Showing posts with label Soap. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Soap. Show all posts

Friday, January 25, 2013

Soaps, Drugs, & Rock and Roll

I have to admit that this is really old news, but I am sure that most people have not heard this story and I wanted to share this great video. The video below explains how real soap tests positive (false-positive that is!) for the date rape drug. This is simply a problem with the drug testing kit, but it turns out to be a great way to find out if what you are using is indeed real soap and not a mixture of synthetic detergents. Their are many cases of products being mislabeled and claiming to be soap when they are in fact detergent. While this test is a pretty cool trick for us soapmakers, I am sure most people will not want to check their soap with a drug kit to determine if it is really soap. An easier way to determine what is in your product is to look at the labels. Be on the look out for "soaps" that have Sodium Laureth Sulfate, Sodium Lauryl Sulfate, Ammonium Lauryl Sulfate, Ammonium Laureth Sulfate, or Cocomidopropyl Betaine as these are all common detergents used in soap-like products. On the other hand, if the label lists oils and sodium hydroxide or potassium hydroxide as the ingredients, then you have real soap. I should note that real soap and detergent products can be found in both solid (bar) and liquid forms.

Check out the video below and at the very end you will see a list of companies that are falsely advertizing their product as soap. As a consumer, you should be able to make an educated choice about what products you are putting on your body.


Thursday, January 17, 2013

The History of Soapmaking


It is impossible to say who invented soapmaking and when soap was first made. Soap had been used by humans for thousands of years. Interestingly, soap was first used to clean fabrics and pots. It was not until much later that people began using it to clean themselves. Before the development of soap, it is likely that people used plants containing saponins for cleaning. The earliest known use of a natural soap-like substance was the Reeta (Sapindus) nut, which had been used by Indians since antiquity. Other plants that have been used are the Soapwort (Saponaria officinalis), many species of Yucca, Soap Lily (Chlorogalum pomeridianum), and the Horse Chestnut (Aesculus hippocastanum)(1). Even today, many people throughout the world employ these plants as cleansers.

Reeta nut (Soap nut)
 A popular myth claims that soap was first discovered and takes its name from Mount Sapo a location near Rome. It is said that animals were sacrificed to the Gods on this mountain and legend has it that the animal fat and wood ashes from the braziers would be washed into the Tiber River during rain storms. The animal fat and ashes would combine to create a soap-like substance that would stick to the sides of the river. When women in the area came to wash their clothing in the river, they noticed that the soap-like substance made their wash cleaner with less effort. However, the location of Mount Sapo is unknown, as is the source of the "ancient Roman legend" to which this tale is typically credited.

It is believed that a soap-like was first invented by the ancient Babylonians at least 5000 years ago. The first evidence of this substance was found during excavation of ancient Babylon. The soap-like substance was found in clay cylinders and dates back to around 2800 BC (2). A clay tablet from Babylon dating to around 2200 BC records a formula of water, alkali, and cassia oil to make soap. This soap is thought to have been used in both cleaning wool and cloth in textile manufacture and also used medicinally.

The ancient Egyptians are also known to have made soap. A medical document, the Ebers papyrus, dating to around 1550 BC states that soap was made by combining animal and vegetable oils with an alkaline salt. The soap was used for treating skin diseases and for washing.

Ebers Papyrus
It is also evident that soap was used by the Roman empire. Pliny the Elder recorded in Historia Naturalis(around 70 AD) the manufacture of soap using tallow (fat) and wood ashes (3). He states that the soap was used as a pomade for hair. This book is also the first appearance of the word sapo, Latin for soap. It was originally thought that an entire soap factory had been found, complete with bars of soap, in the ruins of Pompeii. Pompeii was destroyed and frozen in time due to the volcanic eruption of Mt. Vesuvius in 79 AD. This has proven to be a misinterpretation, it is now thought that this building was used to clean and prepare textiles. Unfortunately this error has been repeated widely and can be found in otherwise reputable texts on soap history. While bathing is known to have been important in Roman life, cleansing with soap was not recognized as important until latter centuries of the Roman era. Soap was generally used as a treatment for skin diseases and cleaning textiles.

Soap made by the Gauls and Romans used goat's tallow (fat) and the ashes of the beech tree to produce both hard and soft soap. The name soap is derived from saipo, the term the Gauls used to describe the product of animal fats and plant ashes.

Muslim chemists in the medieval Islamic world were the first to produce soaps as we know them today. They were made from vegetable oils such as olive oil, aromatic oils like thyme oil, and lye. The formula for soap used since then hasn't changed. It is known that from the beginning of the 7th century soap was produced in Nablus (West Bank, Palestine), Kufa (Iraq) and Basra (Iraq) (4). Arabian Soap was perfumed and colored and some of the soaps were liquid and others were hard. They also developed soap specifically shaving. The Persian chemist Al-Razi was the first to record soap recipes in a manuscript. More recently a manuscript from the 13th century was discovered that details even more recipes for soap making (5).

