Tuesday, March 1, 2016

Handmade Citrus Soap with Activated Charcoal


I love this simple and beautiful cold process soap with citrus essential oils and activated charcoal to pull toxins from the skin. Here's the recipe:

Tallow - 50%
Coconut oil - 40%
Olive oil - 10%

Sweet almond oil - Additional 10% superfat added after trace

1 Tbsp. activated charcoal
litsea cubeba essential oil
sweet orange essential oil
pink grapefruit essential oil

water
lye (always refer to lye calculator)

Monday, May 18, 2015

Peppermint & Eucalyptus Soap

So fresh and green! Here's the recipe:

30% coconut oil
30% olive oil
30% lard
10% avocado oil

Superfat with 10% olive oil

Colored with alfalfa powder.

Scented with Peppermint and Eucalyptus essential oils.

I used the lye calculator from thesage.com.

Thursday, January 29, 2015

Carrot and Citrus Natural Soap

Natural Carrot and Citrus Soap
 
Why carrot in a face soap? Carrots have beta-carotene and are packed with vitamins and antioxidants that are great for aging skin. Here's my recipe:
 
30% carrot-infused olive oil (see explanation below)
20% coconut oil
20% palm oil
10% shea butter
10% grapeseed oil
10% sweet almond oil
 
Scented with litsea and orange essential oils, .5 ounce per pound of oils
Colored with dehydrated carrot powder, 1 Tbs. per pound of oils
 
To make carrot-infused olive oil, simply place a few carrots in your food processer and chop into tiny pieces, or you can grate. Place in a crockpot. Cover the carrot with olive oil. I used about 20 ounces for two large carrots. Put your crockpot on the warm setting and leave overnight. Use a coffee filter and colander to strain the oil from the carrot and keep in the fridge until ready to use. The oil will be a slight orange color.
 
You could also make your own dehydrated carrot powder. Slice your carrots super thin, place in the oven on a dehydrator rack for several hours, until the carrots are crispy and completely dry. Pulverize into a powder with your food processor.
 
The beautiful creamy orange color from this soap comes from the slightly orange carrot-infused olive oil and the carrot powder.
 
 


Sunday, January 11, 2015

Lovely Lavender and Lemon Natural Soap Recipe (Cold Process)

My two loves come together in this recipe:  lavender and lemon! I have basic cold process soap making directions in a previous blog post (2011, I think) so I won't go through the basic soap making steps here. For the first time, I tried the "pot swirl" method and was pretty pleased with it, only I need to make a couple adjustments for next time.

Here's the recipe:

Coconut oil - 27%
Palm oil - 23%
Olive oil - 20%
Sweet almond oil - 14%
Castor oil - 8%
Cocoa butter - 8%

For my mold, I need 50 ounces weight of oils so I used:

Coconut oil - 13.5 oz wt
Palm oil - 11.5 oz wt
Olive oil - 10 oz wt
Sweet almond oil - 7 oz wt
Castor oil - 4 oz wt
Cocoa butter - 4 oz wt

For the lye water, I used 15 fluid ounces of water and 6.97 oz wt of lye.

Now for the fun part! After your lye water and oils have cooled to a workable temperature (between 100 and 120 degrees F), combine the lye water and oils. Stir them by hand, then give them a quick pulse or two from the stick blender. Quickly add your essential oils or fragrance oils and blend them in. (I used equal parts Lavender EO and Litsea EO. I'm really pleased with this combination!) For the size of my batch, I used a total of two ounces wt of EO).

Pour part of the mixture (I poured about 1/3 of the mixture) into a glass measuring bowl. Hopefully the mixture is nice and thin still! Add alkanet root powder for the purple coloring and mix by hand, and give it another quick stick blend. To the main mixture, add lemon peel powder for a natural yellow color.

Now we have two parts of soap mixture; yellow in the main pot and purple in the measuring bowl. Now for the "in the pot" swirl technique:  Imagine your main pot is a clock. Hold the purple mixture high above the main pot and pour part of it in at 12 o'clock. Hold it at a slightly lower level and pour at 3 o'clock. Even lower at 6 o'clock and right at the surface at 9 o'clock. Pour the last bit right in the middle of the clock. Take your spatula and "connect the dots" one time. The high pours allow for the color to reach the bottom of the pot, then the low pours put the coloring towards the surface, so it should distribute somewhat evenly throughout the pot.

