Kudos to the OP and other experimenters who have added another way to deal with speedy FO's. Good thinking
Old Hippie: There are more reactions possible with a lye solution than saponification.. which *must* include fatty acids.
Essential oils and fragrance oils do not contain fatty acids. So they do not saponify or need to be counted in superfat calcs.
They may react in other ways with the lye solution, as in losing or morphing scent, changing color, etc-- as do things like oatmeal, vegetable purees, even bentonite (all of which thicken the raw soap but don't saponify or superfat). Many essential and fragrance oils contain alcohol type scent chemicals which speed trace (eugenol in clove eo, and in many floral fo's, for example) but still don't affect fat level, not being fats.
Fragrance oils contain diluents that allow us to use them at roughly the same levels across soap formulas, but are not oils in the same way that olive or almond are.. they are not water soluble, to be sure, but aren't oils in the vegetable oil sense, not having fatty acids. Suppliers don't add vegetable oils instead of more stable diluents like DPG since they don't want their product to go off as fast as vegetable oils do. (This is not to say that some random seller on etsy or ebay or amazon might not cut their oils that way.. there, buyer beware.. but it's not industry practice.)
If you are truly curious about what is in fragrance oils, you can get a sense of them by reading the EU allergen reports many/most fo sellers supply; you'll see DPG, or often Benzyl benzoate, in high %, and those are the diluents. Youwill not find vegetable oils though.
Trade secret/proprietary ingredients regulations are not for hiding things that might be allergens (as vegetable oils could be), but for preserving technical advantages in production method, or scent formulations.. they're not out to fool you, or hide bad things--just to keep their scent ideas to themselves, the way you are not compelled to list who you get your eo or fo from on your product labels, and the exact eo or fo you have bought.
Old Hippie: There are more reactions possible with a lye solution than saponification.. which *must* include fatty acids.
Essential oils and fragrance oils do not contain fatty acids. So they do not saponify or need to be counted in superfat calcs.
They may react in other ways with the lye solution, as in losing or morphing scent, changing color, etc-- as do things like oatmeal, vegetable purees, even bentonite (all of which thicken the raw soap but don't saponify or superfat). Many essential and fragrance oils contain alcohol type scent chemicals which speed trace (eugenol in clove eo, and in many floral fo's, for example) but still don't affect fat level, not being fats.
Fragrance oils contain diluents that allow us to use them at roughly the same levels across soap formulas, but are not oils in the same way that olive or almond are.. they are not water soluble, to be sure, but aren't oils in the vegetable oil sense, not having fatty acids. Suppliers don't add vegetable oils instead of more stable diluents like DPG since they don't want their product to go off as fast as vegetable oils do. (This is not to say that some random seller on etsy or ebay or amazon might not cut their oils that way.. there, buyer beware.. but it's not industry practice.)
If you are truly curious about what is in fragrance oils, you can get a sense of them by reading the EU allergen reports many/most fo sellers supply; you'll see DPG, or often Benzyl benzoate, in high %, and those are the diluents. Youwill not find vegetable oils though.
Trade secret/proprietary ingredients regulations are not for hiding things that might be allergens (as vegetable oils could be), but for preserving technical advantages in production method, or scent formulations.. they're not out to fool you, or hide bad things--just to keep their scent ideas to themselves, the way you are not compelled to list who you get your eo or fo from on your product labels, and the exact eo or fo you have bought.