I would not suggest colloidal oatmeal for a shampoo. While it is tiny pieces, it is still oatmeal pieces. I, too, would use the oat milk method.
Yeah...doesn't sound practical to have oatmeal pieces in shampoo, does it? That's what I thought, but I wanted to make sure.
I did a google search and the only shampoo bar that actually used oatmeal in it was a dog shampoo.
I don't know how I would soak the oatmeal in frozen goat milk that is to be added to lye.... I suppose I could soak the oatmeal in GM, remove the OM and then freeze the GM. Would this then be called, "oatmeal-infused GM?
Also, a general bar for hair and body is likely to be bad at one or the other - or both! For my short hair I can use a body bar on my hair, but for people with longer hair it would be terrible.
A shampoo bar is not really a body bar. You can use it as such, but then it is still a shampoo bar that just happens to be used as a body bar.
I would infuse first and freeze after, for ease. But as to what to call it - just tell your friend that you infused it when you give it to her. No matter what you 'call' it, you'll still talk to her about it when she gets it (explaining about the acid rinse, for example) so you can just tell her
What about just using oat milk? You could do oat and goat together if you're really wanting to use GM? You'd save yourself a step by using oats that have already been milked
In my experience, the soothing benefit of the oats comes from using colloidal oats (I grind my own). I'm not sure you'd want a soothing ingredient in a shampoo bar, or the little oaty bits. Which brings us full circle to just using oat milk.
I find a lot of times people are... placated/comforted/placebo effect(ed) by knowing that their requested ingredient is in the soap, whether or not it retains it's therapeutic/herbal/aroma properties after saponification.
(Actually now that I think about it, "Oat & Goat" is a great name for a soap! I make a lot of beer soaps... a "Goaty Oaty Stout Soap might be next on my to-do list!)
What about just using oat milk? You could do oat and goat together if you're really wanting to use GM? You'd save yourself a step by using oats that have already been milked
In my experience, the soothing benefit of the oats comes from using colloidal oats (I grind my own). I'm not sure you'd want a soothing ingredient in a shampoo bar, or the little oaty bits. Which brings us full circle to just using oat milk.
I find a lot of times people are... placated/comforted/placebo effect(ed) by knowing that their requested ingredient is in the soap, whether or not it retains it's therapeutic/herbal/aroma properties after saponification.
(Actually now that I think about it, "Oat & Goat" is a great name for a soap! I make a lot of beer soaps... a "Goaty Oaty Stout Soap might be next on my to-do list!)
I am curious what you use for grinding your oats, and if a grain mill will grind as fine as colloidal oats. Colloidal oats practically dissolve they are so fine. I know my very expensive burr grinder that grinds coffee to a powder will still not grind oats as fine.What about just using oat milk? You could do oat and goat together if you're really wanting to use GM? You'd save yourself a step by using oats that have already been milked
In my experience, the soothing benefit of the oats comes from using colloidal oats (I grind my own). I'm not sure you'd want a soothing ingredient in a shampoo bar, or the little oaty bits. Which brings us full circle to just using oat milk.
I find a lot of times people are... placated/comforted/placebo effect(ed) by knowing that their requested ingredient is in the soap, whether or not it retains it's therapeutic/herbal/aroma properties after saponification.
(Actually now that I think about it, "Oat & Goat" is a great name for a soap! I make a lot of beer soaps... a "Goaty Oaty Stout Soap might be next on my to-do list!)
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