Kosmerta
Well-Known Member
6 weeks ago before I found this forum I tried making soap with oat milk as a water replacement. This was the first time I ever used a non water liquid in my soap making.
I made oat milk at home by blending 1/4 cup plain steel cut oats with 1 cup distilled water, then I allowed it to sit for 1 hour and strained out the oat mush with a cheese cloth. Aiming for a 30% lye solution I used 50% oat milk, 50% distilled water for the liquid.
Immediately the mixture became incredibly thick, even hard to stir. I added distilled water until my mixing container was full but I still could not get the consistency to thin. I ended up dumping this mixture down the sink my my mud room.
I tried again with 25% oat milk 75% distilled water and it wasnt as bad, but still very thick with white pieces floating in it. I added more distilled water trying to make it dissolve and they would not. At first I was worried the white pieces were undissolved NaOH, but using my spatula to press bits against the side of the container they just mushed. I now think there may have been some oil from the oat kernal in my oat milk which saponified in the lye solution. I decided to use this in my soap batter and it took FOREVER it seemed for the batch to hardened with the extra water added.
The soap seems fine now but I am wondering if the lumpy oat milk solution was normal. I would like to try this recipe again with the original 50/50 oat milk solution and I am wondering if anyone else has experience of this happening, and how to avoid it. If it is unavoidable. Would using the thickened lye solution be harmful to the soap?
(Bonus note, the lye dumped down the sink must have cleared our mainline because the next day all the drains in the house drained faster lol)
I made oat milk at home by blending 1/4 cup plain steel cut oats with 1 cup distilled water, then I allowed it to sit for 1 hour and strained out the oat mush with a cheese cloth. Aiming for a 30% lye solution I used 50% oat milk, 50% distilled water for the liquid.
Immediately the mixture became incredibly thick, even hard to stir. I added distilled water until my mixing container was full but I still could not get the consistency to thin. I ended up dumping this mixture down the sink my my mud room.
I tried again with 25% oat milk 75% distilled water and it wasnt as bad, but still very thick with white pieces floating in it. I added more distilled water trying to make it dissolve and they would not. At first I was worried the white pieces were undissolved NaOH, but using my spatula to press bits against the side of the container they just mushed. I now think there may have been some oil from the oat kernal in my oat milk which saponified in the lye solution. I decided to use this in my soap batter and it took FOREVER it seemed for the batch to hardened with the extra water added.
The soap seems fine now but I am wondering if the lumpy oat milk solution was normal. I would like to try this recipe again with the original 50/50 oat milk solution and I am wondering if anyone else has experience of this happening, and how to avoid it. If it is unavoidable. Would using the thickened lye solution be harmful to the soap?
(Bonus note, the lye dumped down the sink must have cleared our mainline because the next day all the drains in the house drained faster lol)