MCT in KOH?

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MCT is mostly capric and caprylic acids. These fatty acids make soap that's even more stripping to the skin than the lauric acid in regular coconut oil.

MCT will saponify just fine. I personally would not ever use it for soap making, however. Some people do use it in place of or in addition to regular coconut oil. I suspect they have have the idea that the properties of the MCT will carry over into the soap made from MCT.
 
^^agreed, @DeeAnna.

Fortunately, MCT oil is nice for making solid "lotion" bars, salves or actual lotions. I use it all the time instead of the regular CO called for in the DIY B&B lotion base recipe. You can also use it as the "specialty oil or additive" when making the actual lotion.
 
MCT is mostly capric and caprylic acids. These fatty acids make soap that's even more stripping to the skin than the lauric acid in regular coconut oil.

MCT will saponify just fine. I personally would not ever use it for soap making, however. Some people do use it in place of or in addition to regular coconut oil. I suspect they have have the idea that the properties of the MCT will carry over into the soap made from MCT.
DeeAnna, do you think it might work well in a stain stick or other non-skin cleaning product?
 
DeeAnna, bear with me on this and let me know if I should repost in a separate thread. I remember reading a post of yours somewhere on the forum that hypothesized the difference in irritating/stripping nature of coconut oil versus palm kernel oil might be due to the greater amount of capric and caprylic oil in coconut oil. After much experimentation, I’ve switched to palm kernel oil for my lauric and myristic acids. While it could be placebo, I’m much happier with the results. BUT, this has made me wonder whether a high capric/caprylic soap might be good for general cleaning purposes. I have young kids and am surrounded by greasy handprints that are resistant to removal with regular household cleaners. I recently mixed up a batch of diluted liquid soap with 1% d-limonene and it worked like a dream. Separately, I’ve been playing with pine rosin in transparent soap. I’ve found that at 5% it helps with lather and transparency, but is too stripping for my hands. Failor writes about using pine rosin for clarity in liquid soap. I’ve also read about tall oil soap. Like rosin, tall oil is a source of abeitic acid. This has led me to consider making a coconut oil based liquid soap with MCT oil, pine rosin, and d-limonene for household cleaning purposes. I thought I might make a batch with and without MCT oil and see if there is any difference. Greasy handprints be gone!
 
@Benjamin -- Be sure to share your experience with the rest of us. I am very curious about this now that you've been brainstorming about it.

A tip: If you want to get my attention, use the @ sign in front of my user name like this -- @DeeAnna -- and I'll get an alert about your post. I only saw your last post in this thread by pure chance today.
 
@Benjamin -- Be sure to share your experience with the rest of us. I am very curious about this now that you've been brainstorming about it.

A tip: If you want to get my attention, use the @ sign in front of my user name like this -- @DeeAnna -- and I'll get an alert about your post. I only saw your last post in this thread by pure chance today.
@DeeAnna will do! I made a batch with 10% castor, 10% rosin, and 80% coconut today. It came out really weird—not like any liquid soap I’ve ever made. The “paste” is liquidy with a goopy center. I’m going to try another batch.
 
I heard you ringing my doorbell loud n' clear. Thanks! ;)

I've seen KOH soap behave like that too. I've also had it form a thick solid-ish paste and a syrupy liquid. I just stir it back together again.
 
I heard you ringing my doorbell loud n' clear. Thanks! ;)

I've seen KOH soap behave like that too. I've also had it form a thick solid-ish paste and a syrupy liquid. I just stir it back together again.
Fantastic! That’s exactly what is going on.
 
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