James Handley
Active Member
- Joined
- Apr 16, 2018
- Messages
- 26
- Reaction score
- 9
Hello everyone. I am very new into soap making and am having a blast. Many have been following my last thread "second soap attempt" and I thank all of you. I purchased some cheap Walmart brand vegetable oil which was strait soy bean oil for some baking, but I knew I was not going to use all of that any time soon. So I thought I would try an overly simple non-balanced soap recipe and see how it compaires to my last soap that I put a decent amount of time and effort into making right.
My last recipe consists of 2% Bees Wax, 48% crisco shortening, 25% Lard, 25% coconut oil. And then replaced 10% by weight of the water to pure honey from my own beehives. (38g). The oils and wax came out to 500 grams.
Now I tried 95% cheap soybean oil and 5% bees wax. also replacing 10% of the water content, with honey.
In my prior batch, it came out very brown. It seems to happen when I add the honey to the lye which reacts making dark color and that darkens the oils. So I mixed the lye water while waiting on the wax to melt into the oils in my crock pot on low. Lye water cooled to room temp and then I added that to the oils. After two min of using the hand blender I then added the honey.
The oil was a light creamy color with the lye but once the honey was added. It steadily got darker until it was refried bean colored. About 5 more minutes of whisking and only 15 min of leaving it on low.
This stuff set much quicker than my last batch and so getting it into molds was less smooth and was just caking globs of goo into the pan.
I'll let the soap cure for a while and then I will do some hand soap comparisons after working on a car and some full body shower tests to see how this cheap soap stacks up.
My last recipe consists of 2% Bees Wax, 48% crisco shortening, 25% Lard, 25% coconut oil. And then replaced 10% by weight of the water to pure honey from my own beehives. (38g). The oils and wax came out to 500 grams.
Now I tried 95% cheap soybean oil and 5% bees wax. also replacing 10% of the water content, with honey.
In my prior batch, it came out very brown. It seems to happen when I add the honey to the lye which reacts making dark color and that darkens the oils. So I mixed the lye water while waiting on the wax to melt into the oils in my crock pot on low. Lye water cooled to room temp and then I added that to the oils. After two min of using the hand blender I then added the honey.
The oil was a light creamy color with the lye but once the honey was added. It steadily got darker until it was refried bean colored. About 5 more minutes of whisking and only 15 min of leaving it on low.
This stuff set much quicker than my last batch and so getting it into molds was less smooth and was just caking globs of goo into the pan.
I'll let the soap cure for a while and then I will do some hand soap comparisons after working on a car and some full body shower tests to see how this cheap soap stacks up.