alchemy_cake
Active Member
So, I've been taking my time learning about soap making, and as I have a kindle I decided to browse the ebooks about soap crafting. I found one, highly rated, on sale for $0.99. So, of course, I bought it! And it's really a very nice little book, informative, concise, and newbie-friendly. However, the author addresses what she says are some myths in soap making, I wanted to get the opinions of some experienced soapers regarding them.
The first is that she says that soap does not need to be mixed until one gets trace. Apparently, with handheld mixers, this isn't required, because the lye and oils get thoroughly blended together well before that point. (She goes on to say that with hand mixing, you do indeed need to go until trace is reached.) I'd not heard of that before, but it seems believable.
The second, which I find stranger, considering how important it seems to many soapers, is that there is basically no such thing as a 'gel stage'. To quote her, "Temperature during the setting period has little or nothing to do with soap setting." The only thing that warmth apparently does is prevents the formation of a "thin rind... that you can trim off". Yet many people clearly find that it does make a difference. Perhaps I've been overestimating how important it is, and it truly doesn't matter?
Thanks for your advice and opinions!
The first is that she says that soap does not need to be mixed until one gets trace. Apparently, with handheld mixers, this isn't required, because the lye and oils get thoroughly blended together well before that point. (She goes on to say that with hand mixing, you do indeed need to go until trace is reached.) I'd not heard of that before, but it seems believable.
The second, which I find stranger, considering how important it seems to many soapers, is that there is basically no such thing as a 'gel stage'. To quote her, "Temperature during the setting period has little or nothing to do with soap setting." The only thing that warmth apparently does is prevents the formation of a "thin rind... that you can trim off". Yet many people clearly find that it does make a difference. Perhaps I've been overestimating how important it is, and it truly doesn't matter?
Thanks for your advice and opinions!