Inexpensive pH test strips are highly inaccurate. They typically read 2-3 units lower than the real pH. Even the good strips are that inaccurate when soap makers use the strips improperly, as most do.
You can't use a simple pH test, even if accurate, to absolutely know if your soap has no excess lye. So while it might be nice to know what the (accurate) pH is, it doesn't give you a definitive answer whether the soap is fully saponified or whether there is excess lye in the soap. The zap test or a titration test for free alkalinity are the only two ways to learn that.
Getting on to your problem -- The blotches may very well be where there is more FO in the soap. If the blotches are about as firm as the surrounding soap, I would give it a good cure and I would expect it would be fine. If the blotches are very soft, I might see what it does after curing, but I'd be inclined to keep the soap for my personal use only, especially if the IFRA guidelines for this FO in soap (Category 9) are very low.
In the future -- stick blend less; hand stir more. Don't "rev up" the soap batter with too much stick blending right away. I might stick blend 10-15 seconds in bursts of 2-3 seconds over a period of 5 minutes or so.
Also, stop blending when the soap is thinner -- at what most of us call "emulsion" rather than when the soap is thick enough to show a visible trace. This is something you learn from experience, but there are good videos to help you get the general idea. See the video links in my article --
Stick Blender | Soapy Stuff
Add well behaved scents to your oils before you add the lye solution, so the scent gets well blended into the fats.
Add troublesome FOs when the soap batter is thinner, not at a thick trace. That will give you more time to hand stir the troublesome FO into the batter so it is well mixed without having to aggravate matters by using a stick blender.