"...this was with me using 35/38% water. You say full water is 27-28%..."
Whoa there, little dogie. I think you have it backwards.
These numbers are the percentages of sodium hydroxide (NaOH, lye) in the water. Not the percentage of water. "Full water" of 27-28% lye means the lye solution has 72-73% water and 27-28% NaOH/sodium hydroxide/lye. The terminology of "full water" is obscure and confusing, but we all have to live with it.
By using a 33% lye solution, you are using "discounted water", meaning you have less water (and more NaOH) in your lye solution than if you used "full water".
Okay, I'm going to add to the chorus. You clearly want to make and sell lots of soap. Whether you realize it or not, that means your business should be based on a semi-industrial version of handcrafted soap making. You can no longer afford to think like a hobby soap maker -- you need to think like an engineer and business person whose job is making and selling soap.
Accept the issue of the cure time. You are getting good advice from everyone about this. A good engineer knows when some issues are non-negotiable, so he or she builds them into the process and moves on. Cure time is one of those issues, if you really want to make soap right. As others have pointed out, the cure time is only going to cause a one-time delay up front, if you run your business right.
You have also mentioned several other things -- You don't want to wait around to stamp your soap. You want it to harden as fast as possible. You are impatient about the cure. You want to sell lots of soap. I would think, given those expectations, that the last thing you would want to do is add more water to your recipe.
Think like an engineer about these goals and tweak your recipe and procedures to better meet those goals. What about your soaping temperature -- can you soap cooler to slow trace? What about your mixing of the batter -- can you reduce the intensity of mixing? What about your molds -- do you want to use slab molds to get a little more water evaporation during the saponification step? A recipe with 50% olive is not going to be especially hard at first and coconut can shorten time to trace -- what about tweaking the recipe for more initial hardness and slower trace?
My 2 cents, YMMV, and all that....
Whoa there, little dogie. I think you have it backwards.
These numbers are the percentages of sodium hydroxide (NaOH, lye) in the water. Not the percentage of water. "Full water" of 27-28% lye means the lye solution has 72-73% water and 27-28% NaOH/sodium hydroxide/lye. The terminology of "full water" is obscure and confusing, but we all have to live with it.
By using a 33% lye solution, you are using "discounted water", meaning you have less water (and more NaOH) in your lye solution than if you used "full water".
Okay, I'm going to add to the chorus. You clearly want to make and sell lots of soap. Whether you realize it or not, that means your business should be based on a semi-industrial version of handcrafted soap making. You can no longer afford to think like a hobby soap maker -- you need to think like an engineer and business person whose job is making and selling soap.
Accept the issue of the cure time. You are getting good advice from everyone about this. A good engineer knows when some issues are non-negotiable, so he or she builds them into the process and moves on. Cure time is one of those issues, if you really want to make soap right. As others have pointed out, the cure time is only going to cause a one-time delay up front, if you run your business right.
You have also mentioned several other things -- You don't want to wait around to stamp your soap. You want it to harden as fast as possible. You are impatient about the cure. You want to sell lots of soap. I would think, given those expectations, that the last thing you would want to do is add more water to your recipe.
Think like an engineer about these goals and tweak your recipe and procedures to better meet those goals. What about your soaping temperature -- can you soap cooler to slow trace? What about your mixing of the batter -- can you reduce the intensity of mixing? What about your molds -- do you want to use slab molds to get a little more water evaporation during the saponification step? A recipe with 50% olive is not going to be especially hard at first and coconut can shorten time to trace -- what about tweaking the recipe for more initial hardness and slower trace?
My 2 cents, YMMV, and all that....