
This year I wanted to do a something different to the gingerbread man soap I have done in the past. So I went with a gingerbread girl instead. When making the gingerbread man in the past, I have found that adding all the details with soap dough is very time consuming. So this time I tried piping the details instead.
The red colorant I chose (I believe it was red vibrance?) did bleed into the white a little bit (usually, to avoid the red from bleeding into the white, I choose Trial by Fire, as recommended below), but it still looked good, all things considered.
Here are all the other supplies I used:
Recipe Totals
If you are a beginner, a recipe like this one might be better. Below I am using a considerable water discount, and I am using a dual lye blend. If you only want to use sodium hydroxide, you will need to run this through a lye calculator, I like soapmakingfriend.com
| Liquid Required | 7.62 oz | 216.12 g |
| NaOH Weight | 4.7 oz | 133.15 g |
| KOH Weight | 0.39 oz | 10.92 g at 90% Purity |
| Lye Weight | 5.08 oz | 144.08 g |
| Oil Weight | 34 oz | 963.88 g |
| Fragrance Oil Weight | 2.13 oz | 60.24 g |
| Superfat | 2% | |
| Total Batch Weight | 49.34 oz | 1398.65 g |
| Lye Concentration | 40% | |
| NaOH / KOH Ratio | 95% / 5% |
Recipe Oils, Fats and Waxes
| Oil | % | Ounces | Grams |
|---|---|---|---|
| Olive Oil | 30 | 10.2 | 289.16 |
| Tallow Beef | 30 | 10.2 | 289.16 |
| Coconut Oil, 76 deg | 25 | 8.5 | 240.97 |
| Castor Oil | 8 | 2.72 | 77.11 |
| Shea Butter | 7 | 2.38 | 67.47 |
| Total | 100 | 34 | 963.88 |
Custom Additives
| Add with the Fats | |
|---|---|
| Rosemary oleoresin | 0.02 ounce |
| Add at trace | |
| EDTA mixed with distilled water (50/50) | 0.49 ounce |
For more information on these additives you can click in the links below, please note above links are affiliate ones
- Rosemary oleresin (My oils already had this added when I masterbatched the oils)
- Tetrasodium EDTA
My affiliate links:
Several of the links above/below are affiliate links, as the ones below. If you buy from them, it will not cost you any more, and I would get a tiny commission on it. As amazon associate I earn from qualifying purchases.
Colorants:
Trial by Fire Mica (Red) This is my favorite red instead.
Titanium dioxide from Make your own or Titanium Dioxide from Nurture Soap
Cosmetic glitter– white
Mold:
Fragrance:
- Gingerbread Man from Wholesale Supplies Plus
- Vanilla stabilizer (I use a little, but I still had some discoloration)
Embeds
- Soap dough (you can mix orange and yellow, or a light brown for the gingerbread girls). I made them by hand, and cut some. This video of making gingerbread men can give you an idea. You could probably use a cookie cutter like this one.
- Colorful soap scraps (for confetti style soap)
Equipment
- List of regular equipment
- Piping set
- Gingerbread boy girl Mini cookie cutter set
- Miniature gingerbread boy cookie cutter
- (depending on the size of your gingerbread boy or girl, you may choose to use the cavity mold or loaf mold or both)
Safety Equipment:
- Nitrile gloves
- Facial Shield (I use either a facial shield or the goggles below)
- Safety Goggles
- Respirator (I use this when mixing the lye, I mix the lye in the window sill, window opened, with a pedestal fan blowing the fumes away, better yet, freeze your distilled water prior) I also try to wear long sleeves, pants and closed shoes. In my personal experience, most of my near misses (when I feel my skin itching or a slight burning sensation), or when I come contact with the soap batter, have happened when I am wiping down the containers, when I am almost done.
MAKING THE SOAP
- First make the gingerbread girls embeds, you can do this days or weeks ahead.
- To make the soap, I normally heat up some of my masterbatched oils, weigh what I need and set it apart.
