El_Granado_Loco
Well-Known Member
I think mine is supposed to be food grade, I find it in the supermarket next to oo, sunflower, corn, sesame oil. But I wouldn't use it in cooking, I don't know anybody personally who does...
Interesting info about pomace...I didn't know it was solvent extracted. I've never used it, and now that I know this, I probably won't ever. I started making soap to get away from solvents, detergents, etc.
Not knocking those who do use it however..to each his/her own I always say
I use soapers choice pomace, I'm wondering if its a brand thing.
Good stuff SoaPetite ... the document states that the remaining solvent should be under 150 PPM which means lower than 0.015%. I actually measured how much soap I use when shaving, that should be a "high side" estimate of what is actually used from a hard well-cured bar soap. That was around a gram (I need to keep measuring to get an average but let's use that for a sec). If the maximum allowable traces of Hexane are still available in the soap after it cures for 4-6 months in open air, that means you have 0.00015g of hexane on your hands. That's 0.15 mg.
You probably were exposed to way more than that the last time you fueled your car.
110C is really hot to soap, 110F is even on the warmer side of what I've done. I JUST did one last night where both were at room temp (68 degrees F) and I started getting trace in less than 2 mins.
Various governments restrict the sale of raw dairy and cheeses too ... that an EU government restricts sale of something is not going to scare me. The term solvents also has a bit of a FUD factor (fear, uncertainty, doubt). Water is the most common and most universal solvent in the world, does that make it bad?
The certificate of analysis that I received (where someone who was qualified to do the analysis actually measured) states 100% OO, as does the MSDS. If you say there are measurable amounts of solvent then I'd like to see proof, otherwise it's just FUD scaring people away from something and we're about information here, not more hippie new-age, fear the man stuff.
Words like "significant" and "very lax" are rhetoric. Surely you know that. You have an opinion to which you are entitled but you've not convinced me of anything other than that you have a personal issue with it. Bringing in an argument about something not even related (BPA) and that which behaves a different way in the body is a strawman fallacy.There is absolutely going to be significant trace if solvent is used - and labeling laws are very lax about all of these chemicals of concern quite deliberately.
Sure, but more FUD. Culturing people's sponges, countertops, dishtowels, even their skin would be even more disgusting. Pouring a glass of milk into a glass which has been on the shelf for a day is very likely a scarier proposition.Considering all the things you can culture back out of raw milk
No, actually, it's standard scientific language. It acknowledges that one may never be 100% certain of anything (quantum physics), and supercedes 'my opinion', 'case law', and most people's 'my opinion' in rigor.Words like "significant" and "very lax" are rhetoric.
You say that as if I care. The truth exists whether you approve of it or not. There is certainly a large body of information about the subject if you are interested in looking at it, and my comments certainly represent the prevailing view.You've not convinced me of anything other than that you have a personal issue with it.
You mean precisely BECAUSE it's relevant - as any unintentional trace materials from processing of highly questionable health effects that can bioaccumulate in the body would be. Perhaps you need to look up the definition of 'strawman'.Bringing in an argument about something not even related (BPA)
Nonsense. And there's some actual FUD for you.Sure, but more FUD. Culturing people's sponges, countertops, dishtowels, even their skin would be even more disgusting. Pouring a glass of milk into a glass which has been on the shelf for a day is very likely a scarier proposition.
Bread, cheese, wine, beer, all dairy products, all safe food, medicine, antibiotics, cleaners... you know, nothing important or relevant to everyday people.I have no doubt working on the microscopic scale gives you a different perspective, but it doesn't carry over to make one's life better.
Actual strawman (they use tested raw milk in the EU - & you know the product and the testing is the same thing you just tried to discard), and it's already been done on the federal level in the US. In fact, the conservatives just doubled the import tax on those same said cheeses to promote the American pasteurized versions. The fact of the matter is that the world is NOT anything like it was before the mass production of milk (mass numbers, machines, hormones, antibiotics, etc.), and the practices used have seriously changed the threats involved. No one is likely to take your cheese away, but it's the world of the lawyer and you can't poison people (unless you're Monsanto, apparently).It would be sad if I could never have a Roquefort or Stilton again just because someone decided the bacteria in the raw milk which made it is scary. I feel sorry for people who live that way as well.
So let me get this straight ... it's all the Conservatives' fault then?In fact, the conservatives just doubled the import tax on those same said cheeses to promote the American pasteurized versions.
No, actually, it's standard scientific language. It acknowledges that one may never be 100% certain of anything (quantum physics), and supercedes 'my opinion', 'case law', and most people's 'my opinion' in rigor.
You say that as if I care. The truth exists whether you approve of it or not. There is certainly a large body of information about the subject if you are interested in looking at it, and my comments certainly represent the prevailing view.
You mean precisely BECAUSE it's relevant - as any unintentional trace materials from processing of highly questionable health effects that can bioaccumulate in the body would be. Perhaps you need to look up the definition of 'strawman'.
Nonsense. And there's some actual FUD for you.
Bread, cheese, wine, beer, all dairy products, all safe food, medicine, antibiotics, cleaners... you know, nothing important or relevant to everyday people.
Actual strawman (they use tested raw milk in the EU - & you know the product and the testing is the same thing you just tried to discard), and it's already been done on the federal level in the US. In fact, the conservatives just doubled the import tax on those same said cheeses to promote the American pasteurized versions. The fact of the matter is that the world is NOT anything like it was before the mass production of milk (mass numbers, machines, hormones, antibiotics, etc.), and the practices used have seriously changed the threats involved. No one is likely to take your cheese away, but it's the world of the lawyer and you can't poison people (unless you're Monsanto, apparently).
I'll end my participation in this particular thread of this conversation with a general note that there are different levels of 'opinion' - from ones based on knowledge with modest interpretation by experts, to just making things up because that's what you want to hear. Many people out there can't seem to make the distinction and that causes a lot of problems in this world (and that's a lifelong observation). I *never* expect (or ask) anyone to believe me blindly, even my students. It's up to individuals these days to do some of the legwork on subjects that you find relevant and make decisions based on FACTS from reliable sources.
Thanks LBussy, quite a fine rough analysis.. 0.15 mg is miniscule I think and it being a solvent, it could still fully evaporate! Sorry my mistake I meant 110 F
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