Product Details
Milk-Based Soaps: Making Natural, Skin-Nourishing Soap

Milk-Based Soaps: Making Natural, Skin-Nourishing Soap
By Casey Makela

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Product Description

Learn how to make moisturizing milk-based soaps like Oatmeal, Peaches and Cream, and specialty soaps, as well as how to turn this hobby into a moneymaker!


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #43606 in Books
  • Published on: 1997-01-09
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 112 pages

Features


Editorial Reviews

From the Back Cover
Learn the time-honored secrets of making moisturizing, skin-nourishing soaps with milk!

Create this sought-after soap at home using the specialized yet simple techniques Caset Makela has developed in more than 15 years of soapmaking. With her in-depth instructions you'll learn to:
* Make both vegetable- and tallow-based soaps using common ingredients and equipment
* Create classic beauty soaps, like Milk-based Oatmeal and Peaches and Cream
* Experiment with specialty soaps from the practical to the lush -- Nitty-Gritty to Romantic Rose
* Name, package, and market your soaps to turn your hobby into a money-maker!

About the Author
The experience and expertise Casey Makela has acquired through 15 years of making soaps is readily apparent in her book, Milk-Based Soaps. She is the owner of Killmaster Soap & Woolen Works, a gift shop and direct mail business. Besides raising dairy goats, Casey has written articles for various animal husbandry periodicals. She resides in Harrisville, Michigan, with her husband and seven children.


Customer Reviews

Overall a good book, but with a few oddities4
If you are an inexperienced soapmaker and you read this book, I think it is probably going to scare you to death. You'll drop the book and run away screaming and never give another instant of thought to making milk soaps. MILK-BASED SOAPS was an informative book and I feel that it taught me some useful things (I have my own soapmaking business), but I was making goats' milk soaps long before I read this book and it just isn't as hard as she makes it sound, I promise.

I was really, really puzzled by Makela's instruction to cool the milk/lye mixture down to 80 degrees F while having the fats/oils at 120 degrees F and THEN mixing the two together. She says in the book that the milk/lye mixture will want to keep separating and falling to the bottom of the pot while you stir -- there's a reason for that, you know. It's because there is not enough 'synergy' between these two substances that are being combined at such wildly disparate temperatures. You know what? I bring my milk/lye mixture and my fats/oils mixture both to 110 degrees F for a 6 pound batch of soap and I have NEVER had any trouble. And I do NOT use all the multiple pots and blenders to scoop the raw soap back and forth, etc. I use one heavy stainless steel pot, one sturdy plastic Rubbermaid pitcher for the lye/milk and one stick blender. This does not have to be a group effort. Makela tends to make this sound as if you need a tag team of willing friends dressed in Haz-Mat suits standing at the ready to assist you in your time of need.

Truly. I make this soap all by myself. I do it all the time. It only has to be a big hairy deal if you intentionally make it that way.

One part where Makela is dead-on right is when she says to put the milk (in its pitcher) into a cold bath -- I stop up one side of my sink and add cool water and ice cubes -- and then pour the lye flakes slo-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-owly into the milk. She is correct when she says that this should be AT LEAST a fifteen minute process, which is one of the reasons why I charge more for my goats' milk soaps. I owe Makela a thanks for the cool water bath idea -- it's a great one and I have never had trouble with the goats' milk overheating since I've done that. I appreciate that advice immensely. When you stir rhythmically, add the lye slowly and keep the milk nice and cool, you'll always have a sunny yellow milk/lye mixture that will easily combine with the fats and oils to make a really beautiful, creamy, buttery beige-colored soap.

There were some nice recipes in this book and some worthy advice for marketing your handcrafted creations. All in all, it was a good book. Buy it -- and don't let yourself be intimidated by what is not really a difficult process at all.

Well worth the money spent.4
This is one of the better books I've read so far. The recipes are large, but the first few batches you make will probably be given away, so these are big enough for you to keep some as well as give away.
The history given is helpful, it was a pleasure to read. As for the methods she uses with the blender, it is alot of work, but it is faster than stirring by hand. Personally, I use my stick blender, less work all around.
It is not nessasary to use palm or coconut oils in soap, and they aren't even the base for all soaps as another reviewer wrote. My best soaps have olive oil as the base and no coconut or palm at all.

Milk soaps aren't for someone completely new to soapmaking.. try making basic soaps first. The recipes are all over the internet, but this book is easy enough to follow that someone who has been making soaps for a month or two will have no problems following it. Actually someone who has never made soap would be able to follow it, but a little experience before trying something that is tricky like milk soaps, wouldn't hurt.
Overall, for the money spent this book is worth it. Much more detailed and well thought out than another soapmaking book I read recently.

Definitely not for beginners!!!!2
It seems that there was some extremely important information missing! She says that you can change the kinds of oils you use, but failed to provide any kind of lye calculation chart which is critical to making safe soap. She also doesn't explain why she uses some of the ingredients she uses. She says to add Borax to water if you don't have soft water, but why does she want you to add it to the milk? Sugar and glycerin. Are they mandatory??? And why the sugar? What does it do? I appreciated the information as far as keeping the milk cool, and the best way to work with it so it doesn't get scorched, but her recipies are too big to use, and she doesn't include either palm or coconut oil which is a basic staple of all soap. Is either oil not recommended for milk based soaps? There are just too many gaps!!!