I think it did rise! I had marked a line on a bamboo skewer after I added the gallon of wood ash water, and marked the half and quarter points. It never got down to half.
The rising happens when carbon dioxide is released as you cook the wood ash soap (as the Potassium carbonate in the wood ash lye converts to Potassium hydroxide, it releases carbon dioxide).
Trivia: A little carbon dioxide from the air will react during the cook too, which you might notice if you cook a "modern" soap in an open pot
I rubbed a tiny little bit of the soap residue off my pot and was able to roll it into a ball between my fingers. No glove . It felt... creamy, condition-y, slightly slippery. Perhaps what I would imagine hair conditioner with cornstarch would feel like? Not runny, but definitely mushable, though would stay in a ball shape if I put it on the counter.
Then I turned the faucet on into the soap cooking pot and I got suds! I used a dishwashing wand brush type thing and wiped around the sides, it all came clean and didn’t leave any kind of greasy oily feel on the pot.
Nice!
You've gone and made yourself some soap!
"... slightly slippery ..."
A caution: Use that "slippery" feeling as a reminder to check for free alkali (with any soap that you make)
The reason: While soap is naturally slippery (hard soap used to be used to stop wooden drawers from sticking), lye heavy soap will be extra slippery (and it can feel harder to rinse off) as it is converting your skin oils into soap. This is not necessarily something that you might immediately feel, unless you have a cut on your skin, then it will sting.
Irish Lass posted a method here, which is valid for any soap type (as long as it is plain soap [such as yours], without any ingredients you are allergic to):
https://www.soapmakingforum.com/threads/how-to-properly-safely-conduct-the-zap-tongue-test.63199/
Someone else mentioned they make KOH shaving soap, (I think it was DeeAnna), and I thought that would be an appropriate use for this soap.
There are so many good uses for a KOH soap, especially one made right from scratch!
(Although I do believe that you would have a bit of a blend, with a little sodium soap from the added salt in there too).
If you like the feel of it on your skin, then it could also be made into a foaming body scrub by mixing in sugar, salt or your favourite (gentle) exfoliant.
Just an aside, I would still be inclined to take at least a portion of it in paste form by stirring it once a day for the next couple of weeks.
The texture will change (you might like it
)
Anyway, count me impressed!