Peachy Clean Soap
Well-Known Member
This is a good tutorial on how to test for alkalinity.
Wonderful tutorial.
This is a good tutorial on how to test for alkalinity.
His book Scientific Soap making is well written and informative.Wonderful tutorial.
I looked on amazon to purchase it' found a few used ones w/ a reduced price.His book Scientific Soap making is well written and informative.
So True' as i'm learning. Dr. Keven Dunn's video above @ end after all said & testing done on how to test if soap is lye heavy' he mentions at end of video to simply do the zap test & train our selves to be able to " feel the zap & taste if soap is lye heavy' ( I'v known about this zap test' never thought to apply it to older soap ) so I thought I'd put Docts theory to test! I had a loaf other then the "pictured one above" I was in Q. about & It works! I could feel just a ever so "slight-zing" & " taste was defiantly different", Also Ive discovered why ive had a prob w/ my "heavy lye" as of late! one reason is my " super fat was to low & 2%" & my "Balance" was off on lye. As I continue on my Soap Journey I'm happy to report my last few batches have been in "Balance" regarding lye as the good Dr. Dunn refers to "weight" lol .It's the age old question with testing - at what pH is it bad? Does a perfectly fine Castile have the same pH as a perfectly fine salt bar? Or are you testing for excess lye instead of pH? That's a useful test for seeing if a soap is safe. pH on its own does not tell you if it is safe ( Is not lye heavy )
The zap test is an easy, effective, and (when done correctly) totally safe method of testing for excess lye in soap
It's the age old question with testing - at what pH is it bad? Does a perfectly fine Castile have the same pH as a perfectly fine salt bar? Or are you testing for excess lye instead of pH? That's a useful test for seeing if a soap is safe. pH on its own does not tell you if it is safe (IE not lye heavy)
The zap test is an easy, effective, and (when done correctly) totally safe method of testing for excess lye in soap
I know this. But (and it is a very big but) how many people would actually do it correctly? I can guarantee that not everyone who talks about the pH of their soap has even read anything by Kevin Dunn, let alone follow the instructions.Kevin Dunn has great instructions on how to do it properly in Scientific Soap Making. You can easily get the chemicals needed to do it at home. (Well mostly easy, reagent grade ethanol can be hard to find due to COVID). The most expensive piece of equipment is a scale that reads to 0.00 g. The procedure is line with what the large cooperations are required to do.
If a bar of soap has a pH of 11.5 I think something might have gone wrong and it is most likely lye heavy anyway. If a bar is not lye heavy and is in all other ways well made and a reasonable bar of soap, it is not very likely to be pH 11.5 or higher, based on the average soap being 9 to 10 on the scale.
Well thank you for your responses! I attribute some of this behaviour to my recent insane soap insanity - I cannot seem to stop thinking about soap - so it was foolish and I did rinse my tongue after I realized it was burning a bit. I think I was making an effort to be 300% sure there was no zap - and then when I did wait long enough to feel a sort of burning feeling - I felt convinced that must be proof they might be lye heavy.....a sign of an impending zap. But honestly, I did try ph strips - and im not sure of their accuracy - they all showed a 9/10 ph - which was different than the distilled water I used. I also tried some red cabbage juice - which turned a nice blue. I have made soaps for a couple of years but it was not till this year that I seem to be having some kind of Soap fever & I cannot stop making batches of soap - I have 11 dozen batches in my spare room now - and what am I going to do with them? Helppppp!!! and the more I learn - the more I realize different things that can go wrong - but I've never had a lye heavy batch......I had no reason to believe any of the soaps would be lye heavy - I used soapcalc.net, they are olive oil 35%, coconut 25%, shea 20%, Cocoa Butter 8%, Avocado 6%, Castor 6%, with a 33% lye concentration, CP soap, and there were no issues with any of the batches........I do feel reassured that the overall soap could be an irritating substance......and that a lye heavy batch has to be an actual zap - Thanks!
