Easy Natural Soapmaking: How To Make Natural Soaps That Rejuvenate, Revitalize, And Nourish Your Skin. by Sayers Autumn
Author:Sayers, Autumn [Sayers, Autumn]
Language: eng
Format: epub, azw
Published: 2018-12-20T16:00:00+00:00
Step 1:
Wearing your protective gear, weigh out the potassium hydroxide and add it into the sage tea. Stir well until all flakes are dissolved. Set the solution aside while you prepare the oils.
Step 2:
Weigh your oil and melt them in a crockpot including your infused oil.
The heat setting should be low. Stir your soap with a spatula for a few minutes.
Step 3:
Hand-blend your soap in successions of 30 seconds. Once trace has begun let it sit to rest for several minutes before stirring with the blender again. Your soap should begin to trace after about half an hour
You may stir in your honey water solution after your soap has traced.
Step 4:
Your heating temperature should be on low to cook your soap. Check on your soap periodically every 30 min to an hour giving your soap a stir each time. The soap will begin to gel. Keep giving your soap a stir to make sure it is all blending in evenly.
After a couple of hours, your soap should be thick and shiny with the consistency of petroleum jelly
Cook for another 4-6 hours and then let your soap batch cool until it isn’t burning hot. Once cooled dilute your soap with more distilled water.
Step 5:
To figure out the dilution amount with this recipe, weigh the fully cooked soap paste.
The cooked soap paste in this batch weighed about 26 oz.
Multiply the weight of the fully cooked soap 20 percent to figure out how much glycerin is needed. Next, multiply the weight of the soap by 80 percent to figure out how much distilled water you need to add.
In the recipe, you will be using 5.2 ounces of vegetable glycerin and 20.8 ounces of distilled water.
Combine the glycerin and distilled water in a large pot and bring to a low boil. Scoop your soap batch into the boiled glycerin and water solution, Stir everything together so that they blend together evenly. Once thoroughly stirred you can turn off your heat and allow your soap to cool to room temperature. Feel free to stir your soap while it cools.
After your soap is fully cooled, you are going to bring the soap batch back to a boil and then allow to fully allow to cool again. If there are lumps in your soap stir or mash until they are all gone.
The soap batch will remain in the pot for several days until it has completely dissolved into liquid.
Once your soap is liquid you may pour into a dispenser or container of your choice. Your soap is ready for immediate use. Yay!
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Easy Natural Soapmaking: How To Make Natural Soaps That Rejuvenate, Revitalize, And Nourish Your Skin. by Sayers Autumn.azw
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