Looking for Dish Soap bar recipe.

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I'd say a big reason why you don't see much about dishwashing soap in bar form is that bar soap is cumbersome to use. You either need to grate it into flakes or powder or or scrub a lot on the bar with the dish cloth or scrubbie.

There was some discussion awhile back about making a paste cleanser for dishwashing that some people really like. I think the recipes in the thread were synthetic detergent blends, but that's not to say you couldn't make a true soap in a paste form. Basically you'd still make an all or mostly coconut oil as the others are suggesting but use KOH, rather than NaOH, and use enough liquid, whether water or glycerin, to keep the soap as a soft paste.

If you grate or powder a soap with a -3% superfat, whether for dishwashing or laundry, any excess NaOH in the grated or powdered soap will quickly react with the carbon dioxide in the air to form washing soda. It doesn't stay as NaOH. If you have a -3% excess lye in a bar soap, the excess NaOH will gradually react too, but the process is slower simply because the soap is in a single solid piece so only the outside surface is exposed to air.

"...would 100% CO with 0% SF work for laundry as well? ..."

Only if you also use enough washing soda or borax to soften the water and keep the pH sufficiently high enough in the wash water so the soap remains an effective cleanser. Soap is not a good cleanser if it also has to soften the water and adjust the pH.

This is the downside to the idea of putting soap directly into dish water without also adding a water conditioner (washing soda or borax). Soap for washing dishes is most efficient when it's put directly on the wash cloth or scubby. Not added to the whole sink of water.
 
I’m hoping to make a hard bar for dish washing by hand. My thinking behind adding castor oil is to add some lather. But, yeah, I guess not necessary with coconut oil. Here are a few images and where I got the idea. I like the home made, reduced plastic option.
Several of these have ingredients I don’t understand. But, there are lots of dish soap blocks online using coconut oil, olive oil, castor oil... So, I’m hoping to make my own version of those
. BFADF02D-33CE-4BBC-A71D-0C9047ACCFEC.jpegCC746DBF-06CA-45FF-8FA0-A5A98E7501EF.jpegE1D2BB80-81B0-4B03-B70F-331868B3DC43.jpeg22124D57-BC9C-4E30-BDF2-A3A01B71807E.jpeg67BAD3DB-802B-4B3E-9D34-AC6A7C8CDAC7.jpeg08D434E6-DEEA-46B7-861C-1EAFF58EC3BC.jpegBFADF02D-33CE-4BBC-A71D-0C9047ACCFEC.jpeg
 
The second one you attached is a synthetic blend (I couldn't read the first one).

I do like Humblebee&Me's dishwashing paste, which was mentioned earlier. It works fantastic, lots of bubbles and great cleansing, and doesn't even dry my hand that much. She also shared a version that is solid, but again, it is syndet, not true soap. I have not made that one yet, but am planning to.

I have bought one, which, from the ingredients, seems to be a combination bar (soap + syndets). I have not tried it yet; if it is good, it may be something worth experimenting with.
 
Just a thought but have you looked at the dishwashing paste recipe from Humblebee and Me or La Fille de la Mer (Ariane)? Super easy to make and i love it as do a lot of other people.
The paste looks very interesting! But, I don’t have those ingredients on hand, I do have lots of soaping ingredients, and I’m thinking I would prefer to try a hard bar for dish washing by hand.
 
I'd say a big reason why you don't see much about dishwashing soap in bar form is that bar soap is cumbersome to use. You either need to grate it into flakes or powder or or scrub a lot on the bar with the dish cloth or scrubbie.

There was some discussion awhile back about making a paste cleanser for dishwashing that some people really like. I think the recipes in the thread were synthetic detergent blends, but that's not to say you couldn't make a true soap in a paste form. Basically you'd still make an all or mostly coconut oil as the others are suggesting but use KOH, rather than NaOH, and use enough liquid, whether water or glycerin, to keep the soap as a soft paste.

