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Alicia Suggested to me that we put the her first article up so that readers
coming late to the party would still have access to the information. Good
idea, wasn't it? So here it is....
Soap Basics
Hello, herbal people! I am so happy to be here, to be part of this great herbal
community. I’ve used herbs in soap as long as I’ve been making soap. Making soap
and working with herbs are two of my favorite activities and putting them
together is a special kind of happiness.
Tina has told me that many of you are already accomplished soapmakers, and that
many of you have never made soap at all. I want to start somewhere along that
continuum, in hopes of having something useful for everyone. In almost
everything I do, I believe that the basics are well revisited. I’m going to give
a very basic soapmaking procedure and formula, and elaborate on it by giving
instructions for a “folded” herbal soap.
Please Note – Although soapmaking is pretty simple once you know what you are
doing, you need to be sure to have everything you need before starting. In
Particular – Protection for your eyes and skin. Protective eyewear is an
immutable essential. I’m a wild and wooly type, eschewing garden gloves and even
shoes most of the time. And, I never make soap without eye protection. You also
need protective gloves, and regular old yellow kitchen gloves – with no holes –
are perfect.
An extremely useful basic set up for small batches of soap can most likely be
had with little effort. Gather two four-cup Pyrex measuring cups, a scale that
weighs at least to .25 ounces, a silicone spatula/scraper, a few small plastic
food storage containers or drawer organizers, and a hand towel. You’ll mix and
combine in the Pyrex cups, stir with the spatula, use the containers as molds,
and the towel as insulation. And don’t forget your eye and hand protection!
To make soap, you need to have lye, aka sodium hydroxide. If you quail at the
memory of “Grandma’s Lye Soap” take heart – time and trial has vastly improved
home made soap. Every oil and fat has a “saponification value” which is the
amount of lye it takes to turn it into soap. You use enough lye, mixed with
water, to saponify the blend of oils you are using. It is very important that
when you combine the lye and water that you always add the lye to the water and
not the other way around. The reaction between the lye and the water is
immediate and intense – making the solution heat up to near boiling almost
instantly. It will steam, and be sure not to inhale it. Some people wear a fume
mask, turn on a fan once the solution is made, or make the solution outside. For
these recipes, you’ll be working with about 2 – 2.25 ounces of lye to 5 ounces
of water, so the steam won’t be unmanageable. You can buy lye at some Big Box
stores, and you can always find it online through soap supply shops. It is worth
noting that Red Devil Lye, the brand that my Grandmothers and Great-grandmothers
used to make soap (once they stopped leaching water through wood ash to make lye
solution) has gone out of business. On the old metal cans there was even a
recipe for making soap! Apparently the misguided people who make Methamphetamine
– aka “crank” - use lye to make it and it has created all kinds of restrictions
on the lye business. So, lye is less easy to find, but you can manage it without
much fooling around.
These recipes use a technique that many call “room temperature cold process.” I
prefer to call it “energy exchange.” It has been customary procedure for some
time for home soapmakers to warm the oils to about 100° - 120° after the lye
solution has cooled to that range, and mix the two when the temperatures match.
I’ve found that for simple recipes, using the heat from the lye solution to warm
and/or melt the oils is a better way to use the energy generated by the
lye/water reaction.
Recipe One – 100% Olive Oil Soap
This makes a very hard bar with a low, creamy foam. Soap at its most simple.
Ingredients:
16 ounces olive oil
Make sure you get 100% olive oil and not a blend. You can use Extra Virgin,
Pomace, Organic, any kind you like.
2 oz. lye
5 oz. water
Procedure:
In one of the Pyrex 4 cup measures, place 16 oz of olive oil.
Put on your gloves and goggles.
In the other, place 5 ounces of water. Weigh the 2 ounces of lye into a small
plastic container – a single-serving yogurt container is perfect. Stirring and
leaning away from the steam, sprinkle the lye onto the surface of the water a
little at a time. Stir until the lye is dissolved. Put the container you used to
measure the lye in the sink and rinse without splashing.
Pour the hot lye solution in a stream into the olive oil, stirring constantly.
Place the empty lye solution Pyrex into the sink and rinse without splashing.
Go back to the “baby soap” and begin stirring. If this is the first time you’ve
made soap, go ahead and keep stirring with the spatula until the mixture is the
thickness of crepe batter or heavy cream, this could happen anywhere from right
a way to over an hour. (Once you’ve made soap a few times, get an inexpensive
immersion blender to save time.) The varying states of thickness are called
“trace.” New soapmakers tend to get very stressed, wondering, “Has it traced
yet?” The mixture goes from translucent to opaque as you stir it, thickening as
you go. You want to be sure the chemical reaction is well under way, and “trace”
is the way to tell. When you think it is getting thick, lift the spatula and let
the “batter” dribble back onto the surface of the soap. If it sits on the
surface of the batter for a little bit before sinking in, it is tracing. You
want to pour it into the mold before it gets so thick that you have to scoop and
glop it.
