Hello lovely soapers,
I hope everyone is having a blast gearing up for the holidays!
I wanted to make the Brambleberry gingerbread cake CP project as a gift for family and friends this year.
https://www.brambleberry.com/articl...zO1VNa8gUV-mMgGtZ7ozT1PAxLudyOt1qKw-tATr1vvu2
I made the bases and then life happened... that was 2.5 weeks ago. In the Q&A section, it says the frosting layer should be poured within 1-3 days (just after the bases are unmolded) to make sure the layers adhere to each other....
Any thoughts on whether it would be worth it to try pouring the frosting layer this far out? Or is it unlikely to stick to adhere well now that the bases have been curing so long?
Appreciate any comments/ideas!
Happy soaping!!
I just found an older post where folks mentioned steaming an already made loaf before piping a layer of frosting....
Anyone have any experience with this technique?
Aha! A little extra digging and I think I've answered my own question thanks to @galaxyMLP. Will report back on how it goes!
I hope everyone is having a blast gearing up for the holidays!
I wanted to make the Brambleberry gingerbread cake CP project as a gift for family and friends this year.
https://www.brambleberry.com/articl...zO1VNa8gUV-mMgGtZ7ozT1PAxLudyOt1qKw-tATr1vvu2
I made the bases and then life happened... that was 2.5 weeks ago. In the Q&A section, it says the frosting layer should be poured within 1-3 days (just after the bases are unmolded) to make sure the layers adhere to each other....
Any thoughts on whether it would be worth it to try pouring the frosting layer this far out? Or is it unlikely to stick to adhere well now that the bases have been curing so long?
Appreciate any comments/ideas!
Happy soaping!!
I just found an older post where folks mentioned steaming an already made loaf before piping a layer of frosting....
Anyone have any experience with this technique?
You can rebatch that top layer just fine as long as you know what you whats missing from it. If you don't, I wouldn't really attempt to rebatch. Too much guess work. You can use it as a laundry soap in that case.
Since you already let the bottom cure, I'd warm it in the oven at 170 for a bit and score the top before pouring the new batch. Make sure the top soap gels. The heat and gelling itself will help make the new soap adhere to the existing soap.
I wouldn't pour rebatch soap on top of the existing bottom though becasue it would have a very hard time adhering. You're going to need to make a new CP batch to pour on top of the existing bottom. Use the rebatched top for another soap or pour it into individual molds.
Aha! A little extra digging and I think I've answered my own question thanks to @galaxyMLP. Will report back on how it goes!