I'm just curious, as I have my first CP all wrapped up in towels as we speak, are you wanting to reach gel, or you really don't care and are more interested in unmolding?
Thanks for asking and good luck with your soap!
I started this thread mainly because of the statement that I read on on another thread that said something like gelled soap will not get soda ash (or something like that?)
I had to start from the beginning and explain that you normally cannot get gelled soap (w/out external help) with a lack of water such as a 50/50 ratio. It may or may not gel but what ever it does it will do quickly which is not enough time to achieve the color phases or whatever these people preach about. Length of time in the gel phase is actually controlled by water. Heat is controlled by the oils and butters and amount of lye that you use.
But to get to gel phase water must be added to more then a 50/50 lye solution. As a consequence to that, that is when soda ash can develop and can also be caused by a lack of blending or emulsifying the batter. In soap batter, the very small pools of water that is not blended will gravitate to the sides and to the corners simply because the water has less of a density then the batter and will be pushed outside. That is where the soda ash will occur if it does at all.
So, in short ~ bringing the batter to gel with more water can cause soda ash under the right conditions and not the opposite.
And no, I really don't care about gel phase. If I get it I get it if I don't then I don't. I am going to try and do it more though because I believe when the gelling stage is increased then there is less of a chance for the soap to crack while using. I believe a short lived, too hot of a gel phase will cause this. However, on the other hand, putting it in the freezer to prevent gel phase will provide a strong bar also. Its either at one end of the extreme or the other that is good.
Oh yeah, concerning unmolding - I do like the fact of unmolding quicker but the only reason I brought that up was that the article I read stated that gelled soaps unmold quicker. I am simply not buying that reasoning simply because gelling takes water. The more water I add the longer it takes to unmold. I have unmolded Castile soap in 8 hours. I would have not done that if I had used more water to gel.
But however, don't get me wrong. Amount of water is not the only thing that determines when to unmold. It is the amount of hard butters or other additives that you add that can determine that also. I am just saying water because that will always remain constant.
When it concerns additives and stuff like that..I don't think I am ready for that yet because I do not know enough.
What did you put in your soap. What kind of fragrance? I bet it turned out good! If it feels sticky at all when you go and unmold ~ LEAVE IT and don't take it out till it feels like it is not sticky anymore. Also, you may already know, putting it in the freezer for a little while before unmolding can help but don't do it if its sticky because it will be sticky frozen soap when you get it out.
Also, I eventually started using heating pads to wrap my soap in. You know the kind for your back that you lay on. Those work out really well.