I too am thankful for this reminder
@DeeAnna. I always go back to your page regarding water when I need to double check what I'm doing because your suggestions are extremely helpful to newbies like me.
I have been playing around with the numbers and taking notes, so that I can see eventually which amount of water goes best with which recipe. It's a long process for sure, trial and error with mostly errors lol
Since I HP I also have to factor in water evaporation. I sometimes end up with a totally fluid batter that's super smoothly gelled and sometimes I end up with something resembling (my) room temp lard that's hard to break apart in the pot before it's fully cooked. When I get that I have to work it with a whisk before it resembles gelled soap and I must say I might be growing more muscle lol
I looked around if someone had some sort of guideline.. Like "use this much water if your recipe has high olive or similar oil" or "only use this much for high coconut" and while those two in particular are addressed in DeeAnna's site, I was struggling with questions like what if I have a high percentage of lard? What if it's a high butter soap? What if I want to add a ton of additives, with or without clays? How about using waxes?
Mainly this issue is because I have not been soaping long enough to know what each fat does while I'm cooking it, so I always tell myself to research each as best as I can while I'm not soaping. Like I said earlier, DeeAnna's page is a great starting point. I know eventually I'll understand, but I'll need time.
All the websites say is "if you want a more fluid batter use more water" but then the question is "more than what?" lol