green soap
Well-Known Member
Five oils were too soft still to unmold after 24 hours...can you guess which ones?
Canola, castor, safflower, sunflower and grape-seed?
Five oils were too soft still to unmold after 24 hours...can you guess which ones?
And the Top 5 Oils Too Soft To Unmold In 24 Hours Goes To:
Corn
Grapeseed
Rice Bran
Soybean
Sunflower
I would have thought since rice bran is used for drying purposes in dry oils, it would dry up fast enough, oh well.
Actually Rice Bran is quite moisturizing and very similar in make up to Olive Oil. It's great for dry or sensitive skin
I figured Sunflower, Grapeseed, Safflower, Olive, Corn, Soybean and Canola would be too soft. Oddly enough, Olive was hard as a rock in about 18 hours! Castor was also surprising with hardness and how fast it traced...faster than Tallow!
My lye solution was a 41% concentration, btw.
I'm curious about the odor from the lard soap. Although I have read about other soaper's incountering it, I have never experienced it myself. (I've never made a loaf that didn't have lard in it) How would you describe it? Is it the odor of the lard itself?
Did you use refined castor oil? I am asking because I once tried making soap using castor oil 45 percent and the rest coconut, waited 3 days but didn't harden, well, actually looked hard from outside, but was soft and creamy inside.Finally, I rebatched with salt and got a hard bar of soap. I used cold pressed unrefined castor oil and coconut oils. wonder if that was what made the difference.
Yeah, it reminds me of taking salt pork out of the package to make collard greens...I don't know how else to describe it
Shawnee, I've finally had a chance to check in on your experiment. Wow...you are a juggernuat! I'm a) too cheap to buy the oils and lye for this experiment b) too lazy to carry it out and 3) too disorganized to keep it all organized. Kudos to you! I know you really won't have definitive results until to see how they preform long-term, but what are your take-aways thus far? Anything that would change your basic soap formulations?
Enter your email address to join: