Stay Connected

Monday, April 20, 2015

Microwaving bar soap -- what in the world?

Microwaving a bar of soap for making laundry soap in minutes, with no grating 


Do you make your own laundry soap? If you do, do you grate bar soap for this?

"Why would anyone make laundry soap?" you wonder.

For me, making my own hypo-allergenic laundry soap has drastically reduced my eczema flare-ups. But the primary motivation for most folks is saving money.

For years, I'd grated my hypo-allergenic bar soap on a small handheld grater. The fear of losing the skin on my knuckles caused me to change from grating bars of soap to melting whole bars of soap in a large pot of water.

Well . . .

I tried something fun and new a couple of weeks ago. Yes, this part was the fun part. How do you feel about kitchen experiments?

From bar to puffy blob: you gotta try this!!


Use your microwave for an easy way to get your bars of soap ready for pulverizing or melting. 
Then, you can use, as is, or blended with other ingredients, for making powdered or liquid soap for laundry and/or filling all of those hand soap dispensers, for pennies.

How I go about this

(Just an FYI -- This isn't about a particular recipe for laundry detergent. There are loads of recipes online. This is about how I get the bar soap into a form that is very user-friendly, without hand-grating.)

What I use

  • 1 very fresh (new) bar of soap, 3 ounces or thereabouts, Ivory or Dial "Basics" (Ivory is the soap that is well-known for working the best in this experiment/transformation, but Dial "Basics" also works for me.)
  • waxed paper
  • microwave
  • blender, food processor
  • storage container for powdered soap
  • 1-gallon, wide-mouth container to store liquid soap 


I microwave 3-oz bars of soap, one at a time. (I use Dial "Basics", but Ivory also works. I'm not sure about other brands of soap.)

The soap should be new. A new bar fluffs the best. And Ivory soap is reported to fluff up the most. But the Dial "Basics" gets enough fluffing to make it easy to pulverize in the blender.

On a large sheet of waxed paper, I place 1 unwrapped bar of soap, in the microwave. Yes, I said in the microwave, just dry, unwrapped, as is.

I set the timer for 1 minute. In 1 minute, the bar of soap will look something like this


You can see some hard edges remaining. I continue to "cook" the bar of soap for 15 second intervals.

It takes my 3-oz bar of soap 1 minute and 30 seconds. Your microwave may vary.

You want to watch these 15 second intervals, as leaving the soap in the microwave too long will result in scorched soap. When the hard edges of the bar are gone, it's done. Like this


Open the microwave, and allow to sit for a minute. Peel the lump of inflated soap off of the waxed paper. The lump will still have hot spots, especially in the center, for another 6 or 7 minutes.

Allow it to cool!

With microwaving, the hard bar becomes pliable, breaks apart easily with your hands and is airy, like foam. Now that is something to see.

For powdered soap

Pull the lump into marshmallow-sized pieces and one by one put them in your food processor or blender. I use my blender for this, doing about 1/3 of the large lump at a time. Turn the appliance on for short bursts, until the lump is pulverized. This only takes a few seconds. With a blender, you'll want to empty the soap powder from time to time, into your storage container. 

The entire time spent pulverizing is about 2 minutes. And does not stress my blender in the least. You will have pulverized soap like this


Be careful about breathing in the soap dust.

One 3-oz bar yields 1 cup of soap flakes.

Powders work well for combining with other ingredients, like washing soda, borax or OxyClean. 

Using the powdered soap:
when I do use this in powdered form, I use about 2 to 3 tablespoons of soap flakes per load. This gives me about 6 to 8 loads of soap per bar.

Most folks find there's better cleaning power if soap flakes are blended with borax, washing soda and/or OxyClean. There are many recipes for these homemade laundry soaps online, all very similar.

Some people prefer to use homemade soap flakes to extend their favorite commercial laundry products, like Tide and Gain, mixing a commercial product with the homemade product in up to a 50/50 mix. You would use less of this blend, due to the density of the soap flakes.

I began making my own laundry soap to reduce eczema flare-ups. But the money-saving aspect also appeals to me.

My husband's laundry seems to require a 50/50 blend, like mentioned above. Soap, alone, does not handle the man-smell. I blend a powdered detergent from Dollar Tree with homemade soap flakes, for his own detergent (and for when I'm washing other clothing/linens that won't include my own). When using just the Dollar Tree detergent, our cost is about 11 cents per load. When I extend the DT detergent with pulverized hand soap, (using 3 bars of Dial Basics to one small box of DT powdered detergent), our cost per load is about 6 cents. Good, right?



Playing in the kitchen is a lot of fun. Even my grown kids think microwaving soap is entertaining. But the real value for me is how easily this makes creating my own laundry soap. Grating bars of soap on a hand grater was tedious. This is just simple.

Who knew I could use my microwave for making laundry soap? Funny thing, there isn't a listing in my microwave cookbook for microwaving bars of soap.

(I have broken this post into 2 parts. It was verging on too long for the blog. More tomorrow on how I make liquid soaps, using microwaved bar soap.)

___________________________________________________________________

Friday, April 17, 2015

I love tablecloths

They are a cheap and super easy way to transform something that looks a bit

like this


to this


Our kitchen table is now 28 years old. It was a kit when we bought it. And has never been refinished. The kids did homework, painted, played with playdough, and colored at this table. The table top edges show years of wear.

Every summer, I vow to tackle refinishing this table. Maybe this summer will be the lucky one. But for now, a nice tablecloth conceals the rough edges and transforms the dining end of the kitchen to something civilized.

This tablecloth, by the way, is one that gets double duty. It goes on the table for the month of December, and then again in early spring. I made it, and the coordinating napkins, several years ago, from a piece of heavyweight fabric, the kind you would use for drapery.

It survives washing in the washing machine. And because of it's heavy weight, it comes out neat enough for family use, to not need the iron. (Okay, some might say a little ironing would be beneficial. But this is nice enough for us.)

Anyway, call me old fashioned. I just love the look of a tablecloth. It doesn't have the visual clutter of placemats/table top.

____________________________________________________________
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Be a voice that helps someone else on their frugal living journey

Are you interested in writing for creative savv?
What's your frugal story?

Do you have a favorite frugal recipe, special insight, DIY project, or tips that could make frugal living more do-able for someone else?

Creative savv is seeking new voices.


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

share this post