I think it's the lye that's the problem, not so much the cooking
(I'm enjoying your adventures!)
(I'm enjoying your adventures!)
Hmmmm...good point, Kim. I don't remember ever having non-alcoholic wine in the past, but very good point. In fact, I decided to change my approach. You've given me another idea.
I think it's the lye that's the problem, not so much the cooking
(I'm enjoying your adventures!)
'Teetotaler?" Wow, how did he store the juice? Anyway, I am currently looking for non or 'de-acoholized' wine. I live in Utah, so it shouldn't be a problem, right? Or local liquor stores simply will scoff at the idea of carrying it...When I was visiting a friend on the other side of Australia recently (I mention this part as it is too far to go visit again any time soon) she took me to meet a friend of hers that made his own grape juice and it was amazing. He made it every year and some of it was about 16 years old. He was a strict teetotaler so nothing to cause alcoholic fermentation had been added to the juice. I tried some of the 16 year old juice and it was like drinking a gorgeous port, you would not have realised it was not alcoholic, except you could drink it by the tumbler full and still safely drive home I wish I could go get some of that juice now as I would like to experiment.
'Teetotaler?" Wow, how did he store the juice? Anyway, I am currently looking for non or 'de-acoholized' wine. I live in Utah, so it shouldn't be a problem, right? Or local liquor stores simply will scoff at the idea of carrying it...
Had to look that up. Can't hurt to try.Would Verjuice work, to get the scent of the grapes?
Kim. I just put up a pic of a sliver of the soap. It does seem to be transparent/translucent. I didn't think of doing that as I hoped to utilize the solids for color and fragrance. Naive of me. I believe filtering it out would help! I definitely don't need to worry about retaining the colour of the wine. Now working on ANY aroma I can get.You are a mine of energy, @Richard Perrine . When you reduce the wine, what about filtering the solids out so you get a clearer bar? I can't wait to see the results.
Kim,I got some wine tonight and I guess I could have experimented on soap but darn it, I drank it instead. The only down side was that I burned dinner, something I have not done in years. My only excuse was that I found out a friend had died suddenly and very unexpectedly overnight and match that with the 3 glasses of wine while preparing dinner lead to burnt offerings. Luckily no one in the family complained.
Does anyone know of very dry red, strongly aromatic wines? Something affordable that I can test?
Planning on it today.I'd ask at your local bottle shop and see what they recommend.
"DO not mix wine with lye." I must say I learned that one the hard way! Lol.Hi all. Kim recently contacted me and it got me thinking about my wine soap tests. I have found that the bar, after a couple of days and testing, does not retain its 'sweet' wine odor. The color also turns a more brownish color, but still transparent. I will be testing the following:
Some recommendations that I will be testing:
1. Add equal volume of water to lye to create the solution. DO not mix wine with lye.
2. Blend the soap to trace and allow to set to allow as much of the lye to react with the oils to saponification
3. Add remaining volume of wine into the slurry after the soap has gone through the stages of HP, but only after the sugar water and glycerin have been mixed and heated.
4. Allow the soap mixture to heat for an additional 15-20 min (?). This will help dissipate much of the alcohol, but still utilize the transparent props it contributes to.
Don't know if this makes sense, but in my head it does. I am simply trying to minimize the contact that the wine solids have with the lye which creates something a lot leas pleasant after a day or two.
Suzy,"DO not mix wine with lye." I must say I learned that one the hard way! Lol.
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