Hi,
Its me. I haven't been on this forum for a while but I just saw the rebatching questions posted by MillieT. So I had to help.
I've gotten my rebatching down to the point that really works for me and that I'm really happy with the results of the soaps. I had (still have) a lot of high % of OO soaps that I was not really happy with so I've done some work the last couple of months. BTW, this is also a good method to use for soaps that you are bored with or no longer want to use.
OK, this is what I do:
1. Use SOAPCALC and calculate your new desired batch.
2. For Water as % of Oil, use 30%. For me, 30% is enough liquid to work with and the soaps will dry quicker.
3. For SF, do what ever you want, I always use 8%.
4. Grate your botched soaps and use 50% old soaps to new batch. (500g of old soaps to 1kg of new batch).
5. Place everything in a pot and place it in the oven to melt to the consistency that you like. Then stick blend it for a smoother consistency.
6. Once the consistency is OK, take the pot out of the oven and let it cool to warm. Warm enough for you to touch the pot and not burn yourself. Sorry, I don't have a thermometer so I can't tell you exactly how warm the mixture should be. I've noticed that I haven't had problems with quick trace if the soap mixture is warm.
7. Mix your lye and liquid. I always use frozen GM so my lye mix is not as hot as with just water.
8. Add the lye mixture to the new batch of soap and stir with a rubber spatula. You must stir well or you will have lye pockets. If you're rebatching a small portion, then it might be good to carefully pour the mixture between 2 pots after some initial stirring just to make sure there's no lye pockets . I usually do that with a total of 1.5 kg. Otherwise you might have to stir for 5 minutes or so from hand.
9. Once everything is well incorporated then pour it into your mold.
10. Voila! Finished!
Hope this clarifies my method a bit better than my previous posts.
Have fun!