Wellllll.........after reading the way it sounds - its ridiculous. I am an over worrier. and I've gone soap insane. and I wanted ABSOLUTE proof there was not zap.....so when I experienced a teeny tingle after a little while my natural urge was to doubt my soap - and even now I am resisting the urge to sneak and lick of all of the soaps again....omg. my husband has commented there is soap stuff accumulating in the kitchen - I told him I am contributing to science!
Thank you for taking the time to provide some reassurance
The "zap" of a zap test is unmistakeable. "Tingling", "burning" and "bitterness" are signs that your soap is not done and you should rinse your mouth well and spit. If you are in doubt of whether or not your LS is ready to dilute, you can wait a day or two for it to finish saponifying. Soap has a way of doing its thing whether you help it along or not.I dont know how the battery zap feels like and i desperately need an answer..
The "zap" of a zap test is unmistakeable. "Tingling", "burning" and "bitterness" are signs that your soap is not done and you should rinse your mouth well and spit. If you are in doubt of whether or not your LS is ready to dilute, you can wait a day or two for it to finish saponifying. Soap has a way of doing its thing whether you help it along or not.
I'm not a fan of the zap test. It's a tool every soaping should have in their toolbox only as needed. Zap testing every batch puts you at risk of compromising your taste buds. I find using phenolphthalein drops to be certainly safer and also the most reliable. Even then, I may have to wait a day or two or three before diluting the soap.
Read what Kenna of Modern Soapmaking has to say about zap testing here (scroll down):
HOW TO pH TEST HANDMADE SOAP
I dont know how the battery zap feels like and i desperately need an answer..
I find using phenolphthalein drops to be certainly safer and also the most reliable.
With normal LS the paste normally tests clear at the end of the cook. If not, keep cooking or just cover it and wait for a day or 2 or 3 to finish saponification. In the case of Carrie Petersen's GLS, (forward to the 5:00 marker) the batch tests fuscia right after becoming soap. Wait an hour and the soap tests clear. Read more here:Can you share more about how you use these? I've seen a lot of people recommending them so have been trying to source some, but when I read more into it (including that document you linked) it seems that it will show as pink for anything over about 8. Do you wait for it to stop being pink to count the soap as done?
You made me giggle lolWell thank you for your responses! I attribute some of this behaviour to my recent insane soap insanity - I cannot seem to stop thinking about soap - so it was foolish and I did rinse my tongue after I realized it was burning a bit. I think I was making an effort to be 300% sure there was no zap - and then when I did wait long enough to feel a sort of burning feeling - I felt convinced that must be proof they might be lye heavy.....a sign of an impending zap. But honestly, I did try ph strips - and im not sure of their accuracy - they all showed a 9/10 ph - which was different than the distilled water I used. I also tried some red cabbage juice - which turned a nice blue. I have made soaps for a couple of years but it was not till this year that I seem to be having some kind of Soap fever & I cannot stop making batches of soap - I have 11 dozen batches in my spare room now - and what am I going to do with them? Helppppp!!! and the more I learn - the more I realize different things that can go wrong - but I've never had a lye heavy batch......I had no reason to believe any of the soaps would be lye heavy - I used soapcalc.net, they are olive oil 35%, coconut 25%, shea 20%, Cocoa Butter 8%, Avocado 6%, Castor 6%, with a 33% lye concentration, CP soap, and there were no issues with any of the batches........I do feel reassured that the overall soap could be an irritating substance......and that a lye heavy batch has to be an actual zap - Thanks!
Wellllll.........after reading the way it sounds - its ridiculous. I am an over worrier. and I've gone soap insane. and I wanted ABSOLUTE proof there was not zap.....so when I experienced a teeny tingle after a little while my natural urge was to doubt my soap - and even now I am resisting the urge to sneak and lick of all of the soaps again....omg. my husband has commented there is soap stuff accumulating in the kitchen - I told him I am contributing to science!
Thank you for taking the time to provide some reassurance
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