Catscankim
Well-Known Member
I started soaping about a year ago, as almost a full-time job. I have used most of my FO again and again with the same recipe that I have been using as long.
All criticism is welcome.
Nearly every FO I add to soap -and stir- is ricing. I swear that all I have to do is breathe on it wrong and it starts ricing up. Most of my batches are blended to emulsion with the sb then everything is stirred after. For like 6 months when I first really started making soap, I didn't know what ricing even looked like...now I am battling it every single batch.
I soap cool. Since I add sugar to my water, I add a little lye at a time to my water/sugar mixture and I stick it in the freezer. I do this maybe three or four times to keep the sugar water from scorching and changing color to too dark. This goes over about a half an hour. In the meantime, I melt my lard and coconut oil in the microwave, two minutes tops It is still kinda congealed (lard) and I stir until it is liquid, then add my olive oil and castor oil. Both lye containers and oil containers are comfortably warm to the touch. I do not take the temp (although now that I am trying to find the problem I should start doing that).
Three or four bursts with the blender, mostly stirring after. I have literally just stirred a lot because I don't want air bubbles LOL. It is quite thin when I start working with it.
Color first....I stir (when I pull the stick blender out, I never put it back in...avoiding bubbles)
I mix dispersed colors in all of my containers. (SB is actually in the sudsy sink by now...zero blending). Everything is the way I want it.
One drop of FO goes in....done.
I'm in Florida, so I get the humidity might be a factor...but I started soaping here and it's never been a problem before. Plus my thermostat is set on morgue. Always 68 degrees while I am home. Windows/doors never open to extra humidity in the house.
There has to be a variable here somewhere. i just can't figure it out. I'm gonna start taking the temp of the oils/lye. I never did before, but at least I can have a standard. I was blaming the fo, but it is happening with fragrances that I have used over and over.
Its a 50% lard bar...25% olive, 20% coconut, 5% castor. 33% lye concentration. 2T sugar, cold distilled water.
All criticism is welcome.
Nearly every FO I add to soap -and stir- is ricing. I swear that all I have to do is breathe on it wrong and it starts ricing up. Most of my batches are blended to emulsion with the sb then everything is stirred after. For like 6 months when I first really started making soap, I didn't know what ricing even looked like...now I am battling it every single batch.
I soap cool. Since I add sugar to my water, I add a little lye at a time to my water/sugar mixture and I stick it in the freezer. I do this maybe three or four times to keep the sugar water from scorching and changing color to too dark. This goes over about a half an hour. In the meantime, I melt my lard and coconut oil in the microwave, two minutes tops It is still kinda congealed (lard) and I stir until it is liquid, then add my olive oil and castor oil. Both lye containers and oil containers are comfortably warm to the touch. I do not take the temp (although now that I am trying to find the problem I should start doing that).
Three or four bursts with the blender, mostly stirring after. I have literally just stirred a lot because I don't want air bubbles LOL. It is quite thin when I start working with it.
Color first....I stir (when I pull the stick blender out, I never put it back in...avoiding bubbles)
I mix dispersed colors in all of my containers. (SB is actually in the sudsy sink by now...zero blending). Everything is the way I want it.
One drop of FO goes in....done.
I'm in Florida, so I get the humidity might be a factor...but I started soaping here and it's never been a problem before. Plus my thermostat is set on morgue. Always 68 degrees while I am home. Windows/doors never open to extra humidity in the house.
There has to be a variable here somewhere. i just can't figure it out. I'm gonna start taking the temp of the oils/lye. I never did before, but at least I can have a standard. I was blaming the fo, but it is happening with fragrances that I have used over and over.
Its a 50% lard bar...25% olive, 20% coconut, 5% castor. 33% lye concentration. 2T sugar, cold distilled water.