Blue1969
Well-Known Member
All the info I have found thus far on salt bars as well as soleseife uses coconut oil. Has anybody ever tried using only tallow?
Your 100% tallow soap with sugar lathers well bc it has sugar - and no salt.No I haven't. Currently sticking to soap. In South Africa "Boerseep", a traditional Beef Tallow soap is very popular, so I am trying all kinds of twists on it. My normal 100% tallow lathers well, I do add sugar for lather. - think I must try 1 minature bar and see?
DeeAnna is so much better at answering than me!! I give the nitty gritty answer, while DeeAnna gives the great explanation as to why! Although I do know the why.Soleseife is also soap made with an excess of table salt. Just because the salt is initially dissolved in water doesn't change the chemistry.
You'll have the same problem with tallow soleseife soap (made with table-salt brine) as you would with tallow salt bars (made with solid salt).
The lauric and myristic fatty acids in coconut, babassu, palm kernel oils have the ability to make soap that remains fairly soluble in salty water. That's why salt-based soap recipes have a high percentage of one or more of these particular fats.
Soap made from fats higher in palmitic, stearic, oleic, linoleic and linolenic fatty acids become almost completely insoluble in salty water. These fats include lard, tallow, palm, nut butters, olive oil, and other liquid oils.
Enter your email address to join: