So I decided to make my first milk soap today. Mind you, this is after years of reading about it.
~ I used fresh goat milk. Froze until beyond slushy ... almost firm but still able to stir.
~ Placed container in ice water - more ice than water.
~ Slowly added lye, about 1 t. at a time, stirring well after adding each t.
~ Mixture stayed cool - almost too cool, I think. The mixture started to thicken so much I thought the lye would have a hard time dissolving.
~ Took out of ice water, continued adding lye. Mixture warmed, but not much. I put it back in the ice water periodically just to make sure it wouldn't get too warm.
~ Once all the lye was in it was about the color of butter. Figured that was pretty good. Set aside to make sure lye would totally dissolve.
Now a thought/question ... it seems to me that when adding lye to fresh milk like this, the milk fat will saponify right away, or at least somewhat quickly. I ended up with some small lumps, resembling lye dots/pellets but larger and softer in the milk ... enough that when adding to the oils, I put it through a fine strainer. I pressed it through and it resembled cooked proteins, like when you make pudding and it gets a little lumpy. Does this happen to anyone else??? (I originally put it through the strainer because of concerns the lye didn't totally dissolve at the lower temp.) Do you just stick blend it all in??? It just seemed weird to me, and that's not something I've ever read about so figured I'd ask.
~ Once I began to stick blend the lye milk into the oils (barely warm), the mix turned a soft orange.
Another question. Everything I've read pretty much agrees that turning orange is a result of the sugars in the milk caramelizing. That makes sense. But this never got to the temps that sugars would caramelize. So now I'm wondering if the orange is from something else. Any ideas? Chemical reaction instead? But if that's the case, then why would some be able to keep it from going orange?
Don't get me wrong, I'm not complaining it went orange ... after all, I'm doing HP and expect it to go all the way. But ... if I ever do CP, it'd still be nice to get it right.
~ I used fresh goat milk. Froze until beyond slushy ... almost firm but still able to stir.
~ Placed container in ice water - more ice than water.
~ Slowly added lye, about 1 t. at a time, stirring well after adding each t.
~ Mixture stayed cool - almost too cool, I think. The mixture started to thicken so much I thought the lye would have a hard time dissolving.
~ Took out of ice water, continued adding lye. Mixture warmed, but not much. I put it back in the ice water periodically just to make sure it wouldn't get too warm.
~ Once all the lye was in it was about the color of butter. Figured that was pretty good. Set aside to make sure lye would totally dissolve.
Now a thought/question ... it seems to me that when adding lye to fresh milk like this, the milk fat will saponify right away, or at least somewhat quickly. I ended up with some small lumps, resembling lye dots/pellets but larger and softer in the milk ... enough that when adding to the oils, I put it through a fine strainer. I pressed it through and it resembled cooked proteins, like when you make pudding and it gets a little lumpy. Does this happen to anyone else??? (I originally put it through the strainer because of concerns the lye didn't totally dissolve at the lower temp.) Do you just stick blend it all in??? It just seemed weird to me, and that's not something I've ever read about so figured I'd ask.
~ Once I began to stick blend the lye milk into the oils (barely warm), the mix turned a soft orange.
Another question. Everything I've read pretty much agrees that turning orange is a result of the sugars in the milk caramelizing. That makes sense. But this never got to the temps that sugars would caramelize. So now I'm wondering if the orange is from something else. Any ideas? Chemical reaction instead? But if that's the case, then why would some be able to keep it from going orange?
Don't get me wrong, I'm not complaining it went orange ... after all, I'm doing HP and expect it to go all the way. But ... if I ever do CP, it'd still be nice to get it right.