Hello all,
I'm a beginner soaper with approximately 6 months experience and just have to say right off the bat, I'm so thankful that this forum exists! I've learned so much from everyone here already and can't wait to continue my journey.
I started my soaping journey in October 2023 and have quickly become addicted. The combination of art and science is intoxicating. While I have no plans of starting a soap empire or ever making a living from selling soap, I would love to someday have a little local soap business to sell some bars at local farmers markets and craft shows, maybe have a few stands and local coffee shops, etc. If I could eventually cover the cost of supplies to keep creating and learning, I would be thrilled.
To that end, I've been practicing and practicing and practicing and having a ball. However, I just realized that I made a terrible rookie mistake. I was gifted a bottle of organic castor oil by a soapy friend that didn't have an expiration date on the label. What she thought was "just a couple of months old" turned out to be *the horror!* multiple (as in, probably 5+ years) old....
How did I discover this? Well, the very first batches of soap I made turned out well (for first attempts at least) and cured nicely. We used the bars at home and I gave some to close friends and family (all know that I am a beginner and still learning) to rave reviews. Let's hope they were genuine and not just being nice. No issues. All is well.
Fast forward about 6 months, I've been making lots of soap and trying out different recipes, techniques, etc. Then it happens... I notice the first tiny orange spot on one of my curing bars that's 3 weeks into cure. Never having had this issue before, I discover the wonderful/insanely frustrating rabbit hole of DOS. And then another spot appears. And another. And another.
The spots are tiny, 2-3mm diameter at most and not every bar from the batch has them. I typically make batches with 2# oils in a 10 inch Brambleberry mold that makes 10 bars. Some batches, only 1-2 bars out of 10 have a spot. Other batches, almost every bar has 1 spot. These are batches that have been curing for about 3 weeks and the spots seem to be appearing more frequently over the last couple of days (I may or may not be obsessively checking them daily).
I start researching like crazy and having a major crisis of confidence. I keep detailed notes of all my batches and realize that some spotty recipes have canola oil, some don't. Probably not the culprit. I do live in the Midwest in a high humidity area, but some batches are fine while others are not... the bars all cure on plastic cafeteria trays lined up on a metal rack with space between each bar and a dehumidifier running (new addition as of a week ago after I discovered DOS). They do not contact the metal surface.
I start scrutinizing the expiration dates of all of my oils (mostly purchased in bulk from WSP, olive oil from Sam's club) and additives (all from Brambleberry). And then it dawns on me. Before all of my bulk oils arrived, I used a "new" bottle of organic castor oil from my soapy friend and every single one of the batches that I made with that oil has gotten spots... Each 2# recipe contains only about 1-1.6 oz castor oil. After a little questioning (without revealing why I was asking), turns out that new bottle wasn't remotely new after all. It was multiple years old.
Here's where I need some encouragement and advice. It has been devastating to find each orange spot. These bars were destined for family and friends and while I personally don't mind using a bar with a single spot, I would feel awful giving these away if they were going to get all spotty sooner or later. I made multiple 2# batches with this castor oil and there is so much soap that we can't possibly use it all ourselves.
What would the experienced soapers in the house do (aside from not use old oil and not get DOS in the first place)? Would you give the bars away after telling folks about the issue and letting them decide if they want to use it? Trash them? I know there are methods to "salt out" impurities and then rebatch but I'm honestly not equipped to do that and don't feel comfortable with that technique just yet.
Sigh. Luckily regardless of the outcome, I can count this as a learning experience. If all the bars turn spotty and gross, it will be a major heartache but I guess lessons learned the hard way usually stick.
I'm a beginner soaper with approximately 6 months experience and just have to say right off the bat, I'm so thankful that this forum exists! I've learned so much from everyone here already and can't wait to continue my journey.
I started my soaping journey in October 2023 and have quickly become addicted. The combination of art and science is intoxicating. While I have no plans of starting a soap empire or ever making a living from selling soap, I would love to someday have a little local soap business to sell some bars at local farmers markets and craft shows, maybe have a few stands and local coffee shops, etc. If I could eventually cover the cost of supplies to keep creating and learning, I would be thrilled.
To that end, I've been practicing and practicing and practicing and having a ball. However, I just realized that I made a terrible rookie mistake. I was gifted a bottle of organic castor oil by a soapy friend that didn't have an expiration date on the label. What she thought was "just a couple of months old" turned out to be *the horror!* multiple (as in, probably 5+ years) old....
How did I discover this? Well, the very first batches of soap I made turned out well (for first attempts at least) and cured nicely. We used the bars at home and I gave some to close friends and family (all know that I am a beginner and still learning) to rave reviews. Let's hope they were genuine and not just being nice. No issues. All is well.
Fast forward about 6 months, I've been making lots of soap and trying out different recipes, techniques, etc. Then it happens... I notice the first tiny orange spot on one of my curing bars that's 3 weeks into cure. Never having had this issue before, I discover the wonderful/insanely frustrating rabbit hole of DOS. And then another spot appears. And another. And another.
The spots are tiny, 2-3mm diameter at most and not every bar from the batch has them. I typically make batches with 2# oils in a 10 inch Brambleberry mold that makes 10 bars. Some batches, only 1-2 bars out of 10 have a spot. Other batches, almost every bar has 1 spot. These are batches that have been curing for about 3 weeks and the spots seem to be appearing more frequently over the last couple of days (I may or may not be obsessively checking them daily).
I start researching like crazy and having a major crisis of confidence. I keep detailed notes of all my batches and realize that some spotty recipes have canola oil, some don't. Probably not the culprit. I do live in the Midwest in a high humidity area, but some batches are fine while others are not... the bars all cure on plastic cafeteria trays lined up on a metal rack with space between each bar and a dehumidifier running (new addition as of a week ago after I discovered DOS). They do not contact the metal surface.
I start scrutinizing the expiration dates of all of my oils (mostly purchased in bulk from WSP, olive oil from Sam's club) and additives (all from Brambleberry). And then it dawns on me. Before all of my bulk oils arrived, I used a "new" bottle of organic castor oil from my soapy friend and every single one of the batches that I made with that oil has gotten spots... Each 2# recipe contains only about 1-1.6 oz castor oil. After a little questioning (without revealing why I was asking), turns out that new bottle wasn't remotely new after all. It was multiple years old.
Here's where I need some encouragement and advice. It has been devastating to find each orange spot. These bars were destined for family and friends and while I personally don't mind using a bar with a single spot, I would feel awful giving these away if they were going to get all spotty sooner or later. I made multiple 2# batches with this castor oil and there is so much soap that we can't possibly use it all ourselves.
What would the experienced soapers in the house do (aside from not use old oil and not get DOS in the first place)? Would you give the bars away after telling folks about the issue and letting them decide if they want to use it? Trash them? I know there are methods to "salt out" impurities and then rebatch but I'm honestly not equipped to do that and don't feel comfortable with that technique just yet.
Sigh. Luckily regardless of the outcome, I can count this as a learning experience. If all the bars turn spotty and gross, it will be a major heartache but I guess lessons learned the hard way usually stick.