Homemade Laundry Soap
Mar. 1st, 2009 05:54 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
I've just made my second batch of laundry soap. The last batch lasted 7 months and I made this one with the remaining ingredients -- how's that for economical? :)
Today's version was inspired by my new copy of The Naturally Clean Home (Karyn Siegel-Maier). Since I have a front-loading washing machine, hard water, and usually wash in cold water, I thought I'd better stick to the gel method commonly available on the internet. So I used the ingredients in the book and the method from the internet. Which ended up going as follows:
Ingredients
Today's version was inspired by my new copy of The Naturally Clean Home (Karyn Siegel-Maier). Since I have a front-loading washing machine, hard water, and usually wash in cold water, I thought I'd better stick to the gel method commonly available on the internet. So I used the ingredients in the book and the method from the internet. Which ended up going as follows:
Ingredients
- 1 cup grated soap (I use Zote brand -- in the future I'll look for something less scented)
- 1 cup washing soda
- 1/2 cup borax
- 10-15 drops essential oil
- A whole lot of water!
- 3-5 gallon container
- Heat 6 cups of water, then dissolve the grated soap into it.
- Once dissolved, turn off the heat and add the washing soda and borax, stirring until those are dissolved.
- Put 4 cups of hot water into your storage container
- Add the soap mixture to the water and mix.
- Add another 1 gallon plus 6 cups (that's 22 cups) of cool water to the mixture. Stir to combine.
- At this point the soap is cool enough to add 10-15 drops of the essential oil of your choice. I used lavender.
- Let sit 24 hours to gel. Or you could pour it into old laundry bottles and then let it sit to gel.
no subject
Date: 2009-03-03 07:11 am (UTC)Soap and detergent function very differently. It is definitely not wise to substitute one for the other without knowing what those differences are. For example, you can wash eye glasses with liquid hand "soap" because it is actually a detergent. Try that with a bar of soap and you'll likely get a film of soap you'll never get off.
no subject
Date: 2009-03-03 02:09 pm (UTC)That's also what caused decades of soap rings on bathtubs, something we haven't seen in our lifetimes as many commercially available bar soaps and bubble baths became formulated as detergents. Personally I now find, on a gut level, white bar soap to be scarily white and excessively perfumed. I prefer a handmade soap that really is a soap, and as such I'm learning to clean more like the way my great-grandmother may have done.