From an editing perspective they also call out 2 tsp of oat flour in the ingredients list but in step 5 they talk about adding almond flour. Is confuse.Are Susan and Sarah members of this forum? It's pretty well written and good to get that history. A soap-making editor would have caught the unfortunate directions to mix lye liquid in a glass jar and to cure for 2 weeks. I did like the tip on combining lavender and rosemary essential oils. I like coconut oil but 41% is high even for me.
Good point. Lye burns on skin are painful but they heal. In contrast, you can go blind only once.the article doesn't call out wearing eye protection. They talk about mask and gloves but not safety goggles.
Stupid question from an extra-galactic guest who is only used to metric units: Is it obvious to weigh the oz, or could someone come up with the brilliant idea to measure oils and/or water by volumetric ounces?
I probably wasn't disparaging enough. Our moms teach us “We don't talk to them. They use the same unit with different meanings depending on what they measure.”I wouldn't call this a stupid question!
Sharp eye!Up-Date Their Soap Was Semi-Jelled
Me too! Just had this discussion with one of my "old guy" engineers who refuses to use metric - even though all of our suppliers, manufacturing, and prints are in metric. Nope, he converts it to inches and then comes ask me questions fully knowing that all the tools I use for production print measurements are in metric. Get.on.board. already.I'm gritting my teeth to contain my rant on our measuring system.
My observation / experience and practice is that if it specifies ounces then I weigh the solid stuff and I measure the liquid stuff by volume. Unless there are bright glowing instructions to not do it that way. However most recipes in the US don't assume the household has a scale though so you get volumetric measurements by the "cup" most commonly, or by teaspoons and tablespoons for smaller measurements. These are the same for liquids and solids.I asked because I have no idea how the ambiguity of “ounce” is handled in practice of US households. We have measuring cups too, and they have multiple graduations for grams of flour, sugar, salt, oil etc. (i. e. implicit assumptions on density), but that's about it with “mixing up weight and volume measurement”.
It's a pity they also say you can use the soap in a week or two or even sooner, after making it. They obviously don't cure any further than 2 weeks.
This is a good point, and one that I didn't consider. I know from experience that one does not often get final approval of a publication's final edit or article.Its hard to know how many items the magazine edited from the instructions.
I asked because I have no idea how the ambiguity of “ounce” is handled in practice of US households. We have measuring cups too, and they have multiple graduations for grams of flour, sugar, salt, oil etc. (i. e. implicit assumptions on density), but that's about it with “mixing up weight and volume measurement”.
But that is so bizarre! For small things it might not be too bad, but for something like broccoli florets, volume measurements could vary so much based on the size of the florets and how they lay in the container/how much empty space there is.
My family used kitchen scales. Perhaps it's a generational thing? Not just my immediate family, but aunts, grans, cousins, etc. In fact, it was quite common that the same kitchen scale was used to weigh babies. So in my recollection, they used to be pretty common. But maybe it was just where I came from and the people I knew and the era in which I grew up.This is a good point, and one that I didn't consider. I know from experience that one does not often get final approval of a publication's final edit or article.
RO: I'd say we handle our ounces and measuring containers much the same way as you handle yours. However, you are right in that most US households do not have or use a kitchen scale. My Mimi and Grandma both had scales, but I've never seen such in any other US home. Hence the so many recipes that say "1 head of broccoli" (@The Efficacious Gentleman) or "1 pound of beef", with the thought being that most heads of broccoli are similar in weight and that meat is sold by the pound. Of course, I usually have to push through my own angst of "Well, what size was the head of broccoli that they used?!", etc. It's funny though that in the US I'd say we do depend on manufacturers doing the weighing for us, but use volume measurements in our cooking.
Yes, good point @earlene ! That our cooking is a mixture of both is what I was trying so miserably to convey with my "recipe" statement. Ugh!In some cases it is a mixture of both, but not mutually exclusive, at least IME.
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