High in Organic Extra Virgin Olive Oil. No palm oil, tallow, or lard included. No artificial color or fragrance. This soap recipe is as followed:
Ingredients
61.60 oz. Organic Extra Virgin Olive Oil
36.50 oz. Distilled Water
34.55 oz. Organic Extra Virgin Coconut Oil
13.90 oz. Food Grade Sodium Hydroxide
Lye Discount 5%
Preparation:
Step 1: Wear safety glasses, gloves, and shoes and of course clothes.
Step 2: Have vinegar on hand.
Step 3: Weight the distilled water. First weight the container or the cup. Press tare to zero the scale and pour the distilled water in the cup.
Step 4: Weight the Sodium Hydroxide.
Step 5: Set the distilled water on the stove with the fan on or in the sink near the window or outside out of kids and pets reach.
Step 6: With caution, pour the Sodium Hydroxide in the water as you stir. Hold your breath for 30 sec to avoid inhaling the fume that will come from the lye solution. Stir for 30 seconds.
NB: Do NOT add water to the Sodium Hydroxide. You will produce a small volcano in your kitchen.
Step 7: After 2 min, return to stir the lye solution again to avoid lye clumps at the bottom of the distilled water.
NB: Place the lye solution near a widow or outside, stand away from the wind direction to avoid breathing the fume from the lye solution.
Step 8: Weight the coconut oil and pour in the pan. If possible, weight directly in the soap pan.
NB: Make the soap in a stainless steel pan (minimum 8Qt for this recipe). The deeper is the pan, the better it is to avoid splatter.
Do NOT use aluminum pan. The lye will eat it.
Step 9: Set on the stove at low heat.
Step 10: Weight the Olive Oil. Set it aside.
NB: Avoid weighting all the oils together on the scale. Weight them separately for more accuracy.
Step 12: Stir the lye solution. Let it cool. If working inside, set the lye solution in the kitchen sink filled with cold water.
NB: Do NOT use the same spoon or spatula to stir the lye solution and the oils. Use silicone spatulas in each one of them or silicone spatula in the lye solution and wood spatula in the oils.
Step 13: Stir the Coconut Oil in the soap pan. As 2/3 is melted, turn the heat off and let the warm oil melt the rest. Add the Olive Oil.
NB: Avoid applying excessive heat to your oils. They are quality oils minimally processed and full of nutrients and skin properties that you want in your soap.
Step 16: Stir the oils and the lye solution times to times.
Step 17: Use two different thermometers, measure the temperature of both the lye solution and the oils in the soap pan. The target temperature range is 85 degree F to 100 degree F. The both don’t have to be at the same temperature but they need to fall within that range.
Step 19: When both the oils in the pan and the lye solution reach the same temperature range, rinse the thermometers with vinegar –water solution, wash them and set to dry as well as the spatula used to stir the lye and the container the lye was weighted in.
Step 20: In low stream, pour the lye solution in the soap pan while stirring the mixture in the pan.
Step 21: Grab a whisk and stir for 2 min.
Step 22: similarly to the thermometer, neutralize the lye in the cup, wash it and set to dry.
Step 23: Use a hand blender to blend the soap in the pan at low setting.
Step 24: Blend for 30 sec and whisk for 3min. then blend for 30sec again. Alternate blending and whisking the soap mixture.
Step 25: You can take a short break between. It should be fine.
Step 26: Prepare the mold. Line plastic and carton molds with plastic or freezer paper. If recycling oat meal box, grit box or milk box, no lining is needed. This recipe will produce about 146.55 oz. (9.16 Lbs.) of Soap. Therefore choose your mold accordingly. Wherever container you recycle, make sure is food grade, wash throughout and dry it.
Step 27: 30 min after the lye was added to the oils; the soap will thicken up and reach a lite trace. A trace is a stage where stirring the soap mixture leaves trace or waves, or dent on top of the soap mixture for few seconds. Aim for medium trace to avoid the soap mixture separating in the mold into lye and oils.
Step 28: At medium trace, pour the soap mixture to the mold(s).
Step 30: Cover with its cover and set aside on the counter out of kids reach and undisturbed.
Step 31: Add the utensils and bowls used in the soap preparation to the pan. Set under the kitchen cabinet or above the top cabinets for at least 3 days before cleaning them. Inside of them will be covered with soap that can be used for their cleaning. Wear gloves to clean them or let them sit for 3 weeks before cleaning.
Step 32: You can pick on soap in the mold if the cover is transparent as the soap undergoes the gel phase. The caramel color will start from the middle as the soap forms a hill at the middle and the color will expand to the edges of the box. After the saponification process, the top of the soap will even up. It is pretty amazing to see the different phases the soap mixture goes thought before turning into hard soap.
Step 33: After 24 hrs, open the box and tap the soap to check the firmness. If firm, remove from the mold (tear the box if using paper mold) and cut into bars with a knife on a clean surface.
Step 36: Cure the soap bars on a stainless rack or in a cartoon box for at least 3 weeks. Every week turn the soap bars to expose all the sides.
Step 37: After 6 weeks, store the bars in a box and close the top to protect them from dust.
Your beautiful Soap is ready for use after 3 weeks of curing.
As a reminder, the longer you wait, the firmer and milder it will get. Learn more on how to care for your soap in Products Care Section.
Enjoy your soap and Happy Soaping!
Leave a Comment
You must be logged in to post a comment.