
Making Cold Process Soap
Create handmade soap from scratch using the cold process method — a chemical reaction (saponification) between oils/fats and sodium hydroxide (lye). This is real chemistry: precise measurements, exothermic reactions, and pH testing. The result is a gentle, customizable bar of soap that cures over 4-6 weeks.
Instructions
Understanding Saponification
Understanding Saponification
The Chemistry
Soap is made by a single chemical reaction — saponification:
Fat/Oil (triglyceride) + NaOH (sodium hydroxide) → Soap (sodium salt of fatty acid) + Glycerol
Each oil has a different SAP value — the amount of NaOH needed to fully convert 1g of that oil to soap:
| Oil | NaOH SAP Value (mg/g) | Properties in Soap |
|---|---|---|
| Coconut oil (76°F) | 0.178 | Hard bar, big bubbles, cleansing |
| Olive oil | 0.134 | Mild, moisturizing, small lather |
| Palm oil | 0.141 | Hard bar, creamy lather |
| Shea butter | 0.128 | Conditioning, creamy |
Superfat
We use 5% less lye than full saponification requires. This ensures all lye is consumed and 5% of the oils remain un-saponified in the final bar, making it more moisturizing. This is called the superfat or lye discount.
Lye Calculation for This Recipe
- Coconut oil: 200g × 0.178 = 35.6g NaOH
- Olive oil: 300g × 0.134 = 40.2g NaOH
- Total: 75.8g × 0.95 (5% superfat) = 72g NaOH
(The 69g specified in materials accounts for a slightly higher superfat margin for safety. Always verify with a lye calculator for your exact oils.)
Preparing the Lye Solution
Preparing the Lye Solution
Safety First
Put on safety goggles and rubber gloves BEFORE opening the lye container. Work in a well-ventilated area — the lye-water reaction produces caustic fumes for the first 30 seconds.
Mixing Lye Solution
- Weigh 165g distilled water into the heat-safe container.
- Weigh 69g sodium hydroxide into a separate dry container.
- ALWAYS add lye TO water, never water to lye. Adding water to dry lye causes a violent exothermic eruption (like dropping water into hot oil).
- Slowly pour the lye into the water while stirring with a stainless steel spoon.
- The solution will heat up to 80-95°C (176-203°F) almost instantly and produce fumes. Stir until all lye is dissolved (solution will be clear).
- Set aside to cool to 38-43°C (100-110°F). This takes 30-60 minutes depending on ambient temperature.
Critical rule: LYE INTO WATER. The mnemonic: "Add the lye to the H₂O, nice and slow."
Preparing Oils and Reaching Trace
Preparing Oils and Reaching Trace
Melting and Mixing Oils
- Weigh 200g coconut oil into the mixing bowl. If solid, gently melt on low heat or in the microwave.
- Add 300g olive oil (already liquid at room temperature).
- Allow the oil blend to reach 38-43°C (100-110°F) — same target as the lye solution.
Combining and Reaching Trace
- When both the lye solution and oils are at 38-43°C, slowly pour the lye solution into the oils while stirring.
- Use the immersion blender in short 3-5 second bursts, alternating with stirring. Continuous blending can overheat the motor and bring the soap to trace too fast.
- Trace is reached when the soap batter is thick enough that a drizzle from the blender leaves a visible trail on the surface for a few seconds before sinking back in (like thin pudding).
- Light trace: Pourable, leaves faint lines. Best for swirl designs.
- Medium trace: Like thin pudding. Good for most basic recipes.
- Heavy trace: Like thick pudding. Difficult to pour, sets fast.
Adding Extras (at light trace)
- Essential oils: Add 15g and stir in well
- Colorants: Mica powder (1 tsp per 500g oils) or natural colorants
- Work quickly — the soap continues to thicken
Molding, Unmolding, and Curing
Molding, Unmolding, and Curing
Pouring
- Pour the soap batter at medium trace into the silicone mold. Tap the mold on the counter to release air bubbles.
- Smooth the top with a spatula.
- Cover the mold with a piece of cardboard, then wrap with a towel for insulation. This keeps the soap warm enough for gel phase — a stage where the soap becomes translucent and hot (60-80°C internally) as saponification accelerates. Gel phase produces harder, more vibrant soap.
Unmolding (24-48 hours)
- After 24-48 hours, the soap should be firm enough to unmold. If it's still soft, wait another day.
- Wear gloves — the soap is not yet fully saponified and may still contain free lye.
- Turn the mold upside down and flex the sides to release the soap loaf.
- Cut into bars using a sharp knife or soap cutter. Approx. 2.5cm (1 inch) thick.
Curing (4-6 weeks)
- Place bars on a wire rack or paper towels, spaced apart for air circulation.
- Cure in a dry, ventilated area away from direct sunlight.
- Cure for 4-6 weeks minimum. During curing:
- Saponification completes (all remaining lye is consumed)
- Water evaporates, making the bar harder and longer-lasting
- pH drops from ~10-11 to 8-10 (mild enough for skin)
Test pH before use: Wet the bar, press pH paper against it. Safe soap is pH 8-10. If above 10, cure longer.
Matériaux
- •Coconut oil (76°F melt point, refined) - 200 gsEspace réservé
- •Olive oil (pomace or pure, NOT extra virgin) - 300 gsEspace réservé
- •Sodium hydroxide (lye, NaOH) - 69 gsEspace réservé
- •Distilled water - 165 gsEspace réservé
- •Essential oil (optional, for scent) - 15 gsEspace réservé
Outils requis
- Digital kitchen scale (0.1g resolution preferred)Espace réservé
- Immersion blender (stick blender)Espace réservé
- Heat-safe container for lye solution (polypropylene or stainless steel)Espace réservé
- Mixing bowl for oils (stainless steel or PP)Espace réservé
- Soap mold (silicone loaf mold)Espace réservé
- ThermometerEspace réservé
- Safety goggles and rubber glovesEspace réservé
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