All those of you who use quite a lot of hard oils in your soaps: do you have your lye and oils at particular temperatures? I made a batch yesterday which was: 45 % Olive Oil, 30% Palm oil, 20% coconut oil and 5 % castor oil, using 100% cow's milk (lye concentration of 31.5% and 5% superfat).
I used frozen milk to make the lye solution, over an ice bucket, and I just heated the coconut and palm oils separately until they melted, then added them to the other oils and poured in the lye right away. I didn't check the temps. It traced almost immediately and I had to spoon a lot of it into the individual silicone molds - not the best look![Frown :( :(](data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAIAAAAAAAP///yH5BAEAAAAALAAAAAABAAEAAAIBRAA7)
So, did that happen because the cool lye effectively started solidifying the hard oils right away? I have used exactly the same technique a few times before and not had the problem, but I had used smaller percentages of both palm and coconut, so I'm thinking it's something to do with the temps and the hard oils. On the other hand, isn't it true that soaping too hot will also cause early trace? I'm so confused!
I used frozen milk to make the lye solution, over an ice bucket, and I just heated the coconut and palm oils separately until they melted, then added them to the other oils and poured in the lye right away. I didn't check the temps. It traced almost immediately and I had to spoon a lot of it into the individual silicone molds - not the best look
So, did that happen because the cool lye effectively started solidifying the hard oils right away? I have used exactly the same technique a few times before and not had the problem, but I had used smaller percentages of both palm and coconut, so I'm thinking it's something to do with the temps and the hard oils. On the other hand, isn't it true that soaping too hot will also cause early trace? I'm so confused!