Making Goat Milk Soap

Posted by admin | Articles, Cold-Process Soap Making, Soap Making | Sunday 11 October 2009 9:38 pm

goat

by: James Pickavance


Goats’ milk is rich with nutrients like proteins, vitamin A, B12, B6, E, beta casein, and minerals. Skin absorbs beta caseins easily and helps in rapid hydration of the dry skins. Goats’ milk helps in moisturizing and soothing the skin as it is natural emollient.

It can make soap creamy, moisturizing, as well as lovely. More over goats’ milk will lower the Ph value of soaps, so that it becomes skin friendly. Goats’ milk soaps are effective for acne treatment as well as other problems of skins. With these qualities, goat milk soaps have positives for regular use.

One can easily make goat milk soap at home. You might be wondering how to make goat soap at your home.

For soap making goats’ milk soaps, milk is used as either liquid milk or powdered milk. It is easier to buy powdered goat milk from food stores. Use either pure milk or equal quantity of water and milk. There is hot process and cold process for making soap with liquid milk.

Two ounces of glycerine, three cups of goats milk, two teaspoon of borax, six and half ounces of lye, one and half pounds of fat etc makes a simple recipe for goats milk soap. Like this, various recipes are there for making goat soaps.

Melt and pour method is widely used for making goat milk soaps. You can buy both bases of pour soap as well as goats milk melt. Decide the recipe for the soap. Decide the type of molds for using.

Decide the shape of the soap that you want to make. Once you stock the goats melt milk as well as base for pour soap, you can look for colours and fragrances for the soap.

It is important that you follow the recipe for goat soap making. Using Vaseline, grease the molds properly so that soap does not stick after it sets. Melt the fat and cool it up to temperature range of eighty-five and ninety-degree Celsius. Pour lye into the paper cup, and then add goat milk. Slowly keep adding the lye. Mix the solution with hand mixer.

Chemical reaction will change the colour of milk to golden one, and the mixture becomes hot. So let the mixture to cool up to eighty-five degrees. To this mixture add glycerine, oatmeal, borax and mix well with the hand mixture for at least fifteen minutes.

Then keep it to rest and then mix at regular intervals of five minutes. Until noticeable changes takes place in consistency keep continuing the above process.

Pour the mixture of soap into the molds and allow it to set. Cover the top part of the molds with cheesecloth. For 24 hours, keep this soap at room temperature, which must be constant.

Remove the cloth off the top of molds and then take the soaps out of it. If the molds used is larger one, cut the soap into equal sized bars.

It is better to cure the soap by the air-drying method for a period of four to six weeks before using.


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Handmade Cold-Process Soap Recipes

Posted by admin | Cold-Process Soap Making | Sunday 1 March 2009 8:26 pm

Always consult your physician if you have high blood pressure, are pregnant, or have other medical concerns before using essential oils or herbs.


COCOA BUTTER SOAP

10 ounces Cocoa Butter
10 ounces Olive Oil
10 ounces white 76F Coconut Oil
14 ounces Crisco shortening
6 ounces sodium hydroxidce
16 ounces soft water, rainwater, or distilled water

Basic soapmaking instructions apply. Cocoa Butter makes up nearly 23% of the oils in this recipe. The bar comes out soft at first but turns very hard after curing and has a dense lather. Temps of lye water and fats when mixed - 115F.


WINTER SKIN SOAP

2 ounces Sweet Almond Oil
6 ounces Cocoa Butter
24 ounces Coconut Oil
2 ounces Grapeseed Oil
16 ounces Olive Oil
48 ounces hydogenated soybean oil (Crisco)
2 ounces Lanolin

13.4 ounces sodium hydroxide
38 ounces water

2 ounces Sandalwood EO or good quality Cedarwood EO
Add this at trace, just before you pour into your mold.

Basic soapmaking instructions apply. If you would like, you can set aside the Almond Oil, Cocoa Butter, and Lanolin and melt those separately to add at trace. It’s best to melt these over a double boiler so you don’t overheat them and lose the skin-nourishing benefits. You can halve this recipe for a smaller batch. Temperature of lye water and fats when mixed - 105 to 115F.


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Cold Process Soap Recipes

Posted by admin | Cold-Process Soap Making | Sunday 1 March 2009 8:22 pm
  • Basic Castile Soap

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    How to Make Lye Soap: How to Get Ready to Make Soap

    Posted by admin | Cold-Process Soap Making | Sunday 1 March 2009 8:19 pm

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    Cold-Process Soap Making – Tips & Tutorials

    Posted by admin | Cold-Process Soap Making | Sunday 1 March 2009 8:14 pm
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    Soapmaking Categories

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