fillycate
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Apr 3, 2009
- Messages
- 61
- Reaction score
- 42
OK, so I made my first batch. It was a goatmilk, honey, oatmeal recipe. I admit, I didn't follow the recipe perfectly. First, I didn't have enough of the kind of animal fat it called for, so I used what I had on hand until it was enough (beef, goat, chicken--is chicken OK?) Also, it called for liquid goat milk, and I had frozen cubes of goat milk.
I don't think the mixture ever got hot, really. It certainly didn't turn orange or anything like that. But it seemed to gel up just fine. The recipe said to use a hand mixer for quite a long time, so it got lots of blending time.
When I went to cut it, there was a fair amount of oil that had seeped out on all sides, and I could see pockets of it where bits of oatmeal were. I just wiped them and cut. The consistency seemed pretty soap-like, so I was all excited that I had succeeded and I just needed to wait.
But as time passed, tiny white crystals began forming on the outside, especially on the top. When I happened to touch them with my skin, my skin tingled, which I figured meant they were crystals of lye.
So, the problem could be several different things. I was wondering if anyone knew the cause of lye crystals on the bars and if the bars can be salvaged or if I should just try to use them to make buckskin leather.
I don't think the mixture ever got hot, really. It certainly didn't turn orange or anything like that. But it seemed to gel up just fine. The recipe said to use a hand mixer for quite a long time, so it got lots of blending time.
When I went to cut it, there was a fair amount of oil that had seeped out on all sides, and I could see pockets of it where bits of oatmeal were. I just wiped them and cut. The consistency seemed pretty soap-like, so I was all excited that I had succeeded and I just needed to wait.
But as time passed, tiny white crystals began forming on the outside, especially on the top. When I happened to touch them with my skin, my skin tingled, which I figured meant they were crystals of lye.
So, the problem could be several different things. I was wondering if anyone knew the cause of lye crystals on the bars and if the bars can be salvaged or if I should just try to use them to make buckskin leather.