There wasn't anything wrong with this soap log except that it was still cooling down - from the gel stage. After another hour, it was fine.
Soap batch mixture is taking forever to
trace:
Soap
batch mixture is setting up too quickly and chunks of "glop" are
forming:
Possibilities:
The Recipe may contain oils that
are naturally slow to trace like unsaturated fats.
You may have added too much
water.
You are stirring by hand or with a conventional blender rather
than a stick blender.
The proportion of oils
and lye may be off in your formulation or inaccurately
measured.
There may be an
insufficient amount of lye.
There may be a problem
with the temperatures of the oil or
lye.
Suggestion:
Chances are, if you are having problems getting to
trace, you are either hand stirring or using a regular mixer. Give
your batch mixture more time. Again, if you are “hand stirring”, tracing will
take significantly longer (hours). Stick or hand blenders are actually “blenders” on
a stick and they incorporate the batch mixture with a strong spinning motion. This action forces the
oils and lye to come together at a fraction of the time of mixing
or hand stirring (minutes). If it does not reach trace when it seems like it should, discard
the batch.
| Possibilities: The oils and lye solution, or both, may have been at a temperature that was too high for your formulation. |
| You may have been stirring too slowly or blending inconsistently. |
Suggestion: Try smoothing out your batch using a stick or hand blender and before it becomes too thick, pour into your mold. If you see any problems with your finished product other than aesthetic ones, throw the batch away.
Soap is cracking or breaking at the cutting stage:
| Possibilities: You may have added more lye than was necessary for your formulation. |
| You may have added too many dry ingredients. |
Suggestion: Always double-check your formulas using a lye calculator that has the sap values recommended by the oil’s manufacturer or supplier. Use a lye discount percentage of between 5 and 10%, meaning that you will use 5 to 10% less lye than it would take to saponify your oils at a 0% discount. Make sure you are weighing out the correct amount of oils and lye for your formulation. If you add dry ingredients, try using a little at a time in each batch until you can determine the correct ratio to fit your formulation. Keep notes.
There is a thin layer of white powder on your finished soap:
| Possibilities: Your mixture has reacted to the oxygen in the air causing a buildup of sodium carbonate. |
Your finished soap contains liquid or powdered lye pockets, or small shiny chunks of lye:
| Possibilities: You may not have blended or stirred your mixture sufficiently or consistently. |
| You may have added too much lye to your formulation. |
| Your mixture may not have gone to trace before being poured into the mold. |
While your soap is cooling, a thin layer of oil is present at the top:
| Possibilities: The oil to lye ratio in your formula is incorrect – too much oil and not enough lye. |
| Inaccurate
weighing/measuring. |
Your finished soap is hard and brittle.
| Possibilities: Your formula may have contained too much lye. |
| You may have a soap comprised of oils with properties that naturally create a harder bar of soap. |
Your finished soap smells rancid:
| Possibilities: You may have used an oil that has reached the end of its shelf life. |
| You may have used too much fat or too little lye in your formulation. |