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How To Make Soap At Home

How To Make Soap At Home

“I have to ask about your handmade soap recipe. How do you make soap at home? I’ve been thinking about making my own for a while (maybe also add some oat pulp that remains from making oat milk?). It would be interesting to see if there’s a minimalist and safe way to  make homemade soaps.”

 

Ever wondered how to make soap at home? Here’s a secret: soap making is ridiculously easy; it’s also fun! In this short-and-sweet episode I’m answering a listener’s question about how to make cold process soap in your own kitchen.

 

Here’s a preview:

[2:30] Essential materials and safety precautions

[7:30] How to make soap at home, step by step

[9:30] Additional ideas for making soap that’s uniquely yours

 

Tools needed:

  • Old clothes (long sleeves) or an apron
  • Goggles or safety glasses 
  • Rubber or latex gloves 
  • Silicone spatula or a stainless steel spoon
  • Heavy duty plastic container for lye solution 
  • Several measuring cups 
  • A good kitchen scale 
  • *Stainless steel bowl or heavy plastic (#2 or #5) bowl
  • Immersion blender 
  • Kitchen thermometer
  • Soap mold (I have this one) 
  • *note: never use glass, aluminum, or soft plastic when mixing/measuring lye.

 

Ingredients:

 (I buy everything from this online store)

  • 3.8 ounces coconut oil
  • 3.8 ounces palm kernel oil flakes
  • 25.4 ounces olive oil (just buy the cheapest from the supermarket)
  • 10.65 ounces water
  • 4.57 ounces Lye
  • 1/4c lavender essential oil, if using 
  1. Pre-measure your ingredients. 
  2. Melt hard oils (coconut and palm kernel oils) together in the microwave or crockpot until liquid. Add olive oil. Temperature of mixture should be around 111 degrees. Add mixed oils to a stainless steel or heavy plastic bowl; set aside.
  3. Make sure you are in a well-ventilated area, then add lye to water in a stainless steel bowl. (Do not at water to lye!) Due the nature of the chemical reaction, temperature will rise to 90-100 degrees. Gently stir.
  4. Slowly add lye mixture to oils. Gently stir. 
  5. Use your immersion blender and gently mix for 90 to 120 seconds. You will know your mixture has saponified when there’s a trail (or “trace”) behind wherever the blender goes. The mixture will look like a thick custard. 
  6. Add your optional additions, such as essential oil, coffee grinds, oatmeal, flower petals, etc. 
  7. Pour mixture into one mold and set aside. Let sit for 24 hours until hard. 
  8. After 24 hours, cut into 10 1-inch bars. Allow to sit in a coo, airy place for 4 weeks so it can harden. 

 

 

* Thank you to ForDays for sponsoring this week’s episode! Get 15% off with code MINIMAL15 at checkout.

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Ever wonder how to make soap at home? Inside: essential supplies and safety precautions for making cold-press soap in your own kitchen.

5 thoughts on “How To Make Soap At Home

  1. Love this podcast! I have been meaning to make soap for a while and this might be what I needed to go ahead. I am hoping you can share the recipe, and speak to the ethics/alternatives of palm oil in soap. I’m also wondering if this is a soap recipe that you use on your hands or body.

    Thanks so much!

    1. Hi Lyda,

      I just sent you an email! Please let me know if you need me to resend it.

      To answer your questions: No, I’m not thrilled that this recipe has palm kernel oil. Yes, I use this soap on my face and body.

      Happy soap making!

    2. Thank you for your quick response about palm oil! I’m stumped finding a recipe that looks good and doesn’t require it. If you figure it out, I would love to know! I love your perspective and look forward to each of your podcasts.

  2. Hi! I listened to your podcast only about three times today and would love to know your recipe as well. My husband gifted me some lye a year ago when I showed interest in “saponification” and I have been terrified to use it. You gave me confidence and I’m ready to dive in!

    1. Hi Mary,

      So happy to have inspired you! I just sent you an email with an attached PDF: please let me know if you need me to re-send.

      Send me photos of your homemade soap when you’ve finished!

      – Stephanie

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A minimalist closet is best served by first identifying the outfits needed to live YOUR unique life. On today's show podcaster Lauren Morley shows us how to streamline our wardrobes, say goodbye to clutter, and feel effortlessly put together every day by focusing less on capsules and more on a 20 outfit wardrobe, instead.

 

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