In the Middle Ages, artisans worked independently to develop dyeing and soapmaking. Since creating good recipes required so much trial and error, the recipes became secret and were handed down from master to apprentice, and from father to son. Soap was largely developed for use in the cloth industry, to prepare wool for dyeing, and not for personal hygiene. Soapmakers in Naples were members of a guild in the late sixth century (6), and in the eighth century, soap-making was well known in Italy and Spain where soap was made with goat fat and Beech tree ashes. During the same period, the French started using olive oil to produce soap. Eventually, fragrances were introduced and soaps for bathing, shaving, shampooing and laundry began to be made. By 1200 AD, Marseilles, France, London, England, and Savona, Italy had become soapmaking centers.

From the 16th century finer soaps were produced in Europe using vegetable oils (such as olive oil) as opposed to animal fats. This switch to vegetable oil was not simply due to the fact that animal fat soap smelled so bad but also because its manufacture would deplete the nation’s tallow reserves, thereby driving up the cost of candles beyond the reach of the poor.

The most important step in the advancement of soapmaking came from two French chemists. Due to the inconsistencies in the concentration of the alkali extracted from ash, it was difficult to maintain quality control of the soap.  Sometimes it would be too oily and other times it would be too caustic. 
Nicholas Leblanc and Michael Chevreul around the turn of the 19th century help to overcome this problem. In 1791, Leblanc patented a method of making sodium carbonate or soda ash from commonly available salt. In 1811, Chevreul discovered the relationship and chemical nature of fatty acids, glycerin, and fats.

The standardization of sodium hydroxide (lye) production has allowed us to refine our recipes and be able to consistently make batches of soap that have the same qualities. We now know the saponification values for different oils, so we can calculate just how much lye is needed to completely saponify (turn into soap) a specified amount of oil. This ensures that we never have a batch of soap that has excess lye in it and we can control how much free oil remains in the soap to create a nice moisturizing bar.

Ladybug Soapworks Gingerbread Soap
References:
(2) Willcox, Michael (2000). "Soap". In Hilda Butler. Poucher's Perfumes, Cosmetics and Soaps (10th ed.). Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishers. p. 453. ISBN 0-7514-0479-9
(3) Pliny the Elder, Natural History, XXVIII.191.
(5) Chemistry Google e-book by Wikimedia Foundation
(6) Understanding the Middle Ages: the transformation of ideas and attitudes in the Medieval world, Harald Kleinschmidt, illustrated, revised, reprint edition, Boydell & Brewer, 2000, ISBN 0-85115-770-X.

Tuesday, January 15, 2013

Black Raspberry Vanilla Cupcake Soap

Third times the charm?  Well maybe, the soap was certainly easy to pipe this time, but I can't say that they look as nice as I would have liked. The color was meant to be darker purple and not a light pink. The "frosting" also looks a little soft to me, but I made sure to keep the points lower so that they do not look like pink Christmas trees! Once again I used a circle hole piping tip instead of the flower-like tip. I am not sure yet which look I prefer?  What is your opinion?


Black Raspberry Vanilla Soap Cupcakes






Saturday, January 12, 2013

Coconut Lime Soap Cupcakes

My blog post yesterday I talked about how easy it was to pipe soap, well perhaps I spoke too soon. I made some coconut lime soap cupcakes the day after I made the chocolate raspberry cupcakes. The fragrance must have sped up the soap reaction because the soap got thick very fast. I was able to plop in the uncolored cake part of the soap and push it down to fill the cups. Then I had to add some green oxide to get the color for the frosting.  I barely whipped that color in, but by then it was so thick that I could hardly pipe it. I had to change the soap frosting into another bag and use a larger circular tip, but even then it took all my strength to get the soap out.  In the end, I think they look good, but boy was it a process! I pressed in some soap shavings to give the look of coconut and then topped that off with my favorite--glitter! I think they look a bit like Christmas trees, so maybe I should make them again for next Christmas and decorate them with little colored balls of soap to look like ornaments! 

Uncolored soap smooshed into the pan!

Trying to add my super thick soap into the piping bag

Final product

Final product with shredded soap to look like coconut

They almost look like Christmas trees!

Friday, January 11, 2013

Cupcakes! Yumm...oh wait...this is soap!

I have been making some soap cupcakes as a special for Valentine's Day. I am preparing three different "flavors". They will be Dark Chocolate Raspberry (shown in this blog post), Coconut Lime, and Black Raspberry Vanilla. 

The cake part of these soaps is made with a dark chocolate fragrance and I darkened up the soap with a bit of cocoa powder. The frosting is scented with a sun ripened raspberry fragrance and the color is from a little bit of red clay. They are finished off with a touch of iridescent glitter to make sure that they sparkle.  I think that they really smell and look amazing! This was my first time piping soap and it was quite easy.  I think I may start making more of these! I have included a bunch of photos as I pipe on the last of the frosting. Enjoy!

Yum! Dark Chocolate Raspberry Cupcake Soap




Check out my lab jacket in this one!

Finishing up the piping

Added a little sprinkle of glitter!