I was just keen to ask you about your recipe for GMS... Could I leave out Castor Oil and just have 95% oils? Or should I look at replacing with something/increase one of the other oils? Sweet Almond Oil maybe?
You could leave it out, but you would need to adjust the other oils to bring it up to 100% and of course, run it through SoapCalc. You could leave it out, but why would you? IMHO, Castor Oil in an integral part of soap making and the major two-punch of moisturizer and oodles of lather, makes it well worth the 5%. Quite frankly, I'm not experienced enough to tell you if there is any other oil or butter that brings as much to the soap party at 5% that Castor Oil does.
Sweet Almond Oil is nice...it was one of the oils I tried before I found Cocoa and Shea Butters and I used it at 10%. The nice about soap making, is that you can experiment with different oils/butters and even if it's not exactly what you want, you still have soap.
One thing I didn't mention above was my Lye Concentration. It was late Spring when I started soaping...outside temps were high 60sF and my garage about 10 degrees warmer; I mention this because while I soap in the house, I put my soap in the garage to saponify and cure. I used a 30% Lye Concentration and after covering my mold with a bit of plastic wrap, I set my soap on a towel with another towel over it and all way well in my world. Even when the temps climbed into the 90sF outside, 100+ in the garage, all was still well...until I made my first batch of GMS. It was not pretty. It was too hot in the garage and I ended up with soap that I had to toss.
My next GMS batches turned out beautifully. 1) In addition to freezing my goat milk, I used an ice bath with some salt and added the lye in small amounts, making sure I kept the temperature of the solution under 75F. It takes about 20 to 30 minutes to mix your solution, but the results are worth it and you can be doing other things as you wait for it to cool back down before adding each bit. 2) I make sure my oils/butter is under 80F before I had my GM Lye Solution. It's probably just my imagination, but I seem to get a much creamier bar of soap (I don't color my GMS) when it's that cool. 3) I refrigerated my soap; uncovered. Again, probably just my imagination, but I seem to get a much creamier and harder bar of soap buy allowing any heat to escape freely. It should be noted, that my doing this, I am not gelling my GMS, but that's okay. I then remove the soap after 24 hours, unmold it and then cover lightly with a clean cotton towel before cutting at room temp.
It's winter here in Oregon...much cooler temps and lots of rain and damp so I've had to make some adjustments. One was to increase my Lye Concentration to 35% as I was having to leave my soaps in the molds for an extra couple of days and then wait another couple of days before trying to cut. While the colder temps mean I don't have to refrigerate my GMS (the entire garage is one big refrigerator), my regular soap isn't gelling properly. My last batch of Chocolate Espresso is going to be for home use only...while the partial gel left some cool designs in the 'coffee' portion of the soap, I got massive glycerin rivers because of the TD I used in the 'whip cream' portion and it doesn't look 'cool' at all...it just looks dirty. Totally my fault as I forgot to turn on the oven to do an 'oven process'.