There's no hot process subforum, so this is where I'm putting these questions. If it belongs elsewhere, please, someone move it appropriately.
Some of you know that I participate in a living history group. I've not made any firm decisions about doing this, but I would like to make at least a few batches of soap in ways that were possible before the year 1600 CE. That means, for starters, making my own lye from wood ash. I know how to do this, at least in theory, and more than one of the homes I'm investigating is equipped with a wood-burning fireplace, so I'll have access to ashes (yay!).
The thing that worries me is determining how strong that homemade lye is, by methods that were available to the average soap maker within that medieval-and-prior time period. The usual method I've found in research is to float an egg in the lye. If it won't float, the lye is too weak. If it floats high in the solution, it's too strong. The objective is to float the egg so that just a little bit of it shows (roughly the size of a US 25-cent piece above the water). However, to my mind, that is not nearly precise enough.
Now, I've heard that there's a method of making hot process soap whereby the excess lye falls to the bottom of the boiling pot, leaving 0% superfatted soap at the top -- no excess lye, no excess oil -- to be skimmed off and put into the molds. My thought is to do that, skim off the soap, and then go back and add 3% to 7% additional oils for their skin conditioning properties. However, I can't find any directions for making that happen: what chemical to add to the soap, what temperature to reach, or anything like that, that would make the saponified oils reject the excess lye as a precipitate. It's probably something really simple, given that it's ancient technology, but I've been unable to find a source I trust on the matter.
So that's my question: What can I do to a batch of soap, of uncertain lye strength, to make sure that excess lye is removed from the batch?
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