Some things don't fit together here.
I've tried to reconstruct where you got that 151.14 g KOH from. It seems like the amount for 500 g coconut oil, saponified at 1% SF with KOH of some 84% purity. These numbers are reasonable
if and only if you're using pure coconut, but change (usually decrease) if you use other oils.
You've written 153 g (good thing that you're bookkeeping everything, otherwise we'd be at a loss here!), so with your oil blend, you have excess lye (
-27% SF instead of +1%), and super high pH, stripping/irritant when used as soap, and (reasonably) clear soap paste after cooking/dilution – but then why isn't the soap zappy as hell too? Are you sure you have conducted the
zap test and know what to expect from a positive zap?
I'm with
@Zany_in_CO that the most sensible remedy is adding more oils.
Be sure that you don't “waste” too much soap by dilution/discarding and on the walls of your containers, or at least estimate how much you have lost already (introducing even more uncertainties definitely won't help). Combine all of your paste and wash test/pH sample, dilute to a honey-like viscosity.
The following is based on the assumptions that you have 100% recovery and 85% pure KOH, and aiming for 1% SF (but you'll have to adjust with your actual numbers): your oils need 102.02 g of KOH (pure), but you added 130.05 KOH (85% of 153 g), so 28 g are still to be eaten up. That's some 150 g of additional liquid oils. If you're aiming at clear LS, I'd recommend not to replicate the original oil blend, but just use olive and castor for this step:
Gently, but thoroughly stir in 100 g of olive oil into the soap honey, and let it sit for a day or two, covered, with occasional stirring if needed (CP liquid soap process). You might conduct a zap test when there doesn't seem to happen anything more, all the oil and cloudiness gone – my guess is that it is still slightly zappy. Then add 50 g of castor oil (and water if it is too thick to stir) and do the same again. Now you're nominally close to 0% SF, and you might be lye-neutral or not; if not, add a bit more castor oil.
An advantage is that you're lowering the PO content, which helps with clarity. PO is a viable oil to make LS from, but not so much if you aim for full clarity. I've once made a LS with 20% PO, and I was happy how clear it was nonetheless, but a day later it has turned murky … just as an anecdote. If you're planning to dilute your soap paste (for use in foamers and/or thickening with salt or thickening agents), this will become less troublesome, but still PO isn't first choice for LS. If you aim for cheap filler oils, use whatever liquid oil is easily available for you.
You notice I haven't given numbers for water – too many unknowns for me from a distance, and in the end you'll have to find the consistency you like.
Another “hate” (not really
) is PKO. There is just no reason to use both coconut oil and PKO in one recipe. They're too similar to detect a difference. Go either 25% CO or 25% PKO next time, unless of course you have an irrational affection to the act of weighing out ingredients.
Finally, an annotation to your tools: I've noticed that you are using glassware. Even lab-grade borosilicate glass isn't indefinitely stable against lye. Okay for prototyping/a small test batch every now and then, but there are reasons to go for PP plastic whenever posible with soaping dishes. (And if it's only that, in case of the impossible, you will prefer wiping up lye spill over wiping up lye spill WITH GLASS SHARDS in it)