julieanne
Well-Known Member
Hi Group!
This thread is being pushed into a separate category to get feedback from you all as a means to find out if the quality of lye used in combo with purified water yields batches of soap that experience less soda ash development. Please experiment and post results from batches that have used food grade lye, technical grade lye, and hardward store lye sold to clear pipes. For your lye solvent, use purified, distilled, and/or tap as your water- no milk additives or we can't quite make straight-forward comparisons.
Using all combos of the above, my findings are that technical grade lye used with purified water from the grocery yields little to no ash.
This would make sense there are fewer minerals in purified water to react and salt (ash) out from the finished product. Same for the lye- lower percentages of impurities in food grade and tech grade lyes when compared against Red Devil Lye made to clear pipes.
Thanks in advance!!
This thread is being pushed into a separate category to get feedback from you all as a means to find out if the quality of lye used in combo with purified water yields batches of soap that experience less soda ash development. Please experiment and post results from batches that have used food grade lye, technical grade lye, and hardward store lye sold to clear pipes. For your lye solvent, use purified, distilled, and/or tap as your water- no milk additives or we can't quite make straight-forward comparisons.
Using all combos of the above, my findings are that technical grade lye used with purified water from the grocery yields little to no ash.
This would make sense there are fewer minerals in purified water to react and salt (ash) out from the finished product. Same for the lye- lower percentages of impurities in food grade and tech grade lyes when compared against Red Devil Lye made to clear pipes.
Thanks in advance!!