AY Honors/Soap Making - Advanced

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Overview

The Challenging Part

The most challenging requirement of this honor is probably this:

8. Design your own soap recipe using a soap recipe calculator and then make it in a small test batch size of no more than 18 oz. of oil weight, and pour it into a 4” square mold or 6” slab mold. Make notes about the following:

a. At what temperature did you “soap” at?

b. Did you use a water discount? If so, how much of a discount was used?

c. What design techniques did you incorporate into your soap?

d. What did you add to it, such as fragrance, color, additives?

e. How long did your soap stay in the mold before unmolding and cutting?

f. How did your soap turn out?

g. Would you use this recipe again? If not, why? What would you do different?

[[AY Honors/Soap Making - Advanced/Requirements|Tab Name/Printable Version]]


1. Have the Soap Making honor.

2. Review and list the basic safety equipment needed to make soap.

3. What is a lye calculator? What is the benefit to using it?

4. What is the average percentage of water needed in soap making?

5. What is a water discount and why would you water discount a soap recipe?

6. What is the purpose of adding stearic acid, sodium lactate, salt, or sugar to soap?

7. Demonstrate how to use a lye calculator when making soap. Note unit of measure used, the type of lye used, the oil used, and saponification value of the oil used.


8. Design your own soap recipe using a soap recipe calculator and then make it in a small test batch size of no more than 18 oz. of oil weight, and pour it into a 4” square mold or 6” slab mold. Make notes about the following:

a. At what temperature did you “soap” at?

b. Did you use a water discount? If so, how much of a discount was used?

c. What design techniques did you incorporate into your soap?

d. What did you add to it, such as fragrance, color, additives?

e. How long did your soap stay in the mold before unmolding and cutting?

f. How did your soap turn out?

g. Would you use this recipe again? If not, why? What would you do different?


9. Make soap. Incorporate color and/or fragrance, and design techniques (such as simple swirl, layering, funnel pour, faux funnel pour, slant pour, in the pot swirl, imbeds, zebra swirl, spin swirl, hanger swirl) in two of these processes:

a. Cold process (CP)

b. Hot process (HP)

c. Cold Process Oven Process method

10. Make liquid soap.

11. Test your soap for pH. At what level should your soap be before gifting or sale?

12. Learn and demonstrate how to package soap product for sale or gifting. Including proper labeling.

13. Determine what a product should be priced to:

a. Break even

b. Make a profit

14. Do one of the following:

a. Sell your soap at a flea market, farmers market, or similar venue.

b. Teach the Soap Craft and Soap Craft Advanced honor.

c. Make a video, write a short play, or create something with soap that depicts how soap and/or cleanliness relate to our spiritual life. Present this to your youth/Pathfinder group or at a Conference Camporee.

Printable Answer Key Tab Name/Edit Answer Key


1

Have the Soap Making honor.


For tips and instruction see Soap Making.


2

Review and list the basic safety equipment needed to make soap.



3

What is a lye calculator? What is the benefit to using it?



4

What is the average percentage of water needed in soap making?



5

What is a water discount and why would you water discount a soap recipe?



6

What is the purpose of adding stearic acid, sodium lactate, salt, or sugar to soap?



7

Demonstrate how to use a lye calculator when making soap. Note unit of measure used, the type of lye used, the oil used, and saponification value of the oil used.



8

Design your own soap recipe using a soap recipe calculator and then make it in a small test batch size of no more than 18 oz. of oil weight, and pour it into a 4” square mold or 6” slab mold. Make notes about the following:



8a

At what temperature did you “soap” at?



8b

Did you use a water discount? If so, how much of a discount was used?



8c

What design techniques did you incorporate into your soap?



8d

What did you add to it, such as fragrance, color, additives?



8e

How long did your soap stay in the mold before unmolding and cutting?



8f

How did your soap turn out?



8g

Would you use this recipe again? If not, why? What would you do different?




9

Make soap. Incorporate color and/or fragrance, and design techniques (such as simple swirl, layering, funnel pour, faux funnel pour, slant pour, in the pot swirl, imbeds, zebra swirl, spin swirl, hanger swirl) in two of these processes:



9a

Cold process (CP)



9b

Hot process (HP)



9c

Cold Process Oven Process method




10

Make liquid soap.



11

Test your soap for pH. At what level should your soap be before gifting or sale?



12

Learn and demonstrate how to package soap product for sale or gifting. Including proper labeling.



13

Determine what a product should be priced to:



13a

Break even



13b

Make a profit




14

Do one of the following:



14a

Sell your soap at a flea market, farmers market, or similar venue.



14b

Teach the Soap Craft and Soap Craft Advanced honor.



14c

Make a video, write a short play, or create something with soap that depicts how soap and/or cleanliness relate to our spiritual life. Present this to your youth/Pathfinder group or at a Conference Camporee.






References


Content on this wiki is generated by people like you, and no one has created a lesson plan for this honor yet. You could do that and make the world a better place.

See AY Honors/Model Lesson Plan if you need ideas for creating one.