(This post was last modified: 07-08-2015, 07:57 PM by DapperDragon.)
(07-04-2015, 05:14 AM)ezlovan Wrote: Lard is extremely underrated as a base ingredient for a bath soap. My favorite bath soap, Pig Trail, uses lard as the main ingredient. The only reason we don't lard in more of our soaps is customer expectations. So many are hesitant to use a non-tallow based or Vegan bath soap.
Is that Pig Trail as in the winding, motion sickness inducing roads to the U of A across Northern Arkansas?
(06-28-2015, 05:37 PM)RzaRazor Wrote: That's interesting, I think olive, coconut and palm would be the most practical for me. What proportions of each ingredient do use and forgive me but how do you actually make it if you dont' mind me asking? Is it all melted in a big pot or what? My experience is very limited.
The first one I did was 50% olive, 25% palm and 25% coconut. You can make it hot process (cook it in a crock pot until the soap is finished) or cold process (combine your ingredients thoroughly then let it saponify on its own time).
Hot process has the benefit of being done right away, though I found that high olive oil soaps benefit from a long cure anyway. The downside is that it becomes lumpy and difficult to mold.
Cold process takes longer and requires at least of month of curing to let the excess water evaporate for good results. But the soap "batter" is liquid at the point of pouring so you can mold it easily, or mix colors, etc.