First, I suggest you dissolve the salt in water BEFORE mixing in the lye. As for how much salt, you could try more salt, as it doesn't hurt the soap to use more salt, but try the reversed mixing method first.
But the main difference I would make with your recipe is to use Lye Concentration and not water as percentage of oils. What you have right now is a 27% lye concentration (or a ratio of 2.69 water to 1 of lye) and that is a lot of water. With that much water, it's going to take some time (some being a long time) for this particular soap to lose water and become hard. If you were doing HP (Hot Process), this much water would be fine, but for CP, you really don't need to start with as much water. Water evaporates out pretty fast in the HP method, but with CP soap it takes a lot longer for water to work its way out of the soap, particularly if you are soaping on the cool side. Your temps are fine for your oils, but it's a lot cooler than doing Hot Process.
What have you done with this soap? Is it still in the mold? Do you know if it heated up and gelled? Have you removed it from the mold yet?
It will harden up eventually, but it takes longer if it doesn't heat up and gel. With this much water, it should gel, but if kept too cool it will not gel, which means it will take even longer to heat up. If you don't mind waiting, which I usually don't, just leave it and wait (possibly a few days to a week) and perhaps it will be hard enough to unmold. Then take it out of the mold and let sit open to the air a bit longer, then cut when it feels like a firm block of cheese. Then allow the individual soaps to cure in the open air, turning periodically to minimize warping.
What have you done with this soap? Is it still in the mold? Do you know if it heated up and gelled? Have you removed it from the mold yet?
Using the Soapmakingfriend SoapBuilder calculator (
link) when I input your recipe this is what I get: See pdf below called Beautifulsoaper recipe 1.
Not knowing the costs of oils in Pakistan or their availability, my suggestions may or may not work for you, so I will just make suggestions with the oils I know you have (the ones listed on your recipe). Here's a variation on your recipe that would harden up faster & be ready to cut sooner. (See pdf below called Beautifulsoaper recipe variation.) The longevity number (how long the soap will last in use) comes up some, which is hard to do with those oils alone, but if you don't use harder fats like for instance, Cocoa Butter, Palm Oil, Soy Wax, or animal fats, then it's harder to increase your palmitic and stearic acids in the soap, which is what helps bring longevity up. (I don't bathe with soap made from animal soaps, so I don't use them unless making soap for others in my family who do, so not using animal fats is perfectly fine.)
But so would your original recipe harden up faster, if you only changed the water amount via the Lye Concentration or Liquid to water ratio so you are using a lot less water.
See the pdf links below for the different Soapmakingfriend calculations. I titled the files according to what they represent. Beautifulsoaper recipe1 is your original recipe with no changes. Beautifulsoap recipe 2 -31percent-lye-conc. has a 31% lye concentration. Notice it uses less water, but nothing else about the recipe is changed. Beautifulsoaper recipe 3 has the 2:1 Water to Lye ratio, again less water still, but nothing else was changed. Beautifulsoaper recipe variation is the one I made oil amount changes to, as well as the water amount.
The following graphics show the difference of water amounts based solely on changing from water as percent of oils to lye concentration or to liquid-to-lye ratio:
Original 38% liquid as percent of oils (I never use this setting) results in 190 grams of water:
View attachment 66662
31% Lye Concentration requires 157.35 grams of water
View attachment 66663
2:1 water to lye Ratio requires even less water - 141.39 grams
View attachment 66664
If you take a look at these 2 graphs below, you can see the 'longevity' number changes (based on the Palmitic + Stearic acid content in the soap):
View attachment 66665
Also when you read he pdf (the files from the soap builder calc) you can see that the resulting printout/file actually shows the exact water to lye ratio or lye concentration or water as % of oils for each different recipe change. That is listed in the very first column at the top left side of the page.
I am not sure if the pdf files will open for you; I don't often add files to posts, so it they don't maybe someone can troubleshoot with me how to add them so they can be opened.