I'm buying from a local hardware store.. Always have bough the same
I have just made a goat milk soap. I added the lye to the frozen milk and noticed it turning brown and didn’t want it to burn so I quickly added it to the oils and that’s when I noticed chunks of lye still in the bottom of the container. I’m sure some of the chunks would have gone into my soap. I stick blended until it traced and poured it. I put it in the fridge after so it wouldn’t gel.
Will the saponification process dissolve the grains of Sodium Hydroxide? Or will I have to throw the lot away?
I'm buying from a local hardware store.. Always have bough the same
Thanks ashmita... I shall look into their website..Hi Isha,
Assuming you are from India, I suggest you buy from Pioneer Chemicals in Delhi. They ship all across India so that wouldn't be a problem.
I have a question regarding this, maybe shunt can help me? I just made a small batch, and I realized I had a layer of thick lye stuck to the bottom of my container when I went to pour in my oils. My lye is from wholes sale supplies and about 6 month old. I do not think the lye was the problem. I probably did not mix it enough .... is in flakes, and usually takes a little longer than the pearls.
Since I had pour the lye in the oils, I went ahead and finished my batch. I disregarded the thick bottom later that was in the lye container. I am certain that there are no pieces of lye on the soap. Is just probably going to be a huge superfat.
It performed well in terms of trace and stuff, and looks so pretty. But I am wondering if I should throw it away.
No, you still have the mystery of how much lye is where. Also, I would not make any soap with a superfat into a laundry soap.
Perhaps you mean KOH?I have never bough NAOH, never made liquid soap either.
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