Hi Guys,
Quick question on a subject that has bothered me for years. A long time ago I was involved in a discussion along the lines of this post's title. It centred around Castile soaps and leaving them to "mature", for lack of a better word for up to a year.
I recall that I did a little experiment back then and weighed some soaps I had made over time. I noted that I had used a recipe with about 30% water. At the end of about 6 weeks - this is all from a long time ago so I could get some of the numbers wrong - the bars were about 28% lighter than when they were cut. So, apparently most of the water was gone.
My question, what happens to the soap between 6 weeks and a year that improves it. I believe all saponification should have completed after a couple of days. I also believe the drying process loses all or most of the water over the normal 4 - 8 weeks. I've used Castile soaps that were a year old and some that were a couple of months old. I confess to being unable to tell the difference. I'd be very interested to hear other people's experience on this topic.
I remember that things got a little heated when last I was involved in this discussion so I need to say that I'm not interested in an argument. I am, however, very interested in being educated. I thank you for your patience.
Quick question on a subject that has bothered me for years. A long time ago I was involved in a discussion along the lines of this post's title. It centred around Castile soaps and leaving them to "mature", for lack of a better word for up to a year.
I recall that I did a little experiment back then and weighed some soaps I had made over time. I noted that I had used a recipe with about 30% water. At the end of about 6 weeks - this is all from a long time ago so I could get some of the numbers wrong - the bars were about 28% lighter than when they were cut. So, apparently most of the water was gone.
My question, what happens to the soap between 6 weeks and a year that improves it. I believe all saponification should have completed after a couple of days. I also believe the drying process loses all or most of the water over the normal 4 - 8 weeks. I've used Castile soaps that were a year old and some that were a couple of months old. I confess to being unable to tell the difference. I'd be very interested to hear other people's experience on this topic.
I remember that things got a little heated when last I was involved in this discussion so I need to say that I'm not interested in an argument. I am, however, very interested in being educated. I thank you for your patience.