like crazy. Not that I did not do that before, but it was more gentle. I tried to stickblend again, and I was so angry I didn't care about burning my stickblender. So I blended like crazy, and suddenly, wow! It looked like trace. Well, looked like, that is not the word. It became a thick pudding that actually hold together. I was no so sure, so I stickblended even more, just to be on the safe side. I do not dare to look under the towel, because I will get crazy if it has separated again.
I think the fault may have been that I used "full water" and 2 percent more (40% of oils). I thought full water would help it to gel at a lower temperature, and hopefully not make the paste too thick and unmanageable. I think I should have done the opposite, used as strong lye solution as possible, perhaps?
My recipe was:
31% (220 g) Flott Matfett (around 65% shea, 25% coconut and the rest rapeseed). I soaped it as palmolein.
31% ( 220 g) Olive
31% (220 g) Sunflower (high oleic)
7% (50 g) Castor
136 grams of KOH (calculated with 100% purity since I don't know the actual purity)
283 grams of tap water (but I measured 285)
(I know I probably will have some superfat (and unclear soap, which is okey) since I soaped with 100% purity of KOH. I did not dare to use 90%, since I don't know for sure. I have to mail the company to find out.)
I had no additives. But I added some mica at the end, just because I was tired of waiting for the stickblender to cool off a bit, and needed to do something. Boring color (50/50 Desert sunset and Sparkling gold), so I guess I have to adjust it a bit later. But I will see how it becomes when dilluted.
I will add sodium citrate when dilluting, and will dillute with a heavy sugar syrup (since I don't have preservatives). I don't know if I can make it work dilluting with a very strong syrup, but we will see. I don't know yet how to make an 80% sugar solution either. It will be a shower gel (since I have given up using bar soaps in the shower), and I want it to be thick and concentrated. So I hope a sugar syrup can make it both thick and very bubbly + preserve it. Have anyone used sugar syrup in liquid soap? Is it a bad idea, do you think?
I will also add fragrance oils. And it doesn't really matter what I'm going to add or not. That was not the problem.
I think I'm scared off from making liquid soap ever again. I'm so tired after struggling with this soap for ages. If this is what liquid soapmaking is, well, then. Or did I do something wrong? And what did I eventually do wrong?
I now fully understand why people are using the glycerin method, just sayin.
Yes, I forgot to tell you my temperatures. The fact is that I have noe clue. I did not measure. I melted the hard fat in the oils in the microwave, and it was just a tiny blob unmelted hard fat when I added the lye. I added the lye as soon as it was dissolved. The soap became quite hot, but not so that you could not hold your hands against the bowl. That came later when I desided to heat it in the microwave to speed it up.
Tap water, yes, I must explain that before anyone comments that I must use distilled water. First of all, distilled water is not easily available here. The only thing is so called battery water bought in auto stores. I guess I have to buy battery water next time I plan to make soap.
Second, our tap water is very clean. But of course, it is tap water, and it is coming straight out of a mountain, so it will have some mineral content. It is not hard water, but I don't know if it's soft either. No residue on the sink, neither white or brown. No fluoride or anything.
Third, I am going to add sodium citrate to neutralize the tap water. And I don't add clay or anything full of minerals, other than mica.
Oh boy, this became a long post. To sum up: Is it normal that liquid soaps take 2,5 hours to trace? And is it normal to have so heavy separation that it will hardly ever come together again? If this is the norm, I will have to get an armoured stickblender, and no less.
Now I had the courage to have a look under the towel. I'm amazed, it looks perfectly allright No separation, and it is slightly translucent. Like if it is gelling. Wow, I'm shocked! I expected another separation. Because this have been a liquid soap nightmare, so I did not have very high hopes for the trace to stay traced. But luckily I was wrong And I'm so glad I did not add detergent dish soap, as I in desperation thought of doing.
Here is some pictures taken with my ancient Iphone 3. So do not expect HD resolution
I am now making my first ever liquid soap. The paste is now in the bowl covered with a towel. And I'm not lying when I tell you I spent 2,5 hours just to get it to trace! And I'm not lying when I tell you I had so bad separation it would never come together again. Eventually it did. That was what I spent the hours on, making the soap come together again. My poor stickblender, yes, it is a miracle that it survived. I guess they make good stickblenders in Congo, where mine is made. It did heat up so badly it started to smell burnt plastic.
