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Calculating Your Water Amount for ... - Lovin Soap Studio- what does water discount in soap making mean ,Dec 18, 2012·I had such a difference in results using a 1.5:1 water discount on a soap with 33% olive oil vs 40%. In the 33% recipe, the soap was so hard after 9 hours it was like trying to cut a cracker. Had to rebatch. However, a 1.6:1 on the next soap I made where I increased the OO to 40% had a drastically different and favorable result.Discounting Water - Lovin Soap Studio – Soap Making BlogJul 23, 2010·To calculate a non-discounted water amount use this formula: Water = Lye Amount * 73 / 27. So if your recipe calls for 2 oz of lye: Water = 2 oz lye * 73 / 27. Water = 5.4 oz. I do not recommend using a discounted water solution higher than 40% lye and 60% water (water = lye * 1.5). Please note that using a higher water discount means that your ...
May 09, 2018·Hi Dave, Water content can vary depending on your personal preference, 33% of the weight of the oils and the sodium hydroxide is our recommended water content. Once you are confident with cold process soap making you could experiment with …
Feb 21, 2019·More water does not make the process safer either for soapmaker or soap so it’s not worth adding extra water for that reason. ‘Water discount’ is a misnomer since we can’t reduce water from the necessary 1:1 water:lye ratio. Any water amount in excess of a 1:1 water:lye ratio is in fact a surplus.
100% Coconut Oil Soap. 16 ounces of Coconut Oil. 2.79 ounces of Lye. 38% of oils: 6.08 ounces of water. results in a 31.42% lye solution. The olive oil soap will trace slower and cure slower than the coconut oil soap, due to the varying lye solution strength from batch to batch, even if you made the soaps on the same day!
Feb 12, 2013·Lye discount means that you calculate the amount of lye needed to saponify all the oils in your recipe and than discount part of it – e.g. lye discount of 5% means that you make your soap with 5% less lye than the required amount. Superfat means you first mix your soap and than add some more oil/fat either at trace or once the soap is ...
Dec 18, 2012·I had such a difference in results using a 1.5:1 water discount on a soap with 33% olive oil vs 40%. In the 33% recipe, the soap was so hard after 9 hours it was like trying to cut a cracker. Had to rebatch. However, a 1.6:1 on the next soap I made where I increased the OO to 40% had a drastically different and favorable result.
Jul 23, 2010·To calculate a non-discounted water amount use this formula: Water = Lye Amount * 73 / 27. So if your recipe calls for 2 oz of lye: Water = 2 oz lye * 73 / 27. Water = 5.4 oz. I do not recommend using a discounted water solution higher than 40% lye and 60% water (water = lye * 1.5). Please note that using a higher water discount means that your ...
Soap making is a science at heart. When you add color and fragrance, it turns into an art. Each oil has its own saponification value, or the amount of lye it takes to turn 1 gram of oil into 1 gram of soap. When we make cold process soap, it’s a mathematical formula that looks like this: (oil amount) x (SAP value) = lye amount needed.
Jul 23, 2010·To calculate a non-discounted water amount use this formula: Water = Lye Amount * 73 / 27. So if your recipe calls for 2 oz of lye: Water = 2 oz lye * 73 / 27. Water = 5.4 oz. I do not recommend using a discounted water solution higher than 40% lye and 60% water (water = lye * 1.5). Please note that using a higher water discount means that your ...
Feb 14, 2020·e) Too Little Water (“Water Discount”) Water discount is the use of less water than usually needed in a recipe. This has many benefits of it’s own, such as decreasing the curing and drying time and helping the soap release from the mold faster. However, this can also cause soap to trace too quickly.
Feb 14, 2020·e) Too Little Water (“Water Discount”) Water discount is the use of less water than usually needed in a recipe. This has many benefits of it’s own, such as decreasing the curing and drying time and helping the soap release from the mold faster. However, this can also cause soap to trace too quickly.
Nov 21, 2016·Avoid the Water Discount Water discounting your recipe has a lot of benefits. It helps soap release from the mold faster and prevents glycerin rivers. But, removing water from the recipe causes soap batter to thicken more quickly. A water discount combined with an accelerating fragrance oil can lead to some pretty thick soap very quickly.
Water Discount "Water discount" is the practice of using less water to make soap than the "full water" amount. You will hear soapers say, "I did a water discount of 10% for my last batch" or something like that. But if you do not know the "full water" basis from which the "water discount" is taken, this information is meaningless.
Water Discount "Water discount" is the practice of using less water to make soap than the "full water" amount. You will hear soapers say, "I did a water discount of 10% for my last batch" or something like that. But if you do not know the "full water" basis from which the "water discount" is taken, this information is meaningless.
The low-water soap had the least amount of moisture, both at the beginning and at the end of the 60-day study period. The low-water soap had an initial moisture concentration of 111 ppt. The medium-water soap cured for 14 days and the …
Feb 12, 2013·Lye discount means that you calculate the amount of lye needed to saponify all the oils in your recipe and than discount part of it – e.g. lye discount of 5% means that you make your soap with 5% less lye than the required amount. Superfat means you first mix your soap and than add some more oil/fat either at trace or once the soap is ...
100% Coconut Oil Soap. 16 ounces of Coconut Oil. 2.79 ounces of Lye. 38% of oils: 6.08 ounces of water. results in a 31.42% lye solution. The olive oil soap will trace slower and cure slower than the coconut oil soap, due to the varying lye solution strength from batch to batch, even if you made the soaps on the same day!
Nov 02, 2015·Using less water than originally called for in a recipe is known as a “water discount.” There are several reasons why you may want to water discount soap. Water discounting helps the soap release from the mold faster. Using less water also results in a shorter curing and drying time, as there is less water to evaporate from the soap.
Dec 18, 2012·Discounting the water helps with all of these issues. It speeds up trace (though still allows plenty of time to design the soap), makes a harder bar for unmolding and reduces the cure time. When I am doing a 90-100% castile or bastile type of soap I will actually use 1.1 times my lye. So if a recipe calls for 8 oz lye, I will use 8.8 oz of water.
Feb 12, 2013·Lye discount means that you calculate the amount of lye needed to saponify all the oils in your recipe and than discount part of it – e.g. lye discount of 5% means that you make your soap with 5% less lye than the required amount. Superfat means you first mix your soap and than add some more oil/fat either at trace or once the soap is ...
Nov 21, 2016·Avoid the Water Discount Water discounting your recipe has a lot of benefits. It helps soap release from the mold faster and prevents glycerin rivers. But, removing water from the recipe causes soap batter to thicken more quickly. A water discount combined with an accelerating fragrance oil can lead to some pretty thick soap very quickly.
Apr 12, 2012·Other things are much more flexible, like the amount of water that is used to make the lye solution. The water is only there to dissolve the NaOH. Using more or less may affect how the soap mixes up, but in the end the water …
Feb 21, 2019·More water does not make the process safer either for soapmaker or soap so it’s not worth adding extra water for that reason. ‘Water discount’ is a misnomer since we can’t reduce water from the necessary 1:1 water:lye ratio. Any water amount in excess of a 1:1 water:lye ratio is in fact a surplus.
The low-water soap had the least amount of moisture, both at the beginning and at the end of the 60-day study period. The low-water soap had an initial moisture concentration of 111 ppt. The medium-water soap cured for 14 days and the …
Water Discount "Water discount" is the practice of using less water to make soap than the "full water" amount. You will hear soapers say, "I did a water discount of 10% for my last batch" or something like that. But if you do not know the "full water" basis from which the "water discount" is taken, this information is meaningless.