Oh good, now they will forget about my weirdness and be judging you instead. Thank you!I definitely see the hind end of the cow. But I see some sort of monster biting it. Lol
Oh good, now they will forget about my weirdness and be judging you instead. Thank you!I definitely see the hind end of the cow. But I see some sort of monster biting it. Lol
Too much CPOP? I can't tell from the picture if it's the same thing but my first CPOP came out with what I thought of as a 'fizzy' looking surface; I think I did it a bit too high for a bit too long. When I planed it off the rest was fine.What indeed puzzles me a bit is the open surface.
I don't know if this is relevant, but my oatmeal soaps with cooked, blended colloidal oatmeal (granted, I don't filter out the oat material) tend to be wrinkly, especially as they dry, and they stay squishy longer than my other soaps. I'm not sure what your filtering process involved though, so maybe it's something other than oat material.@KiwiMoose's #21287 put the idea into my head to finally make some oatmilk soap. Well, technically today … 2am … Soaked rolled oats in water, and threw in some pandan leaves that were still around, too. SB'd, filtrated, blended into oils (not exfoliating). And a new silicone mould had to be inaugurated … Pandan Puzzle!
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What indeed puzzles me a bit is the open surface. Not quite like soda ash, it rather looks like mm-sized fat crystals (can be smoothed out with the finger and feels greasy). I'm not worried, I just haven't seen such a thing yet. It's a classic trinity recipe (palm oil as hard fat, melted at >50°C), cast at thin trace, and CPOP'd (oven heat re-use from another round “disposing of” Lollipop margarine). Other surfaces are unaffected.
OK, I'll keep it in mind for shampoo!Shampoo is something you'd need to measure because the pH can be anything depending on the ingredients used, and the pH can and should be adjusted to acceptable levels. For my shampoo I use a proper pH meter, not strips, just so I can measure more accurately. I've never even used my meter to measure the pH of the soap I make.
OK. My very first soaps were on the verge of Hot Process, which means normally the saponification has finished when molding, and afterwards I still haven't have high pH even with CP. Do you know why it is so ? Can it depends on the recipe, or rather the temperature?No, it does change. But it changes from 14 to about 10-ish. Certainly no lower than 9.
weeeeell, I may be smart , but I know I'm a beginner, therefore I have a lot to learn!You are very welcome! A lot of people become upset when they hear that their soap isn't as low a pH as their strips tell them and won't believe their strips aren't accurate, I'm glad you're not one of them and that you're open to new information.
I do know that soaps made with different oils have different pH levels, depending on the oils used. Heat will also speed up saponification, which brings the pH down as the lye gets used up. If it gels, or if you cook the batter (hot process), this speeds up the process and the lye gets used up faster. As soon as the lye is completely used up, the pH from that point on won't change very much. If the batter is still liquid, the pH will still be pretty high just because the free lye in the batter makes the pH higher.OK. My very first soaps were on the verge of Hot Process, which means normally the saponification has finished when molding, and afterwards I still haven't have high pH even with CP. Do you know why it is so ? Can it depends on the recipe, or rather the temperature?
I like your attitude!weeeeell, I may be smart , but I know I'm a beginner, therefore I have a lot to learn!
I also remember my physics lessons, and pH paper didn't range from 1 to 15 then, so I guess the kind I use is not very accurate. Or chemists would not use pH-meters.
I understand people can feel pride in what they do, but they have to have sound reasons for it; if they based their pride on a wrong pH measure, if they are intellectually honest they have to accept (even by checking on the internet) and take no offense...
Personally, if someone comes and kindly EXPLAIN why I'm wrong, I certainly hope I'll accept it...
Well, thanks again for this shared knowledge,
Happy bubbles!
Stéphanie
The contents of your strainer looks like grated cucumber, and now I want tzatziki!Thanks for the input, so I have a better idea what to expect from the soap and how it cures.
The “milk” was 16% oats in water, soaked, puréed, and filtered through a tea strainer (that held back all of the bran). The filtrate was smooth without specks (and green b/c pandan):
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I blended 33%ppo of this pandan-oat milk to the oils, the added lye was at 43% concentration. I was worrying if the resultant lye concentration (23%) wouldn't be a bit on the low side, but the batter behaved nice and thickened up quickly. Unmoulding after 14 hours was possible, still soft, but kept shape and already felt like soap (rather than oily). The pieces now weigh 157.3 g, I'll watch how it'll go on.
ETA: LOL I just noticed that the pandan stained that beautiful white silicone mould! Guess it's a good thing that natural greens aren't very long-lasting!?
Get some tile keychains and attach to everything and tie to your phoneLMAO I am glad I'm not alone. Usually not EOs but my vapes. I'm constantly losing them. I wish they had built in alarm/location. I mean whenever I lose my phone, I just tell the Google lady to find it. I need this for my vapes, pens, hearing aides, everything.
Har har har. Well played.What indeed puzzles me a bit...
One of these days I will stop experimenting with recipes, but I’m not quite there yet. Here’s some soap I made yesterday using a tried and true lard-based recipe that has a good dose of OO. I usually soap this recipe between 85 and 90F and 35% lye concentration, but started this batch with everything at 73F and used 40% lye concentration. Wowsers! I planed the tops because they were uneven, but there was no ash. The batter stayed fluid for a quite a long time
So beautiful!!! I was happy to hear you keep playing around with recipes too. I can’t stop tweaking
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You’re work space is soooo INVITING! I love it . It’s a true art galleryUsually I make myself do “chores” before the joy of soap cutting. But today all I have for myself is throwing laundry in the washer and playing with soap dough before I get to cut FOUR! I’m super excited for my workday!!!
Recently someone on here responded to a photo of my workspace saying they’d be there all the time. I keep hearing that in my head. I feel really grateful!
(Dishes gotta wait cause saponification yada yada...)
That's happened to meI got everything out to make soap and then realised I didn't have enough lye - so I'm off to get some...
Gorgeous! Looks like neapolitan ice cream!!Today I cut my bubblegum soap. Look at this beauty, I am in love with it.
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