Astro
Active Member
Hi
I am quite new to soap making and absolutely loving it. I have used a basic hot process recipe to learn (recipe below) and made 2 batches so far. The first was as instructed without the EO. The 2nd I halved at thick trace and moulded for cold process and then added lavender EO and food colour to the rest of the batch for hot process - all have come out amazing and really nice although I did have a little trouble unmolding the cold process (probably needed longer in the mold)
I live on a farm where we produce jersey milk and a faulty freezer has resulted in 150 litres of un-pasteurised, un-homogenised milk going sour. I have found a couple of basic milk soap recipes that I would like to try . Again, I am going to split the batch for cold process and then hot to see the difference. I will freeze the milk for the lye solution.
Now for the question: The milk is separating as it sours, and I have the solids at the top and whey below. How should I process this mixture as the liquid content of the lye?
1. Should I whisk it all together to try and get a more milky consistency
2. Should I use the whey as the liquid for lye and add the solids into the weights for the oils/solid fats
3. Can I just use it as it is or do I need to make adjustments for the solids and liquids.
Can anyone advise how I should use the milk. Thanks
The recipe I want to try is
Here is the original recipe I started making soap with:
• 36 oz. olive oil (emollient and gentle)
• 6 oz. coconut oil (helps make a good hard bar)
• 3 oz. castor oil (improves suds)
• 6 oz. lye
• 12 oz. water
• 2-4 oz. essential oil of choice, optional
I am quite new to soap making and absolutely loving it. I have used a basic hot process recipe to learn (recipe below) and made 2 batches so far. The first was as instructed without the EO. The 2nd I halved at thick trace and moulded for cold process and then added lavender EO and food colour to the rest of the batch for hot process - all have come out amazing and really nice although I did have a little trouble unmolding the cold process (probably needed longer in the mold)
I live on a farm where we produce jersey milk and a faulty freezer has resulted in 150 litres of un-pasteurised, un-homogenised milk going sour. I have found a couple of basic milk soap recipes that I would like to try . Again, I am going to split the batch for cold process and then hot to see the difference. I will freeze the milk for the lye solution.
Now for the question: The milk is separating as it sours, and I have the solids at the top and whey below. How should I process this mixture as the liquid content of the lye?
1. Should I whisk it all together to try and get a more milky consistency
2. Should I use the whey as the liquid for lye and add the solids into the weights for the oils/solid fats
3. Can I just use it as it is or do I need to make adjustments for the solids and liquids.
Can anyone advise how I should use the milk. Thanks
The recipe I want to try is
- 10 ounces milk (try 9 oz if you want your soap to set up faster, or if using silicone molds)
- 4.3 ounces lye (sodium hydroxide)
- 22 ounces olive oil (71%)
- 8 ounces coconut oil (26%)
- 1 ounce castor oil (3%)
Here is the original recipe I started making soap with:
• 36 oz. olive oil (emollient and gentle)
• 6 oz. coconut oil (helps make a good hard bar)
• 3 oz. castor oil (improves suds)
• 6 oz. lye
• 12 oz. water
• 2-4 oz. essential oil of choice, optional