If you grate or powder a soap with a -3% superfat, whether for dishwashing or laundry, any excess NaOH in the grated or powdered soap will quickly react with the carbon dioxide in the air to form washing soda. It doesn't stay as NaOH. If you have a -3% excess lye in a bar soap, the excess NaOH will gradually react too, but the process is slower simply because the soap is in a single solid piece so only the outside surface is exposed to air.

"...would 100% CO with 0% SF work for laundry as well? ..."

Only if you also use enough washing soda or borax to soften the water and keep the pH sufficiently high enough in the wash water so the soap remains an effective cleanser. Soap is not a good cleanser if it also has to soften the water and adjust the pH.

This is the downside to the idea of putting soap directly into dish water without also adding a water conditioner (washing soda or borax). Soap for washing dishes is most efficient when it's put directly on the wash cloth or scubby. Not added to the whole sink of water.
That is super helpful, and a lot to think about. Maybe the dish bar isn’t such a great idea after all. I’ll look into the pastes and other ideas, but I don’t have any of those ingredients on hand. Glad I didn’t just try it without checking. Thank you!
 
"...My thinking behind adding castor oil is to add some lather. ..."

Castor, in and of itself, does not create lather, despite what the "cleansing" number in Soapcalc implies. It stabilizes the lather created by other soaps, making the lather last longer.

Coconut oil and similar "cleansing" fats have a high % of lauric and myristic acids. Soap made from these fatty acids dissolves quickly and easily and it can aggressively emulsify fats, regardless of whether the wash water is hot, warm, cold or salty. This is why a mostly- or all-coconut soap is often recommended for laundry and dishwashing and why it is so hard on your hands.

Soaps made from longer fatty acids also emulsify and clean, but these soaps are less soluble in water and do not clean as as aggressively. This milder action is why these soaps are good for cleaning the skin without causing irritation or over-cleaning, but aren't so good for cleaning laundry and dishes. They will perform best in warm or hot water, and not so well in cold or salty water.

Lard soap has long been used in the laundry, but its historical use as a laundry soap is more because other fats were often not available for making soap. It isn't because lard soap is all that amazing for washing grimy clothes. Farm wives made soap with lard because that's all they had.
 
My laundry soap has a -3% superfat and I haven't noticed any colors fading. I think I based the -3 on another discussion on laundry soap in another thread. Obviously, would never use it for for dishes or handle it without gloves.
I don't understand why then I experienced colour fading. I was blaming it on 0% superfat and then with the unsaponifiables in the coconut oil, I thought it was probably going into the negative and causing colour loss. I switched to 1% superfat and it's now been so long ago I can't remember how that did. I want to make laundry soap, just never get there.
 
Unsaponifiables in coconut oil? The saponification value for a given oil is a real-life number that is a measure of everything in the oil that does and doesn't saponify. The unsaponifiable content in a fat is taken into account when the saponfication test is performed and the sap value is calculated for the fat.

Even if it wasn't accounted for in the sap value, the unsaponifiable content in coconut oil isn't all that high -- and is similar to the unsaponifiable content for many other common soap-making fats, including olive, palm, lard, palm kernel, etc. All have no more than 1-2% tops, and often less. Even pomace olive oil is limited per industry standards to a max of 3% unsap. content. Avocado and shea contain higher unsaponifiable content -- more in the 5-10% range, speaking in general.

Soap is alkaline (high pH). Some colors and some fabrics can tolerate the alkaline nature of soap, and some can't. For delicate fabrics and bright colors, it's probably best to test first if a person wants to use soap to wash these clothes. Or stick to soap for washing jeans and everyday clothes and a syndet cleanser for the nicer stuff.

People have shared ideas on SMF about making and using soap-based "stain sticks" to pre-treat stains on clothing. Coconut oil soap is often used for these sticks. Some people have learned the hard way that stain sticks aren't always the best thing to use - the soap sometimes causes the fabric color to change or fade. I thnk Carolyn (@cmzaha) has a good story about this, if my memory is working right.
 
