Saturday, July 11, 2009

Batch four-the pretty one :-)

I made my own recipe today! It's mostly olive oil. I also added TTO for fragrance and some olive oil and lanolin for moisture. Lets see how this goes. I did something new. I added some color! I'm so excited to see what happen. I'm sure I've messed up by using food color but I don't have soap coloring yet and it was just a test batch. I used HP again, I think I may have over cooked a tiny bit and extra soponified a bit, I removed those pieces. I had the perfect box for my one pound batch, I can't wait to cut it!

Boo to small batches!

I tried out a one pound batch and I do not like them! It didn't work well with my stick blender and while it showed a nice thick trace in a couple minutes it quickly started to seperate again! I've never had that happen. I'd rather happily make 2-3 pounds than try for 1 pound or less and be annoyed.

Update on batch 4 soon to come.

Tuesday, July 7, 2009

Batch three

I mad a quick batch today, 5 pounds of HP milk soap. No fragrance. I made it in a square loaf. I used the same recipe as before substituting the milk for the water. I use a stick blender for the first time and I am impressed! It cut my trace time down a TON! It had been taking an hour to trace. It took around 6 minutes today. I'm sold and will never make soap again without it. It took a bit longer to cook than I expected but I was in a hurry so maybe it just felt that way. I much prefer the HP to the CP....I like to see results sooner than 6 weeks. I can't help myself. I used a mini bar of the HP batch I made before and I got clean hands and lots of white fluffy suds!! I'm so proud of myself :-)

As far as my recipe. I need to adjust it as I think it's a bit drying. I'll play around with that today.

Wednesday, July 1, 2009

Mini Batch two

This batch was totally experimental based on conversation I was reading. I used milk and a slowcooker. The milk actually would have gone well but when I was nearly done mixing I got a bit over confident and pour in my lye too fast. The bars turned out very nice. I popped them out of the pan but I couldn't do that very well/easily from the muffin pans I used. I will have to order some pan from a site I found if I plan to do HP instead of CP. These bars do seem much easier to store since they don't have to be laid as flat or be left alone. I put them in a little basket and will keep them there for a week or so. I may alternate between the two processes as I can see the things I woulodn't be able to so with HP(as far as making my bars look pretty). It took an hour to trace so I'm guessing that is normal. The burned milk actually doesn't look terrible. The bars are tan and not much darker than the ones I made with water. Again, I'm assuming the olive oil makes them a darker shade. I also added honey and cocoa to these bars. They are unscented but would be very pretty with the brown marbeling if they were in bar instead of button form.

I will probably make a couple more batches of milk soap for the simple reason that I have too much milk in my freezer and I need it gone! I bought a little too much on sale a couple months ago. I'd also really like to learn how to get the lye in without burning.

Tuesday, June 30, 2009

Batch one- bars

My bars stayed in the tubes for 24 hours. I then put them in the freezer overnight. I must say I'm pretty proud of my bars. They are not perfect but I made them! They have small specks in them. I think they are air bubbles and not lye. I read that mixing at high speeds can cause this. I had my mixer on level 8 for about 15 minutes before I read that part, oops. Now to find someplace to cure them. I'm making another batch tonight.

Sunday, June 28, 2009

Batch one

I made my very first batch of soap. I used the Soap Essentials Bar II recipe in The Soapmaker's Companion. The recipe calls for 201 grams of Lye, 19 ounces of water, 21 ounces of olive oil, 16 ounces of coconut oil, 14 ounces of palm oil, 12 grams GSE and I added an ounce of eucalyptus oil for scent. For molds I used 2-12 inch pieces of 3 inch PVC that I rubbed vaseline in to prevent sticking. To keep them insulated I put them into a water cooler and stuffed a towel and some newspaper around the sides. I covered the top with another big towel.

I think I did okay for my first batch. I now see why I need to speak with others who make soap. I had so many questions and messed up a bit. I'm still not sure how this soap came out. One of the things that shocked me was the color. My bars will be yellowish. I thought it was my fast pouring of the lye mixture since I have seen white bars. I read afterwards that some grades of olive oil can produce yellow bars so maybe there is still hope! It also took much longer than I thought to trace. I stirred for about an hour. I know that GSE makes the soponification process take a little longer. I also hope that I didn't will myself to see a non-existent trace out of exhaustion. I'll know more tomorrow night. I am still hoping to be able to cut my bars and use them one day.

My mistakes and things I would change :
I learned you can not just dump the lye into the water and hope for the best. You must pour slowly while mixing or it cakes at the bottom and sticks HARD. I ruined the glass jar I bought today as well as my lye solution. It had to be remade.

Using a large pot for a smaller batch is not a good idea. It makes things much more difficult to handle. The pot I have would probably be a bit large for even a 12 pound recipe(I was using a 4 pound recipe). I will be going to find a glass bowl to use instead.

Hand mixing is hard! I partially hand mixed. I used a handheld mixer but the pot was so large I still ended up stirring. In the future I will use my kitchen aid. I will just need to find a extra bowl for it.

The lye solution needs to be poured into the oils slowly. If my soap fails that will have been part of the reason. I went more slowly than I did with the lye and water but still a bit fast.

Temperature is important! Another possibility, if my soap fails, is the temperature. After I had to remake my lye solution I grew impatient. I didn't allow the lye to cool enough and began mixing at around 115ish degrees. It should be added, according to my book, at 80-100 degrees.

The PVC pipe I bought was 5 feet. I cut it into 2-12 inch pieces and 2-18 inch pieces. Next time I will use 1-18 inch piece for a recipe this size. One pipe is only half full. I wonder if that will effect the soap?

I really shouldn't make soap at midnight. It's a process that can't be rushed.