- Then I measure the masterbatched lye needed. However, if you do not masterbatch the oils or lye, I detail it below:
- In a well ventilated area (outside or by a window), add the lye gradually to the distilled water. Do not breathe the fumes. You can freeze half of the water ahead to avoid fumes, and weigh the ice cubes. You need to wear your safety gear. Lye burns! You can prepare this several hours ahead, or even days ahead, keep it properly covered. (If making it the same day, loosely cover it to allow it to cool. Once at room temperature, use an airtight lid).
- While you wait for the lye water to cool down, you can weigh and melt your oils. Weigh your fragrance oil or essential oils into a glass container or ceramic container (fragrance oils can dissolve thin plastics).
- Prepare the red colorants and titanium dioxide. Mix it with 1 tbs of olive oil or another clear oil. I use a spatula with the titanium dioxide to break down any lumps. This takes a while.
- When your oils and lye solution are at or below 105°F (37.77°C), put on your PPE (Personal protective equipment) again, and add your lye solution to the oils slowly, to avoid splatters pour it on the blender shaft. If your lye solution is cooler than this, is ok. As long as it not near freezing. (Room temperature is fine). If your oils go under 95° F, warm them up to lightly above 100° F
- Stir with the blender on Off position initially, then blend for 5-7 second periods, alternating with stirring for 10 seconds or longer, until it is emulsified. This takes about 30-50 seconds with this recipe. When a recipe reaches emulsion, everything has a uniform, lighter color than before, you do not see the darker oil swirls when blending. You could bring your soap to light trace instead, since the pour is fairly simple.
- Pour out a small portion for the piping, they will go into the containers with the red and white colorants.
- Add the fragrance to the rest of the soap and stir for about 30 seconds. If using a vanilla stabilizer, add it to the fragrance prior.
- Add the soap scraps, stir and pour it into the mold.
- Carefully, place the embeds on top. So that they do not sink. This fragrance accelerates, so do not wait until it has fully set up.
- Go back to the red and white and stir and mix, and once it is thick enough for piping (could be 30 minutes or more) place it in piping bags and use it do decorates the embeds.
- Wait 24-48 hours and remove from the mold when it peels easily from the sides.
- To cut the soap into bars I normally use a single bar cutter.
- Let the soap cure for at least 4 weeks in an open area protected from direct sunlight before using. (not touching any metal)
*SUPERFAT:
By now you probably know that lye (sodium hydroxide) converts oils into soap, through a process called saponification. And you probably also know that there are specific amounts needed of each for this to happen. Because each soap has a different SAPonification value, different amounts of lye are needed for each oil.
Superfatting sounds like something I like to do to myself when I keep eating after I feel full. But in the soap world, many will know it is when you either add more oils or less lye than it is required. Let’s say, hypothetically, that you need 3 oz of lye to convert 16 oz of manacao oil (totally made up oil) into soap. If you only use 2.5 oz of lye instead of 3, that means that a percentage of the manaco oil will not become soap, but will remain an oil. And this is desirable as that extra oil will cause the soap to become more gentle on your skin, by reducing its cleansing ability slightly. But if you use 4 oz of lye instead of 3, that means all 16 oz of manacao oil will become soap, and not only that, there will be extra lye floating around. That extra lye will be looking for more oil to convert to soap, that oil could be the natural skin oils, which means this soap can burn or irritate the skin.
Usually superfat of at least 3% is recommended as oils properties may change from crop to crop. But even if you had a 0% superfat soap, it would still be gentle as handmade soap creates glycerin, which is a skin humectant. (From most commercially produced soap, glycerin is removed to be sold separately).
*LYE CONCENTRATION / WATER DISCOUNT:
Most soap calculators will give you the amount of water needed to mix the lye with, based on traditional cooking methods of making soap, what we now know as hot process. This is a big percentage of water (38% of the oils) because a lot of it would evaporate through the cooking process. However, for cold process soap this is usually too much water, which can lead to a lot of soda ash or a lot of shrinkage during the cure.
This blogpost explains it better (from modern soapmaking).
