Chispa
Well-Known Member
I made a shaving soap based loosely on the article found here.
I subbed Avocado oil, since I didn't have Shea butter. I know avo makes a nice hard soap bar, and didn't think much of it.
Recipe:
Oil %
Avocado Oil 10
Coconut Oil, 76 deg 15
Lanolin liquid Wax 5
Stearic Acid 45
Tallow Beef 25
Superfat 3%
100% KOH lye
(in this batch I completely forgot to add the glycerin)
50g batch. Measured out on a 0.01g scale.
http://soapee.com/recipes/7727
I followed Deanna's advice in the shaving soap megathread and split the oils up into three groups. Regular oils, Stearic Acid, and superfat. The plan was to first combine the regular oils (including the Lanolin) with the lye. Let that work for a while, then add the stearic, then the avo. The theory is to allow the lye to work easily on the regular fats, since the lye has to do some work to split them into fatty acids. Once this is done, the SA will snap up the remaining lye.
There was one small issue. You note that my avo is 10% of the fats, but the superfat is only 3%. I figured that I would add all the avo at the end rather than splitting it up, but when I mixed it in, it did not seem like there was any lye left in the soap. The oil did not mix into the soap at all, it rather pooled on top, and even though I tried hard with my mini-whisk it never mixed into the batch.
Eventually I just set it aside to cool. It had no zap. The soap was soft and sticky, with just enough body to hold its own shape, but some would stick to my finger if I poked it.
I've used it shaving. It makes a very creamy lather that does not whip up at all, but is certainly lather, not oil or soap. It is very gentle on my skin. Compared to the Proraso Red shaving soap I was using before it is much less drying.
I'm not sure why the superfatting behaved like it did. It feels like the stearic acid quenched all the lye, and all 10% of the avo stayed oily. The lye was brand new, first time I used it. I remade the recipe, and added half the avo in with the regular oils, half as superfat and it behaved rationally. But I don't know if I would see the same behaviour with unconverted stearic acid.
I subbed Avocado oil, since I didn't have Shea butter. I know avo makes a nice hard soap bar, and didn't think much of it.
Recipe:
Oil %
Avocado Oil 10
Coconut Oil, 76 deg 15
Lanolin liquid Wax 5
Stearic Acid 45
Tallow Beef 25
Superfat 3%
100% KOH lye
(in this batch I completely forgot to add the glycerin)
50g batch. Measured out on a 0.01g scale.
http://soapee.com/recipes/7727
I followed Deanna's advice in the shaving soap megathread and split the oils up into three groups. Regular oils, Stearic Acid, and superfat. The plan was to first combine the regular oils (including the Lanolin) with the lye. Let that work for a while, then add the stearic, then the avo. The theory is to allow the lye to work easily on the regular fats, since the lye has to do some work to split them into fatty acids. Once this is done, the SA will snap up the remaining lye.
There was one small issue. You note that my avo is 10% of the fats, but the superfat is only 3%. I figured that I would add all the avo at the end rather than splitting it up, but when I mixed it in, it did not seem like there was any lye left in the soap. The oil did not mix into the soap at all, it rather pooled on top, and even though I tried hard with my mini-whisk it never mixed into the batch.
Eventually I just set it aside to cool. It had no zap. The soap was soft and sticky, with just enough body to hold its own shape, but some would stick to my finger if I poked it.
I've used it shaving. It makes a very creamy lather that does not whip up at all, but is certainly lather, not oil or soap. It is very gentle on my skin. Compared to the Proraso Red shaving soap I was using before it is much less drying.
I'm not sure why the superfatting behaved like it did. It feels like the stearic acid quenched all the lye, and all 10% of the avo stayed oily. The lye was brand new, first time I used it. I remade the recipe, and added half the avo in with the regular oils, half as superfat and it behaved rationally. But I don't know if I would see the same behaviour with unconverted stearic acid.