Gardengirl7
Member
Will rebatching cold process soap with undissolved lye fix the problem and make the bars usable or do I have to throw away the whole batch?
If you test one bar and it is zappy, then expect all to be unusable. If you test one bar and it is not zappy, this is no guarantee that all are fine. Not even the one you tested, if you fear undissolved/unreacted lye. Sorry.On the zap test, does that mean when you test one bar from the batch that will tell you the whole batch is lye heavy or not?
If you test one bar and it is zappy, then expect all to be unusable. If you test one bar and it is not zappy, this is no guarantee that all are fine. Not even the one you tested, if you fear undissolved/unreacted lye. Sorry.
Thank you. Now I know that what I thought happened to me today - did happen. 🖐guilty. First fail.It might. Sorry to hear . I guess you'll join the team “pour lye solution into oils through a strainer”. Another issue with lye crystals/pockets is that the lye is missing in the main batter, hence one has unplanned excessive superfat with all its downsides.
Back to rebatching: The point is, it depends on the recipe, water content, and age of the soap if rebatching is able to completely dissolve the solid structure that has already built up during the first hours/days of CP curing. Even if you grate it up finely (cheese/garlic grater), the “noodles” might not fully dissolve in the extra rebatch water, and can keep small lye pockets enclosed – defeating the whole reason for rebatching.
If your recipe is well-behaved/soft enough (and your soap young enough) that it will turn into a liquid-ish paste state when hot, then you can stir it thoroughly.
In any case, wrap it so that it loses as little moisture to evaporation as possible. Once you're ready, grate it up as finely as possible. Wear gloves and goggles. The least painful rebatch method is oven rebatch.
Keep us updated how it goes!
I guess you have made the zap test to be sure it's lye. ETA: Can you post pics? Lye crystals/pockets have turned out more than once to actually be incompletely mixed FO, stearic spots, air bubbles, or exaggerated damage from wire cutters.
Enter your email address to join: