5 Homemade Soap Recipes
Believe it or not, store-bought soap
is a modern invention that has only been around about 70 years. Before
then, soap was made in the home with simple natural ingredients and
scents, with the addition of lye or glycerin. Lye is another name for
the chemical sodium hydroxide (NaOH) that causes soaps to harden and
gives them their renowned cleaning abilities.
Warning: It is important when using lye to wear gloves, long sleeves and preferably goggles because the chemical can burn the skin.
You'll never have to purchase factory-made soaps again after you try these 5 fun and easy recipes for homemade soaps!
|
Castile Soap
Castile soap is a mild and pure soap
that is super easy to make. This recipe will make 6 large bars that can
also be decorated with your favorite herbs and spices.
What You'll Need:
20 oz. (580 ml) Olive oil
2 1/2 oz. (75g) Coconut Oil
2 1/2 oz. (75g) Palm Oil
8 oz. (240ml) cold water
3.3 oz. (90g) Lye crystals
1 oz. of fragrance or essential oils (optional)
Large pan
Plastic Bowl
Molds of your choosing
Thermometers
Stick blender or hand whisk
1. First prepare the moods by coating them with cooking spray and wiping off the excess.
2. Gather together the measured
ingredients. Put on some gloves to shield yourself from the lye. Pour
the water into the plastic bowl and then add the lye, stirring with a
spatula until dissolved. The water will heat up when it reacts with the
lye, so wait for it to cool until it reaches room temperature.
3. In the pan, melt the oils together over a low heat (do not add the essential fragrance).
4. Using the thermometer, measure the
temperature of the water-lye mixture and then the oil mixture and wait
until they are the same temperature. Then, stir together the lye and oil
mixtures slowly, adding the lye to the oil and not the other way
around.
5. Using the stick blender or whisk, mix together until the mixture thickens.
6. Pour the mixture into the mold and
smooth it out with a spatula. Cover the container or mold and wrap with
an old towel to keep the heat in. Allow the soap to set for 24 hours
until it has hardened.
7. Once the soap is hard, let it sit
out for 1-2 days before using it to let air circulate through it. Some
even let the soap sit out for up to 3 weeks until they use it (not this
is not necessary). Always test the soap on your hands before using it on
your face.
Once your Castile soap is done, you
can dampen the top of the soap and add herbs or spices that you like. It
is nice to add dried flowers like lavender or calendula.
Herb and Citrus Soap
This easy to make homemade soap is
great for the hand washing or even as a body cleanser and has a
refreshing and invigorating scent.
What You'll Need:
Glycerin soap (sold in most craft stores)
Assorted herbs and citrus (basil, mint, rosemary, orange and lemon)
Food processor
Plastic spoon or scraper
Soap molds (plastic or cardboard containers can also be used)
Cooking spray
1. Melt the soap: put the glycerin
soap blocks in a glass bowl and melt them in a microwave for 30 second
intervals until it has melted. Stir the soap to break up the
big chunks.
2. Chop up or puree your herbs of
choice and squeeze out any extra water with a paper towel. Zest and peel
the citrus until you have about 1 tablespoon of additives for each cup
of soap.
3. Prepare the mold containers by spraying them with cooking spray and wiping out theexcess.
4. Add the herb and citrus to the
glycerin once it has cooled. At this point, the soap will begin to set,
so keep stirring the mixture to ensure that the puree does not float to
the bottom. Once you have reached the desire color, add the mixture to
the mold.
5. Let the mold sit out for about an
hour. Then put the mixture in the freezer for another hour. After around
2 hours, the soap should pop right out of the mold. To finish, slice
the soap with a knife.
The soap will keep for up to 3 months, so make sure you don't make too big a batch that you won't be able to finish.
Enjoy the fresh and clean scent of your homemade soap!
Oatmeal Soap
This oatmeal soap is so easy to make,
smells great, moisturizes and exfoliates! Oatmeal soap is great for
people with sensitive or irritable skin, and is recommended for use in
the winter time when our skin needs all the hydration it can get!
What You'll Need:
Goat's Milk Soap Suspension Formula
(available at a variety of craft and health stores). If it isn't
available, glycerin soap can also be used, but add some cream to it.
Instant Oatmeal
Sweet Almond Essence
Molds
Blender
Glass bowls
1. Place the cubes of the Goat Milk
formula into a microwave-safe bowl and melt in the microwave, stirring
occasionally, for 1-1/2 minutes. If all you have available is the
glycerin soap, also melt in on high and stir as needed.
2. Once the glycerin cools, mix in
about 40 drops of sweet almond oil, about 5 drops for every cube you
used for a mild scent, and even more for a stronger scent.
3. Add about 1/4 cups of oatmeal that
has been blended to make the grains smaller to the mixture. Mix the
ingredients in a bowl and then add them to the molds.
4. Let the mixture sit outside for an
hour, and then place it in the fridge for an hour until it hardens.
Remove the soap from the mold and let it air out for a while before
using.
Now ways to make your homemade soap fantastic!
Marble Soap
These soaps are so beautiful that you
won't want to use them. They are great as gifts or to put on display
and impress your guests!
What You'll Need:
Ready soap bars, either the Castile soap above or a readymade soap of your choosing.
Fragrance oil (if desired)
Rectangular slab molds
Colored mica powers of your choosing (can be purchased at craft stores or hardware stores)
Microwave safe container
Small bowls for each color used
Grater
Rubbing Alcohol
Spoon
1. Chop up the bars of soap and begin
to grate it with the grater. If you are lucky, in the craft store you
can find soap shavings, but if not, begin shaving down the soap
yourself.
2. Melt the shavings in a bowl in the microwave in 30 second intervals, stirring periodically.
3. Separate the melted soap into the
small bowls. Add the fragrance (if desired) and the mica colors to each
one. stir together the fragrance and the color. If the mixture isn't
coming together, add a bןt of rubbing alcohol.
4. Drizzle the colored soap from one
of the bowls onto the mold and then spritz it with alcohol. Leave lots
of blank spaces to be filled with the rest of the colors.
5. Once the soap is cool, but not yet
solid, drizzle a final color on top. Spritz it with alcohol and allow
the soap to cool for 24 hours before removing the soap from the mold.
6. Once the soap has set (can
anywhere from a few hours to a few days), cut the marbled soap blocks
into rectangles with a knife.
This beautiful soap is sure to wow your family and friends!
Loofa Soap
This soap looks super hard to make, but it is really simple and useful for its exfoliating powers.
1. Use one of the soap recipes
mentioned above and add the fragrances, spices and herbs that you enjoy.
Prepare the soap and once it has thickened into a smooth mixture, set
it aside.
2. Cut up a loofa into 2-3 inch
circles and place them in a soap mold (preferably rectangular). Then,
pour the soap mixture into the mold over the loofa. (If you'd like, it's
possible to take one of the mica colored soaps and add it to the middle
to highlight the loofa's circular shape and give it a professional
look).
3. Like with the other soaps, let
them sit until hardened, or place in the freezer for about an hour to
help with the hardening process. Set out an wait about a day before
using.
|
Aucun commentaire:
Enregistrer un commentaire