Once the soap is traced, pour it into the molds. This recipe makes about 23
ounces, and you can pour it all into one container or divide it into a few
smaller ones. Scrape all the mixture out of the Pyrex, put the Pyrex and spatula
in the sink.
Spread out the towel on a surface where the soap can sit undisturbed. If you use
multiple containers, line them up side by side so that they touch. Fold the
towel over the filled molds, and let it sit while you clean up.
Wipe any leftover soap out of the Pyrex with a paper towel and put it in a
baggie. When the soap on the paper towel finishes saponifying, you’ll have a
nice soap-permeated cleaning cloth. Be sure to never rinse blobs of raw soap
down the drain, as it will make a terrible clog. Be sure you wear your goggles
and gloves during clean up. Very hot water and detergent will take care of the
clean up in no time. Wash everything and set it out to dry.
Now, turn your attention back to your soap. It will get firmer as it sits, and
will probably cool off and heat up a couple of times over night. When you are
starting, wait two days before taking it out of the mold. To make this easy, put
the full molds in the freezer for about an hour, take them out - wearing eye and
hand protection - and place them upside down on a paper-covered work surface.
Push on the bottom of the container and the soap should pop right out. If it
doesn’t, put it back in the freezer for another hour, and try again.
There you have it, fresh soap, sitting right there! Use a stainless steel knife
to cut it into bars, choosing the size that appeals to you. Sit the soap to dry
and cure for about two weeks on brown paper in an out of the way place. Turn the
bars every couple of days.
Recipe #2 – My favorite basic.
This makes a gentle very bubbly soap.
Ingredients:
11 ounces olive oil
5 ounces coconut oil
You can usually find it in jars at the health food store. It is solid at room
temperature. This is what makes the lovely lather.
.5 ounce (1 Tablespoon) Castor oil
You can find this in small amounts in the laxative section of the pharmacy. When
you make more soap, go ahead an order some online for much better prices. This
tiny amount of castor oil is a big boost to your lather.
2.25 oz. lye
5 oz. water
The procedure is the same, the only slight difference that the coconut oil will
be melted by the heat of the lye solution. That heat is enough to melt the
coconut without trouble.
So, there you have them, two recipes for small amounts of simple, perfect soap.
Now, to add the herbs.
Almost any herb you can grow can be used in some way in soapmaking. Whether or
not the benefits of any herbs survive the soapmaking process is up for debate. A
bright green peppermint fleck will turn brown in a few days, and beautiful
lavender buds will look a lot like dead fleas. But, it doesn’t matter to me; I
love to load up my bars with as much herb power as possible.
Herbal infused water – Basically strong herbal tea; strain out the depleted
herbs before using. Use this in place of plain water to make the lye solution.
Be sure that it is cold! You don’t want more heat in that lye solution. Usually,
herb infused water will turn greenish brown or bright orange or some other
alarming color and have an even more alarming odor. Don’t worry; neither the
color nor smell will make it into the bars.
Herb infused oil – Infuse your liquid oils as usual, straining out any depleted
herbs before using. The soap may get some color from infused oils, but not
usually.
Herb bits and pieces – you can add dry herbs to your soap as it begins to trace.
Make sure the soap is thick enough to suspend the herbs throughout the mass so
they don’t all sink to the bottom or float on the top. If you want to make an
herbal layer on the top of the soap, add the herb topping after the soap has
been poured. Almost all herbs turn brown when stirred into the soap, so big
pieces can be kind of gross. Dried calendula petals keep their color and are
very pretty stirred in as well as on top.
For a recent “soap swap” between fellow soapmakers, I made “three fold” herbal
soaps, meaning I used the herb three ways to make the soap. I used freshly
harvested herbs from my garden. For each soap – Comfrey, Lemon Verbena and
Rosemary – I used herb infused- water and oils, and either stirred dried herb
into the “batter” at trace or placed herbs on top as decoration. Another “fold”
could be to add the matching essential oil, but in this case, I only wanted to
use what came from my own garden. Which of course has me dreaming of a tiny
still…
If you have questions about the herbal soapmaking projects in the column, please
don’t hesitate to contact me. I’m always eager to talk soap and herbs! Please
let us know if you have herbal soapmaking topics you’d like to see here.
Alicia Grosso
AnnabellaAndCompany.com |