Now simply pour it in the mold!



This batch came to trace really quickly so I had to work fast! I may have stick blended it too much, so I recommend minimal use of the stick blender. Cocoa butter may have also contributed. Higher soap temps may also lead to early tracing. I've also read that increasing the amount of water can help slow down tracing. There are so many factors in each batch of soap, it's hard to pinpoint the exact cause of early tracing.

Even so, I think the batch turned out beautiful. I just cut it up and overall I'm pleased with the swirls. I love the little specks of lemon peel powder for the coloring.



Friday, January 9, 2015

Holiday burlap banners

Here's just a few more banners I did before Christmas. I can't wait to make some Valentine and Spring banners. Will keep you posted!








Barnwood "faith" frames

 
 
I found these old barnwood frames in an antique store and instantly thought they might look great with my "faith" verse stencils! I love how they turned out! These were donated to an auction and they sold for more than double what I paid! Very satisfying feeling!
 

Monday, September 22, 2014

Politics, Religion... and GMOs?

I get to meet a lot of neat people in my line of work. When I strike up a conversation with someone new, the discussion almost always leads to the distrust in our nation's food system. GMOs are usually at the top of the "do not trust" list. I usually hang back a little bit and try to decide someone's "official stance" on the GMO subject, because everyone seemingly has a stance on the matter.

Many folks are fearful of GMOs and you can't blame them. There's some really effective fear-mongering propaganda out there. To the developers of the propaganda, I tip my hat to you. Even men and women directly involved in commercial GMO grain operations are suspicious.

Many farmers are finding that the GMO conversation is taboo - sort of like politics and religion. We'd rather not talk about it to avoid upsetting someone.

If you're not exactly sure how GMOs are made, this video does a nice job explaining. In the 1980's, genetic engineering consisted of planting corn, hand pollinating to get specific traits, selecting the strongest plants (drought tolerant, disease resistant, etc.), saving seed from those plants, replanting that seed and repeating until the desired outcome was achieved. As you could imagine, it took several years and a lot of labor!

By the 1990's modern technology knocked years off of that with a "mechanical" shooting process - literally shooting cells with certain genes! Regardless of how you feel about Monsanto, I highly recommend taking the tour to learn more about how GMOs are made.


Recognize the plant on the left? This is what the corn plant looked like originally. Lots of vegetation and very little seed. Thanks to our ancestors and genetic selection, the corn plant looks as we know it today.

The argument I usually hear against GMOs is that they aren't natural. What about cross bred cattle? Humans cross breed livestock to achieve desirable characteristics, like docility and acceptable birth weights. Are these cattle not natural? They're just as natural as you and me. This may seem like a ridiculous example but my point is, where do you draw the line? Are plants and animals not continually modifying their genetics to get stronger?

Additionally, I have yet to see a research-based study to prove that GMOs are harmful. I have seen, however, many summaries of studies stating that GMOs are safe. This message doesn't fit the media's propaganda, so we usually don't see those studies blasted on our Facebook pages.

Generally the opposition laments that other countries don't allow GMOs, so what do they know that we don't? My answer is... they're really good at fear mongering. They haven't provided the research, either.

So why not at least label so people know what they are getting? I'm not saying it won't happen some day, but why put a red flag "warning" label on something that's perfectly safe? This would also raise food prices.

Monsanto must be paying off the government, right? Why does our government allow such atrocities? This is almost always where the conversation ends because I can't prove that "big corporations" and the government are not in bed together. I do assume, however, that our government is in the business of feeding people, a world population of 9 billion by 2050. GMOs are allowing us to produce more with less area and fewer inputs (fertilizer and water).

Many of my friends know that I have a deep respect for all segments of agriculture. I absolutely love this article from National Geographic Magazine, "Feeding 9 Billion". I think it does an excellent job talking about the need for both organic and conventional agriculture.

I always like to encourage folks to talk with their dollars. Spend locally and get hooked up with a CSA or your local farmer's market. Get to know your farmers and learn how your food is produced.

I'm looking forward to having more respectful GMO conversations in the future. Hopefully more people will speak up even when the conversation turns uncomfortable. Happy harvesting!