Hello all! I'm an MP'er just beginning to CP (and very excited), so you will probably be seeing a lot of questions from me in the near future. Thank you all in advance!
I found a shampoo recipe that looks a bit odd when run through a lye calculator. The recipe is from a random page, which I wouldn't normally trust, but it does claim to be taken from Susan Miller Cavitch's "The Natural Soap Book". The recipe can be found here:
http://www.organic-gardening-and-homest ... ampoo.htmlThe calculator I'm running it through is the one on my Soapmaker 3 Pro software. Since I only want to test this recipe, I cut it down to 1/10th the size. So now it looks like this:
- 4.8 oz distilled water
- 51 grams lye
- 4.9 oz olive
- 3.6 oz castor
- 3.6 oz coconut
- .8 oz jojoba
My question is, my software calculator is reflecting that this recipe uses only a 2% lye discount (I believe "lye discount" = superfat?) and a *negative* water discount of 13%, meaning I'm using 13% too much water. Is that correct? Wouldn't a shampoo recipe usually have a high superfat, not low? And why would you want to use more water than is necessary?
Thanks again, everyone! It's much appreciated.