Wow, that was interesting ... I had no idea that many 'steps' were involved in making Soap ! Thank-you for sharing your process : ) I can't say I'll be making it, but I def. will have (even) more appreciation for the people I purchase it from @ the Farmers Market. Thanks again & HAGWeekend : )
Welcome to the Saskatchewan Prairies, Growing Zone 3 - Canada! On my channel you will learn about cold climate growing techniques, indoor gardening during long cold winters and see what's cooking in the Getting Clean Kitchen! Subscribe Here: bit.ly/2CGyAMX
First of all thank you for the video if was very helpful. I have been contemplating making soap to sell, but I'm not sure how to go about it, legally .If you had some advise that would be great.
I'm not sure where you live Peter, but in Canada anyone wanting to sell body care products should register their product recipes with Health Canada. You upload your ingredients to their site (Cosmetic Notification Form) and as long as you are using ingredients approved by Health Canada - you will be given a number to keep for your records in case anyone ever requests. I have never been asked to produce this number when selling at trade shows or in retail locations, but it is good to follow the rules. I also always post on my products a warning to discontinue use if skin irritation occurs. Hope that helps.
Goat's milk is nourishing and moisturizing to your skin! Thanks for stopping by the channel. 📢📢SUBSCRIBE TO THE LITTLE GARDEN NEWSLETTER: littlegardenontheprairies.substack.com/subscribe
@@LittleGardenSK Thank you for your prompt reply🙏🙏🙏 If you don't mind, can you tell me how many % was you milk out of the lye solution? Thank you in advance🙏🙏🙏
Hello - I don't have an exact % that I discount but try to discount no more then 40% out of the total liquid. I want to make sure there is enough water for the lye to fully dissolve. In this recipe the water measurement was 190 gms and Lye 75 gms. My goats milk added after the cook was 90 gms. Hope that helps!
@@LittleGardenSK Thank you! So you subtracted 90 grams out of the 190 grams of liquid, right? You dissolved your lye with 100 grams of water, correct? I'm sorry to trouble you again! But your soap is SO BEAUTIFUL, MOISTURIZING AND CREAMY! I'd like to make one like yours. Hope you can tell me that measurement! Thank you again and I'm very sorry!🙇🙇🙇🙏🙏🙏
TYPO!!! This soap has to cure at a minimum of 4- 6 WEEKS, not days. You may want to edit it as both hot process and cold process soapmaking needs to go through water evaporation and crystallization before its finished curing. To properly make soap. Yes, one can use the soap after saponification but it will be a fast dissolving, soft and can be slimy when used before its finished curing. Always weigh the soap; when finished loosing weight, the soap is fully cured.
@@LittleGardenSKonly cold process has to cure for 6-8 weeks. That’s the saponification period, using this method, soap is cooked and CAN be used within 3 days or less. The longer you wait, harder the bar of course it you were correct in your information
Soap looks good, however the numbers for your lye and liquid are WAYYYYY out as you have them written in your notebook at the end of the video. For your 1400g of oils you would need about 210g of lye at 0%SF seeing as you added your superfats separately after the cook. Hope you actually used the correct amount
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Wow, that was interesting ... I had no idea that many 'steps' were involved in making Soap !
Thank-you for sharing your process : ) I can't say I'll be making it, but I def. will have (even) more appreciation for the people I purchase it from @ the Farmers Market. Thanks again & HAGWeekend : )
I'm glad you enjoyed watching. I also used to sell at markets and really appreciate how much effort other artisans put into their products.
Very interesting, thanks for sharing so detail information 🙏💜🌈
Thanks for watching!
What a great video!Wish I had more time and energy to do this....maybe sometime😍Just beautiful!
Thank you! I used to make batches every week when I was selling my producets - now I only do it when I need some soap for myself!
💥CHECK OUT MY EBOOK🌟 -- 30 Easy Recipes for Non-Toxic Cleaning Products, All Natural Bath and Body Products using Essential Oils: amzn.to/3ZAW7Vz
Welcome to the Saskatchewan Prairies, Growing Zone 3 - Canada! On my channel you will learn about cold climate growing techniques, indoor gardening during long cold winters and see what's cooking in the Getting Clean Kitchen! Subscribe Here: bit.ly/2CGyAMX
Nice snd fluid.
Love it when it works out that way! 👍
75g lye for more than 1400g of fats total? That seems like quite a large lyediscount?
First of all thank you for the video if was very helpful. I have been contemplating making soap to sell, but I'm not sure how to go about it, legally .If you had some advise that would be great.
I'm not sure where you live Peter, but in Canada anyone wanting to sell body care products should register their product recipes with Health Canada. You upload your ingredients to their site (Cosmetic Notification Form) and as long as you are using ingredients approved by Health Canada - you will be given a number to keep for your records in case anyone ever requests. I have never been asked to produce this number when selling at trade shows or in retail locations, but it is good to follow the rules. I also always post on my products a warning to discontinue use if skin irritation occurs. Hope that helps.
what is the goat milk for?
Goat's milk is nourishing and moisturizing to your skin! Thanks for stopping by the channel. 📢📢SUBSCRIBE TO THE LITTLE GARDEN NEWSLETTER: littlegardenontheprairies.substack.com/subscribe
Do you need to do water discount from your lye solution since you add milk after the cook? Thank you in advance!
Hello May. Yes that is correct. Thank you for checking out my channel.
@@LittleGardenSK Thank you for your prompt reply🙏🙏🙏 If you don't mind, can you tell me how many % was you milk out of the lye solution? Thank you in advance🙏🙏🙏
Hello - I don't have an exact % that I discount but try to discount no more then 40% out of the total liquid. I want to make sure there is enough water for the lye to fully dissolve. In this recipe the water measurement was 190 gms and Lye 75 gms. My goats milk added after the cook was 90 gms. Hope that helps!
@@LittleGardenSK Thank you! So you subtracted 90 grams out of the 190 grams of liquid, right? You dissolved your lye with 100 grams of water, correct? I'm sorry to trouble you again! But your soap is SO BEAUTIFUL, MOISTURIZING AND CREAMY! I'd like to make one like yours. Hope you can tell me that measurement! Thank you again and I'm very sorry!🙇🙇🙇🙏🙏🙏
@@mayyoke6101 that’s ok! If you go to end of the video to 11:16 you’ll see a screenshot of my recipe measurements I used for this batch.
TYPO!!!
This soap has to cure at a minimum of 4- 6 WEEKS, not days. You may want to edit it as both hot process and cold process soapmaking needs to go through water evaporation and crystallization before its finished curing. To properly make soap.
Yes, one can use the soap after saponification but it will be a fast dissolving, soft and can be slimy when used before its finished curing. Always weigh the soap; when finished loosing weight, the soap is fully cured.
Thank you!
@@LittleGardenSKonly cold process has to cure for 6-8 weeks. That’s the saponification period, using this method, soap is cooked and CAN be used within 3 days or less. The longer you wait, harder the bar of course it you were correct in your information
NOT A TYPO
Soap looks good, however the numbers for your lye and liquid are WAYYYYY out as you have them written in your notebook at the end of the video. For your 1400g of oils you would need about 210g of lye at 0%SF seeing as you added your superfats separately after the cook. Hope you actually used the correct amount