victrix
Member
Hello!
This recipe is one I've already made, and so far I've really liked how the bars turned out. They don't feel soapy or oily to the touch, and they haven't dried my hands out.
Information to note, my skin is fairly sensitive (I have a number of contact allergies), and in addition to that I'm very sensitive to sensory things (ie, oily textures, or skin feeling excessively dry)
(There is a variation on this recipe that I've made that adds activated charcoal and red morrocan clay, and I do think that recipe dries my hands out a little, but that's not the focus here lol)
I've been using this recipe with hot process in a crockpot, and have added the jojoba oil after the soap is around a medium trace, in the hopes that the jojoba will be left as the main part of the superfat.
The main question I have though: these bars seem to be hard for the most part, but if I put enough pressure on them I can mold them like clay. Is that particularly unusual? Or is it just what is to be expected from this recipe? After leaving them in the new shape, they seem to harden up again. I imagine it's almost what a rebatching would be like, minus having to reheat it.
The soap batches I've made before using this recipe were a few 100% olive oil batches, and a shave soap recipe I tried out once. I don't remember those bars being moldable like these ones. Though, I also don't remember trying to squish them haha
Other questions I have that are also related to bar hardness; is it due to to the superfat percentage? Would decreasing that lead to a more solid bar?
Or, is there a chance that the bars are behaving like this because of when I add the jojoba oil? I say they behave like clay, but there are notable bits that don't squish, as if some of the soap is more squishy/fluid than the rest. I can send a picture example in a few minutes.
This recipe is one I've already made, and so far I've really liked how the bars turned out. They don't feel soapy or oily to the touch, and they haven't dried my hands out.
Information to note, my skin is fairly sensitive (I have a number of contact allergies), and in addition to that I'm very sensitive to sensory things (ie, oily textures, or skin feeling excessively dry)
(There is a variation on this recipe that I've made that adds activated charcoal and red morrocan clay, and I do think that recipe dries my hands out a little, but that's not the focus here lol)
I've been using this recipe with hot process in a crockpot, and have added the jojoba oil after the soap is around a medium trace, in the hopes that the jojoba will be left as the main part of the superfat.
The main question I have though: these bars seem to be hard for the most part, but if I put enough pressure on them I can mold them like clay. Is that particularly unusual? Or is it just what is to be expected from this recipe? After leaving them in the new shape, they seem to harden up again. I imagine it's almost what a rebatching would be like, minus having to reheat it.
The soap batches I've made before using this recipe were a few 100% olive oil batches, and a shave soap recipe I tried out once. I don't remember those bars being moldable like these ones. Though, I also don't remember trying to squish them haha
Other questions I have that are also related to bar hardness; is it due to to the superfat percentage? Would decreasing that lead to a more solid bar?
Or, is there a chance that the bars are behaving like this because of when I add the jojoba oil? I say they behave like clay, but there are notable bits that don't squish, as if some of the soap is more squishy/fluid than the rest. I can send a picture example in a few minutes.