Unsaponifiables in coconut oil?
The reason I singled out coconut oil is because I used 100% CO. I have no knowledge of which oils have more unsaponifiables than others, just read that all oils have unsaponifiables. This was in a book I read 15 years ago so who knows whether it's accurate today or not.
Where I noticed fading was on a blue wash cloth, so it would have been cotton. I do use a coconut oil stain stick. I have never had that happen with that. Let's hear it from @cmzaha
 
Maybe I shouldn't but I do use a 1% superfat in laundry soap for a little margin just so the soap doesn't go a little over in the lye heavy direction. I don't want to fade colours by having it go that way.
I'll take fading clothes over a slow-accumulating oil build up in my clothes. Even when I did use soap for laudry, I didn't have fading. I had to deal with stains that were stubborn and needed enzymes to break those down. laundry detergents, many of them, have those enzymes in their formula.
 
... just read that all oils have unsaponifiables. This was in a book I read 15 years ago so who knows whether it's accurate today or not.....

I agree that that all fats have some amount of unsaponifiable content -- true statement, that.

What I was trying to explain (and doing so poorly, I see!) is the saponification value accounts for this unsaponifiable content. It is not something people would need to worry about or adjust for.

I think we're seeing this situation in much the same way, but maybe saying things differently.
 
I agree that that all fats have some amount of unsaponifiable content -- true statement, that.

What I was trying to explain (and doing so poorly, I see!) is the saponification value accounts for this unsaponifiable content. It is not something people would need to worry about or adjust for.

I think we're seeing this situation in much the same way, but maybe saying things differently.
No, I'm quite sure it's me explaining poorly. I understood your explanation but 15 years ago I didn't know that the sap value accounted for the unsaponifiables. Hence I thought it might be excess lye instead of the alkalinity. I appreciate your knowledge.
 
Is this for the OP and her dishwashing plans? Or my reply to a question about laundry soap?

If directed at me, I grate it up and use it in a clothes washing machine, scooped out with a spoon, so there is no contact with skin.

It's for the OP, and in reply to the thread in general. Lye heavy soap (within reason, I tested up to -15% trying to prove DeeAnna wrong, LOL) will cure out to a non-lye-heavy state by the end of cure. So no special precautions are needed.

I have hard water now, so I had to revert back to commercial laundry soap to avoid the "greys" happening to my former "whites". No amount of EDTA helped. Nor did bleach. And I no longer use liquid soap paste for general cleaning, either. Such a shame.
 
I recently made a dish bar with 95% CO and 5% castor.
I like it and don’t find it especially drying on my hands. I normally use a dish brush.
Caveat: almost everything goes into the dishwasher so I usually only use it for the occasional pot or colander and my cutting board, so, daily use but it’s not like I’m washing everything for each meal.
 
I recently made a dish bar with 95% CO and 5% castor.
I like it and don’t find it especially drying on my hands. I normally use a dish brush.
Caveat: almost everything goes into the dishwasher so I usually only use it for the occasional pot or colander and my cutting board, so, daily use but it’s not like I’m washing everything for each meal.
I am going to try your recipe with the castor oil, I make 100% coconut oil bars and I put them into an organza gift bag and use the bar whilst still in the bag, and I hang it on the tap when I am finished. I also do that with my shampoo bars easier to use and the soap dries cleaner. Thank you for sharing.
 
Castor is normally used to stabilize lather for low-lather soaps. 100% CO is a high-lather, grease-fighting soap that cleans dishes very well on its own. Can anyone explain what helpful properties castor would add to a dish soap, as opposed to a soap being used on the face or body?
 
I am going to try your recipe with the castor oil, I make 100% coconut oil bars and I put them into an organza gift bag and use the bar whilst still in the bag, and I hang it on the tap when I am finished. I also do that with my shampoo bars easier to use and the soap dries cleaner. Thank you for sharing.
That’s similar to the recipe I found online that I’m thinking about making. I’m glad to heat it’s working well for you. I wash most stuff by hand, so it might not work out for me. But, if I used that kind of recipe, and I didn’t like it, couldn’t I repurpose it for laundry?
 

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