Soap Fail! I just unmoulded the batch we're talking about. I feel so discouraged right now.
Part of the soap went away with the knife and I guess the poppy seeds have stained it (see the brownish spot?).
To answer to your questions: the mixture reached trace after circa 8 minutes of stick blender. I put the EO in and stirred just a little more because the soap was now getting thick very quickly.
I heated my oils all together and used the amount of water and lye suggested by the BB calculator for a 10% superfatting level.
When I had the temperature problem I heated the lye water just as Linda said, putting it in the sink filled with warm water. Yeah, at least I did something good!
Irena's questions make me wondering if I may have misunderstood the superfatting thing
: I assumed from my readings that there were 2 ways to superfat a soap. The first was to calculate the ingredients amount with a 0% superfatting level and then adding at trace an X amount of oil that I intended as superfatting agent. This seemed to me something suitable to an expert soaper so I chose the other way, the second.
The second way was to put a X% of superfatting level in the formula and let the calculator do the work for me calculating the exact amount of lye and water necessary to "eat" my oils leaving a X% superfat (in my assumptions, that would be a formula where the lye and water had been discounted). This is what I did. If I misunderstood the matter please tell me, your help is very precious to me since no one I know has any experience in soap making
This is the recipe:
olive oil 400 gr
coconut oil 200 gr
soy beans oil 200 gr
sunflower seeds oil 200 gr
10% lye amount 212,4 gr (approximated to 212)
water 700 gr.
And this is my soap disaster.