Abeltran
Member
- Joined
- Jul 9, 2017
- Messages
- 14
- Reaction score
- 36
Hi all!
I'm new to this forum so please forgive me if I don't know what I'm doing quite yet! I've been lurking on this site for quite some time now for general answers to questions, so today I figured I'd sign up and join in the convo!
I've been making cold process soaps for a few months now and have quickly become a soap-making addict! However, I'm having some problems I'm hoping others can help me with...
I live in hot, humid Florida, and it seems that pretty much every batch of CP soap I make lately "sweats". The sweating is more prevalent in recipes where I use chilled tea in place of distilled water. I'm not sure why the soaps made with tea sweat more, but they do. What I mean by "sweating" is that either still in the mold, or just unmolded, the soaps will get beads of amber-colored liquid all over them; some bars more than others, even though they're from the same batch! I figured this was due to the humid climate where I live, and have learned to remedy the problem. When the soaps sweat/bead-up, I take a paper towel and try to absorb up as much as I can. Then I'll place the soaps on a curing rack and put a fan on them to help dry them up more. This has worked well for me, as whatever excess moisture I didn't absorb with the paper towel gets reabsorbed back into the soap quickly, and then I just continue to cure as normal.
But here's where my problem is... My soaps have fully cured now, but the soaps that got the worst sweating in the beginning have cured with a dry, hard, crusty-looking top! The bottoms and sides look fine (and they're cured on a rack where air reaches all sides), it's just the tops that have formed a dry, hard crust, where the soap isn't as vibrant in its natural color as the sides and bottoms are.
I'm wondering why this has happened and how I can fix them? Since this problem is happening more so with the soaps made with tea, is it possible I'm using too much liquid in the recipe, or that the tea is not saponifying fully?? I use 10.50 oz of liquid with all my recipes, which have 32oz of base oils. I don't want to cut the tops off, as these are round soaps poured in a round-cavity mold, and have pretty textured tops I worked hard to make! I'm wondering if I should try giving the soaps a bath to see if that helps, or possibly steaming the tops of the soaps??? I just don't know though, and am stumped as to why only the soaps that had "sweating" issues cured with this problem. If anyone could offer any insight or advice, it would be so appreciated! Also, if anyone knows how I can avoid or prevent the sweating from happening in the first place, I would be so grateful! Thank you for reading and offering your wisdom!
I'm new to this forum so please forgive me if I don't know what I'm doing quite yet! I've been lurking on this site for quite some time now for general answers to questions, so today I figured I'd sign up and join in the convo!
I've been making cold process soaps for a few months now and have quickly become a soap-making addict! However, I'm having some problems I'm hoping others can help me with...
I live in hot, humid Florida, and it seems that pretty much every batch of CP soap I make lately "sweats". The sweating is more prevalent in recipes where I use chilled tea in place of distilled water. I'm not sure why the soaps made with tea sweat more, but they do. What I mean by "sweating" is that either still in the mold, or just unmolded, the soaps will get beads of amber-colored liquid all over them; some bars more than others, even though they're from the same batch! I figured this was due to the humid climate where I live, and have learned to remedy the problem. When the soaps sweat/bead-up, I take a paper towel and try to absorb up as much as I can. Then I'll place the soaps on a curing rack and put a fan on them to help dry them up more. This has worked well for me, as whatever excess moisture I didn't absorb with the paper towel gets reabsorbed back into the soap quickly, and then I just continue to cure as normal.
But here's where my problem is... My soaps have fully cured now, but the soaps that got the worst sweating in the beginning have cured with a dry, hard, crusty-looking top! The bottoms and sides look fine (and they're cured on a rack where air reaches all sides), it's just the tops that have formed a dry, hard crust, where the soap isn't as vibrant in its natural color as the sides and bottoms are.
I'm wondering why this has happened and how I can fix them? Since this problem is happening more so with the soaps made with tea, is it possible I'm using too much liquid in the recipe, or that the tea is not saponifying fully?? I use 10.50 oz of liquid with all my recipes, which have 32oz of base oils. I don't want to cut the tops off, as these are round soaps poured in a round-cavity mold, and have pretty textured tops I worked hard to make! I'm wondering if I should try giving the soaps a bath to see if that helps, or possibly steaming the tops of the soaps??? I just don't know though, and am stumped as to why only the soaps that had "sweating" issues cured with this problem. If anyone could offer any insight or advice, it would be so appreciated! Also, if anyone knows how I can avoid or prevent the sweating from happening in the first place, I would be so grateful! Thank you for reading and offering your wisdom!