Irish Lass - do you get a hot gel circle in the middle of your soap (that's my issue with honey)?
As the good Gent said, what you ended up with is partial gel. That's something I try to avoid by encouraging gel (i.e., insulating my mold and placing it in a warm place to hold the heat in).
I need to mention right here, though, that when making honey soaps, one needs to be very mindful as to how they go about their soaping procedure and also how they go about encouraging full gel, because of the overheating issues that honey is known to cause.
For what it's worth, the procedure that I use with mine- birthed from a fair bit of experimentation with my formulas and chosen lye concentration- works like a charm for me and my formulas. I can't guarantee that it will work with other formulas and/or other lye solutions, but for what it's worth, this is my procedure when making soaps with honey:
1) I soap with a 33% lye solution (which contains dissolved silk, as well as honey that was added in the manner explained in my previous post above)
2) My oils/hard fats are completely melted and are somewhere between 110F-115F when I add my warm (about 105F - 110F) honeyed lye solution to them.
3) I bring the batter to a nice med-thick trace and pour into my wooden mold, cover it with its wooden cover, plus 3 cloth diapers (or 'nappies' as our British members say) draped over top, then place it in a pre-warmed 110F oven, which I then turn off as soon as my soap is inside. My oven has a wonderfully convenient digital temp display that shows me how hot the temp is getting as the oven is heating up. Once it shows a reading of 110F, I turn the oven off.
4) Once my soap is in the oven and the oven turned off, I close the oven door and leave it alone to do its thing overnight (I soap at night before I go to bed).
5) Sometime the next day, usually about 18 hours later, I unmold and cut.
I get full gel every time with no overheating issues, and my finished soap does not have any weeping honey spots.
Oh, I should probably mention that I use 1 tablespoon of honey ppo.
RE: dissolving silk. It's as Carolyn said- you need to dissolve it in lye solution, preferably hot lye solution if you want it to dissolve in a timely manner. If you like to use silk and to soap cool on a regular basis, you should look into master-batching your lye solution. That's what I do. I make a up enough lye solution (with silk) to last me through 7 or 8 batches of soap. Lye solution keeps very well for a very long time (over a year, at least) as long as it is properly covered/stored.
IrishLass
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