Goats Milk Olive CP Soap
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Milk Soaps can be a little tricky for the novice, so we recommend you begin soaping with some milk-free recipes and progress to this one. The low pH level of Goats Milk is close to our skin's pH, making it a very gentle cleanser. Goat’s milk also contains alpha hydroxyl acids, which are known for their restorative and rejuvenating qualities. I like to think some of these benefits remain in my GM CP Soap. Milk and Caustic Soda (Lye) do not like each other! You can end up with a yellow/tan coloured smelly mess if you don’t plan ahead. There are several methods you can use to combat this problem – and the secret is the temperature of milk and the temperature of lye water. If you are a beginner with a few batches under your belt, this is a good way to get into Milk Soaping – we recommend you start with 50% Goats milk and 50% Distilled Water in your first few recipes. Please read these instructions right through to the end TWICE before beginning your soap. Planning is the key! Tips and Methods are listed underneath the recipe. Ingredients:
For how to make soap from Scratch, please see our Cold Process Soapmaking Instructions Page The main difference with Goats milk CP Soap and milk free soap making is preparation - prepare the concentrated solution of Sodium Hydroxide (Lye) and water the night before and allow to cool or even chill the concentrated lye mixture if you are soaping in high summer temperatures. Have all other ingredients ready weighed and measured, and then add the iced Goats milk to the cool lye water and stir to dissolve. This will eliminate most of the curdling problems and discolouring issues that occur. Add this mixture immediately to the warmed oils and stir as usual. Add fragrances, blend, pour and insulate. Many soapers find the ammonia type smell that is evident during the first few weeks quite unpleasant (I personally don’t mind it), BUT the odour soon dissipates and you will then smell the sweet natural fragrance or your Essential Oil or Fragrance after a few weeks – it is not ruined, it is going to smell *weird* for a while due to the milk content.
• Pre-Cool Lye Water: Mix lye with half the required water, and set aside (secured from small children and animals). When this has cooled completely, stir in ice cubes of milk and stir to dissolve cubs - as if you were trying to get a jelly to set early. Combine immediately with liquid oils, bring to trace and pour • Use the Slushy Method: Freeze the required quantity of Milk in a Ziplock Bag resting in a bowl and then allow to semi defrost. Mix lye with half the proportion, and set aside (secured from small children and animals). When this has cooled completely, stir through slushy semi melted milk until dissolved. Combine immediately with liquid oils, bring to trace and pour • If using Powdered Goats Milk or Buttermilk Powder, reserve a cup of distilled water from the recipe, heat, and add either 4 tablespoons of Buttermilk Powder to this to make a slurry or 40g of Goatsmilk Powder mixed to a slurry - make sure there are no lumps. Add this at medium trace and then pour.
Yoghurts work well in soap too and my personal method is to add a good dollop of fresh yoghurt at trace, rather than freezing it. Yoghurt leaves the skin very soft and satiny. I make a gorgeous Strawberry and Yoghurt CP Log that sells like hot cakes – the secret was slightly under-scenting the Strawberry Fragrance – at about 2% of the oil weight maximum – YUM!
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