LilyJo
Well-Known Member
Thank you both, will leave it alone and keep my fingers crossed. I wonder if I didnt blend it for long enough but I will see what happens and have another go in a day or so.
This is a tried and true recipe that I've made several times. Others have tried it with excellent results. Be sure to keep the bar high and dry between uses by using a soap-saver-type soap dish. Tweak to your heart's delight! (Like, do I even need to say that?! )
ZANY’S NO SLIME OLIVE OIL CASTILE
Ingredients: Olive oil, water, sea salt, sodium bicarbonate.
1) MAKE FAUX SEAWATER - Use for water portion of the lye solution.
1 quart warm water
1 Tablespoon sea salt
1 Tablespoon sodium bicarbonate (baking soda)
I make up a quart at a time and store it in the fridge until I need it.
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2) MAKE LYE SOLUTION - Mix and allow to cool to 35°C - 40°C (100°F - 110°F).
1.7:1 Water to Lye Ratio (Note decimal and colon)
0% Super Fat/Lye Discount
Notes: I’ve tried 2:1 and 1.5:1. 1.5:1 gets almost too hard and 1:2 is okay but a bit slimey, so, for me, 1.7:1 is the ideal. Olive oil is high in unsaponifiables; so 0% SF works best to reduce slippery slime.
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Prepare lye solution and set it in the sink to cool. Weigh olive oil into soap pot. Warm to 35°C - 40°C (100°F - 110°F). Combine when lye and oils are within -12°C (10°F) of each other. SB on and off to emulsion stage (5 - 25 minutes, depending on grade of olive oil.) Slowly pour into mold. Tap to remove bubbles. Spritz lightly with alcohol. Cover with plastic wrap. Insulate. Leave soap undisturbed for 12-24 hours.
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UNMOLD in 12-24 hours
CUT Day 2
CURE Ready to ship in 2 weeks. 6 weeks is best. The longer the cure the better the soap.
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Unscented, this soap is suitable for babies, sensitive skin, and for cancer patients undergoing radiation. Add 5% castor oil and 10% coconut oil for bubbles and an even milder soap.
If adding fragrance, add 0.85 oz. FO or 0.5% EO /PPO (Per 500 grams) to the castor oil an hour or so ahead of time (or overnight) and a teaspoon PPO of dry ingredient of choice -- corn starch, oat flour, arrowroot powder, White Kaolin Clay, etc. -- to help “stick” the fragrance.
VARIATIONS: Infuse Calendula Petals (yellow) or Bay Leaves (green) in oil ahead of time. Strain. Use up to 40% in the batch to add mildness and color.
No, "Soap" is Not shampoo.Is this a shampoo bar??
This is a Castile soap. It can be used as a shampoo bar. Try it with 80% olive oil + 20% coconut oil (Option: 15% coconut & 5% castor) to see if your hair likes it. Make sure to use an acid rinse (ACV or Lemon Juice) to restore the acid mantle of the scalp. Rinse thoroughly with increasingly cool water until it's as cold as you can stand it to be sure to remove all the soap residue.Is this a shampoo bar??
I started soaping in 2003 when there was a lot of information on line, mostly from people who had been at it for quite a while before me and learned from others who came before them. Many members, like Anne Watson for one, wrote the first books on modern soapmaking. There were several other forums and Yahoo Groups like that. One of the best was an Australian forum that featured other B & B products, not just soap. One of the best books ever, Soap Naturally by Patrizia Garzena and Marina Tadiello, was a result of the information and recipes shared on that forum.Anyway I'm a big history nut and I noticed that Zany and a few of you had done research into Castile and other styles of soap so my question is, where do you find such information? I've only been able to find the most shallow of references to them. Thanks.
You're welcome. Please read: Post #1Thanks, going to try this. Does it have to cure for a long time?
but at 48 hours already is surprisingly bubbly.
Are you using this soap right away or letting it cure first?
I went through a phase to learn to make some old-fashioned soaps: Pine Tar, Brown Windsor, Aleppo, old-fashion lye soap, transparent soaps -- although I've yet to try "Pears". I'm working on a recipe but I'm not 'there' yet. Details elude me. So if you find a recipe for that in Soap Through the Ages I hope you'll share!
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