Either sodium citrate or potassium citrate. Either one works.
I use 0.5% EDTA; I have not used citrate (either kind) as a chelator. Other people do. Most use sodium citrate. Here's the info I have gleaned from their contributions: https://classicbells.com/soap/citrate.html Also see: https://classicbells.com/soap/citricAcid.html
Spice --
I wrote "... I store finished soap in covered containers or get it packaged in shrink wrap..."
To clarify, I keep young soap in cardboard boxes covered, top and bottom, with clean cotton toweling. That is the "covered container" I mentioned, and it is most definitely not air tight.
After curing, I package the soap in shrink wrap, but that happens 3 weeks or more after the soap was made. I also make a "sniffy hole" in the shrink wrap so people can smell the scent. So the shrink wrap is also not air tight.
But if I didn't need the sniffy hole for people, I probably wouldn't bother. The soap would be fine. For proof, just look at the pictures of Krista's soap in this thread that were wrapped in plastic wrap -- those bars aren't in bad shape.
I hope this clears things up.
I use 0.5% EDTA; I have not used citrate (either kind) as a chelator. Other people do. Most use sodium citrate. Here's the info I have gleaned from their contributions: https://classicbells.com/soap/citrate.html Also see: https://classicbells.com/soap/citricAcid.html
DeeAnna - are you referring to sodium citrate? How do you list this ingredient on your soap label? My recipe (with hemp at 6%) reflects Linoleic 11 and Linolenic 2. Would it be safe to say that using .01% ppo would help keep DOS away? At what phase would I add the citrate?
Sorry for all the questions but I've never used sodium citrate before.
Spice --
I wrote "... I store finished soap in covered containers or get it packaged in shrink wrap..."
To clarify, I keep young soap in cardboard boxes covered, top and bottom, with clean cotton toweling. That is the "covered container" I mentioned, and it is most definitely not air tight.
After curing, I package the soap in shrink wrap, but that happens 3 weeks or more after the soap was made. I also make a "sniffy hole" in the shrink wrap so people can smell the scent. So the shrink wrap is also not air tight.
But if I didn't need the sniffy hole for people, I probably wouldn't bother. The soap would be fine. For proof, just look at the pictures of Krista's soap in this thread that were wrapped in plastic wrap -- those bars aren't in bad shape.
I hope this clears things up.
You package your soap so it doesn't get air? Not to say its not done, its just that I have read that soap needs air to cure, so after cure it's ok?...
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