A different soap-making-recipe
A different soap-making-recipe - Sugar + Cornstarch = ? Author: Lisa Chambers
To me, soapmaking is a never ending learning process. There's
just so many different ingredients and techniques to try- the
possibilities are endless.
I have always kept my mind and eyes
open for new ideas. Well, I also love to cook and where better a
place to come up with new ideas than your very own kitchen?
I'm
not sure if anyone else has tried this or thought of it yet, but
for me a new trick popped up and I wanted to share my experience
with other soapmakers.
Having a sensitivity to coconut oil in soaps and also having
temperamental skin in general, has kept me stingy with lathering
oils in my soapmaking recipes.
However, people are so used to
the abundance of lather usually associated with bought soaps
(since they cheat with sodium laurel sulfate), that a more
"lotion-like" lather is harder for some to except. Besides,
let's face it- who doesn't like big fluffy bubbles?
Because of
this I have always tried to increase lather in my soaps through
other natural additives. A different soap-making-recipe
The addition of various types of powdered milks not only adds
the nourishing we all know is famous for gorgeous skin, but has
seemed to help somewhat in adding more of a lather and
contributed a certain creaminess to it. Silk fibers added to my
lye water gave even more positive results for me. I always knew
silk provided wonderful "moisture locking properties" and a
truly luxurious feel- but since I felt how it significantly
increased my soaps ability to lather, it quickly became one of
my favorite indulgences. Then there's the other trick of the
trade... Sugar. Whether dissolved in lye-water or it's presence
enters in from the addition of honey in my soap batches, sugar
has displayed outstanding results. As a matter of fact, when I
first began soaping, castor oil was almost mandatory in all my
soap recipes due to the rare ricinoleic acid in it that
contributes to lather without being nearly as drying as
typically used "lathering oils". I have found the combination of
silk and sugar works so well together that even though I still
respect and welcome castor oil for it's wonderful content of
essential fatty acids, it is no longer absolutely
necessary for me to soap with. A different soap-making-recipe
Well, good thing I'm a "label reader"! One day while baking my
husband a special treat, I happened to glance at the ingredients
list on a bag of confectionery sugar. "Ingredients: sugar and
cornstarch". As with many addicted soapers, I have a personal
problem with often swiping items from our food cabinets to sneak
into soap- if it's in the kitchen, it's game! I have tried
cornstarch in my soap before and it was in fact really nice.
(Cornstarch is soothing to the skin and sometimes used as a
replacement for the feel that silk gives in vegan soaps.) A different soap-making-recipe
I decided to give it a shot. When my soap got to a very
thin trace I added about one tablespoon confectionery sugar per
pound of base oils, attempting to add it carefully and space it
out around the bowl for easier mixing. I then put my stick
blender to it and mixed it very well, making sure that it was
evenly incorporated into the mix and no clumps were left behind.
I noticed it did thicken up a tad, but not so much that it was
that hard to manage getting my soap into it's mold when it was
ready. Once curing time was up and I tried it, I jumped up and
down like a kid at Christmas. It seemed to have the effects a
soap would have from the batches I would take the extra steps to
dissolve my sugar in water before introducing the lye,
and the added feel that cornstarch can bring! The only
difference is that was a lot easier and faster than having to
heat up your water and stir like a mad person to dissolve your
sugar, and then wait for it to cool down a little before adding
my lye. It seemed to be a truly effective time saver.
A different soap-making-recipe
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A different soap-making-recipe

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