Evik and judymoody, thank you for your replies.
I appreciate it.
I do use the near-maximum recommended water amount. For a batch with 240 ounces of oil (my usual) I use 72 - 80 ounces of water. Again, it is the maximum reccomended amount... I use the Majestic Mountain Sage
lye calculator. The only reason I am afraid to reduce my water amount is because I am afraid it will mess up my volumes with my mold and with such a large batch I am afraid to experiment in that area! All of my recipes are calculated to a T and with 20+ different scents and recipes....well, you know what I mean...I guess I am just afraid to find out that maybe I should recalcuate everything (that would only be if my volumes got messed up I guess).
Perhaps if I reduce the water should I get a a more "effective" cure time? Right now my soaps are hard, yet melt quickly after a 6 week cure time. Does anyone else have this? How long do you cure and what are your bars like as soon as your sure time is up? I am working towards having most of my products shampoo bars versus regular natural soap, so the softness/hardness of bars, I think, is especially important. Nothing more luxurious than a using a shampoo bar that has cured for over a year, right?
I took Genny's links and bought some GSE to get me by until I can, well, maybe recalculate recipes...not sure. Again, I am just dreading the idea of refiguring all of the recipes that I just recently and finally got organized. If I must than I shall, but for now, for the soaps I have to make this week to increase inventory I feel that experimenting must wait. This week I myst move onto...well, new scents that take, well I guess, some e-x-p-e-r-i-m-e-n-t-i-n-g.
Haha!
The soap scrapes trick sounds neat and I can understand why it might work for small batches. Very cool.
Castor oil...yes I usually have 10 percent and higher.
Extra Virgin Olive oil...that is all I use....that is a pretty important thing to note, but use at the most 40 percent and that is in one of my soft batches. I noticed that my soap turned out grainy when I used a high percentage of POMACE olive oil, so I stopped using it for awhile. I think the extra virgin has a higher quality too, but that is just my personal preference.
I will have to look into stickblending. I am currently using my Dad's cord mixing drill (I am the daughter of a contractor
) and it has worked pretty well thus far with the drywall "mud" mixing attachment. Yes, it is good for now.
Thank you for all your suggestions - I really appreciate it! I will look into all the things you have mentioned.
A fellow soaper,
Emma
Yamali Naturals