I was very afraid of using goat's milk but had a friend who really wanted me to make it and so I read and read and researched before I began. Now I must tell you, I've only made 5 batches of goat's milk so I'm NO EXPERT. With that said, this is what has worked for me.
1. I use powdered goat's milk (none in my area and it's cheaper that way)
2. Dilute it in distilled water.
3. Pour into ice cube trays. I usually make this up the night before I want to soap.
4. Place frozen goat's milk cubes into a plastic container that fits in a larger ones that is an ice bath.
5. Stir in lye a bit at a time. In my mind, I'm putting in 1/10 of the lye at a time and stirring until I don't feel any lye crystals.
6. Keep adding small amounts and stirring, all the while I check it with my temp gun to
never get above 70 degrees. Usually it's no more that 55 degrees while it's all melting down.
7. Make soap! My oils are usually around 80-90 but the temp difference between the lye/milk and the oils don't seem to be a problem. Anne-Marie has a good video on this.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D8-D7nGlwFk8. If you don't want it to change color, put in freezer. I let mine gel but need to watch carefully for overheating.
I've only had one that had a faint smell of ammonia which shortly went away.
With all that said, I made a batch yesterday in the midst of a crazy stressful day and guess what? I insulated it by mistake and got a crack before I realized what I had done. Luckily, I had checked on it an hour after insulating it. I just uncovered it and let it sit on the table. Even forgot to stick it in the freezer! One thing I learned......DO NOT SOAP WITH ANY DISTRACTIONS AROUND or if your mind is occupied with something else
It looks good this morning but it could have gone horribly wrong.
Oh and please feel free to pick apart my process as this is the only way I can improve
BTW I like your method of mixing the milk powder into the oils Linda. I'm going to try that!!!
