Hi all! I'm hoping someone can explain to me the essential difference between bar soap that has been diluted to a liquid, and liquid soap. I understand both processes, but not why the traditional liquid soap process is supposedly better. Let me put it into context...
Basically, in liquid soapmaking you do HP, with the only difference being that you use potassium hydroxide instead of sodium hydroxide and you go a little overboard on the lye. Once you've achieved the paste, you add boiling water, allow it to dilute, neutralize the extra lye, set it aside for a week or so and... ta-da! Liquid soap.
The other day, I was experimenting with a leftover bar of CP soap. I shredded it, added it to boiling water, it diluted perfectly and never separated. I added the proper amount of preservative and tested it in a foaming bottle. The resulting soap foam was full and creamy.
So, I don't really understand why the first method is supposed to be superior to the second. In both cases you have saponified oils and the end result is soap in liquid form. I asked BB customer service and the first rep wasn't sure, so she asked someone else and the best answer they could give me was "it's not really liquid soap, it's just CP diluted in water".
What am I missing here?
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