Homemade Soap
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Try this Homemade Soap recipe, or contribute your own.
Yield: 1 Servings Ready in 1 hours
Cuisine: AmericanMain Ingredient:
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| Half gallon platis container |
| Mold with cover ( a heavy |
| ***safety glasses |
| Sheet of freezer paper |
| 8 ozPulverized oatmeal -or- |
| 2 ozDried herbs/flowers |
| 24 ozCoconut oil (health food |
| EQUIPMENT |
| Thermometer, meat or candy |
| 4 ozCornmeal -or- |
| Rubber spatula or long |
| 4 ozFragrance/essential oil if |
| 12 ozLye (Red Devil, found beside |
| 24 ozOlive oil (do not use |
| Stainless steel or enamel |
| INGREDIENTS |
| ***rubber gloves |
| 38 ozVegetable oil (Crisco solid, |
| BOTANICALS IF DESIRED |
| Two large towels or a |
| 32 ozWater (My well water is hard |
| Scale that will weigh up to |
Homemade Soap Preparation
Dissolve lye in water. This is best done under an exhaust fan or outdoor. Stand back and avoid fumes. Set aside to cool. In the stainless steel stock pot melt the Crisco and coconut oil. Add the olive oil and allow to cool. Grease your soap mold now. Some soap makers prefer silicone spray but my purpose in making my own soap is to avoid using things like that. I use Crisco. Fit the freezer paper into the bottom and two sides of the mold to make removing the soap easier. Grease the paper. When both the oils and lye mixtures have cooled to 90* you are ready to blend. You can speed cooling by using a sink of cool water and setting the mixtures in to cool. If one cools too much you can warm it in a sink of warm water. You need to have 10-40 minutes of uninterrupted time now. Slowly pour the water/lye mixture into the oils. Youll quickly see a reaction. Stir in a consistent manner. Dont beat as you would eggs but stir quickly enough to keep the mixture in constant motion. If youre creating bubbles in the mixture you are going too fast. Continue to stir until the soap "traces." Youll feel a slight difference in consistency as the soap begins to saponify. When tracing has occurred youll be able to drizzle a small amount of soap back onto the top of the soap in the pan and it will leave a trace before sinking back into the rest of the mixture. After a batch or two youll recognize when tracing has occurred by the feel of the soap while stirring. If you want to add botanicals/grains to your soap now is the time to do it. Remove one cup of soap (doesnt need to be exactly a cup, whatever it takes to mix with the botanical/grains) and stir in with whatever youre adding in a separate bowl. Oatmeal makes a nice complexion soap, corn meal adds texture to scrub dirty hands. As soon as its mixed pour it back into the pan and stir. If youre going to add essential or fragrance oil pour it in slowly now. Continue to stir until well mixed then pour into prepared mold. Cover mold, wrap it in towels or blanket to keep warm and leave it undisturbed for 18 hours. No peaking! The soap will rise to approximately 160* and then cool down. Dont uncover until its cooled. Allow soap to sit in the uncovered mold for 12 hours. Loosen sides and turn over onto a clean sideboard. You should cut your bars from the large mold within three days. You can cut it at any time but three days seems to be a good window. The soap doesnt become difficult to cut and smaller bars dry faster. Allow to cure 3 weeks before using. Posted to MM-Recipes Digest V4 #016, by wannerl@seiu.org on Wed, 15 Jan 1997.
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