My plan was to make cold processed liquid soap. But it would never trace, and I got impatient, and threw the bowl into the microwave to give it some heat. After that, it started to separate. I have had separation before in hot process, so I knew it was just to stickblend it together again. But not this separation, no! I stickblended as much as I could, threw the bowl in the microwave again, handstirred with a whisk (because I had to give my stickblender some cooling. But really didn't cool). I was almost giving up. At the edge of nervous breakdown, I threw the bowl in the microwave again, and really nuked it like crazy. Not that I did not do that before, but it was more gentle. I tried to stickblend again, and I was so angry I didn't care about burning my stickblender. So I blended like crazy, and suddenly, wow! It looked like trace. Well, looked like, that is not the word. It became a thick pudding that actually hold together. I was no so sure, so I stickblended even more, just to be on the safe side. I do not dare to look under the towel, because I will get crazy if it has separated again.
I think the fault may have been that I used "full water" and 2 percent more (40% of oils). I thought full water would help it to gel at a lower temperature, and hopefully not make the paste too thick and unmanageable. I think I should have done the opposite, used as strong lye solution as possible, perhaps?
My recipe was:
31% (220 g) Flott Matfett (around 65% shea, 25% coconut and the rest rapeseed). I soaped it as palmolein.
31% ( 220 g) Olive
31% (220 g) Sunflower (high oleic)
7% (50 g) Castor
136 grams of KOH (calculated with 100% purity since I don't know the actual purity)
283 grams of tap water (but I measured 285)
(I know I probably will have some superfat (and unclear soap, which is okey) since I soaped with 100% purity of KOH. I did not dare to use 90%, since I don't know for sure. I have to mail the company to find out.)
I had no additives. But I added some mica at the end, just because I was tired of waiting for the stickblender to cool off a bit, and needed to do something. Boring color (50/50 Desert sunset and Sparkling gold), so I guess I have to adjust it a bit later. But I will see how it becomes when dilluted.
I will add sodium citrate when dilluting, and will dillute with a heavy sugar syrup (since I don't have preservatives). I don't know if I can make it work dilluting with a very strong syrup, but we will see. I don't know yet how to make an 80% sugar solution either. It will be a shower gel (since I have given up using bar soaps in the shower), and I want it to be thick and concentrated. So I hope a sugar syrup can make it both thick and very bubbly + preserve it. Have anyone used sugar syrup in liquid soap? Is it a bad idea, do you think?
I will also add fragrance oils. And it doesn't really matter what I'm going to add or not. That was not the problem.
I think I'm scared off from making liquid soap ever again. I'm so tired after struggling with this soap for ages. If this is what liquid soapmaking is, well, then. Or did I do something wrong? And what did I eventually do wrong?
I now fully understand why people are using the glycerin method, just sayin.
Yes, I forgot to tell you my temperatures. The fact is that I have noe clue. I did not measure. I melted the hard fat in the oils in the microwave, and it was just a tiny blob unmelted hard fat when I added the lye. I added the lye as soon as it was dissolved. The soap became quite hot, but not so that you could not hold your hands against the bowl. That came later when I desided to heat it in the microwave to speed it up.
Tap water, yes, I must explain that before anyone comments that I must use distilled water. First of all, distilled water is not easily available here. The only thing is so called battery water bought in auto stores. I guess I have to buy battery water next time I plan to make soap.
Second, our tap water is very clean. But of course, it is tap water, and it is coming straight out of a mountain, so it will have some mineral content. It is not hard water, but I don't know if it's soft either. No residue on the sink, neither white or brown. No fluoride or anything.
Third, I am going to add sodium citrate to neutralize the tap water. And I don't add clay or anything full of minerals, other than mica.
Oh boy, this became a long post. To sum up: Is it normal that liquid soaps take 2,5 hours to trace? And is it normal to have so heavy separation that it will hardly ever come together again? If this is the norm, I will have to get an armoured stickblender, and no less.
Now I had the courage to have a look under the towel. I'm amazed, it looks perfectly allright No separation, and it is slightly translucent. Like if it is gelling. Wow, I'm shocked! I expected another separation. Because this have been a liquid soap nightmare, so I did not have very high hopes for the trace to stay traced. But luckily I was wrong And I'm so glad I did not add detergent dish soap, as I in desperation thought of doing.
Here is some pictures taken with my ancient Iphone 3. So do not expect HD resolution
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