When you say long term, do you mean using salt on a continuous basis?Many use 1 tsp PPO salt dissolved in their water before mixing lye. It may help with getting it out of the mold sooner. Long term, not sure.
No on hardness for the long term of the soap. I don't use it so hopefully someone that does will pop on. I use sodium lactate pretty much to help me get my soap out of the mold quicker. Salt does the same. Over time I don't notice any difference in the hardness of my soap with or without at cure.When you say long term, do you mean using salt on a continuous basis?
My soaps are too young to tell me if they're harder than the ones without, especially since they're all different recipes with different oils and amounts.
Having said that, I add salt in varying amounts to see what's what lol and yes, in all instances, they've been easier to unmold when salt is added. And this is HP in individual molds I'm talking about.
Is it just me or do my soaps with salt (not soleseife) actually look smoother too?
I use salt in every batch. It makes the bar harder in the mold and harder after cure.
No salt actually inhibits bubbles. The amount you use to make it hard (about 1 tsp ppo) doesn't make a huge different IMO but I am not a bubble freak.Nice to know, I’m learning so much from you all. We need a diapers retreat, .
Another question, does putting salt in soap gives it more suds?
thank you so much for the infoNo salt actually inhibits bubbles. The amount you use to make it hard (about 1 tsp ppo) doesn't make a huge different IMO but I am not a bubble freak.
Salt bars (where you had 50% ppo salt to the batter) really don't bubble much which is why a lot of people use a high coconut oil recipe to counter that.
A little sugar or honey will make more bubbles (1 tsp ppo)
Enter your email address to join: