In a double boiler, melt glycerin soap base. Meanwhile, melt the shea butter seperately.
Combine the glycerin base, shea butter, and essential oil (if using).
Pour into molds. Cool completely before unmolding.
Cut the bar of soap into small squares that will fit into the pump bottle.
Put them in the bottle (1/4 bar to 8 oz water) Add water to fill bottle.
Let sit an hour or two, shaking once in a while.
You will have a great liquid soap that will make your hands feel soft!
As you use up the liquid add more water until all the chunks of soap are gone.
Then add more soap!
The chunks of soap actually look pretty in the container.
I bet the high end stores come out with this in a few months!
Using a heavy saucepan, melt the soap over low heat until it is liquid.
Remove pan from heat.
Stir in cinnamon oil and food coloring.
Pour soap into a mold and let it set for 3 hours.
Unmold and enjoy.
Take your bar of soap (we use Dove or store brand like it, because it's more moisturizing), and grate it with a cheese grater.
Pour the water and grated soap into a microwaveable container and cook on high for 3 min.
Remove and stir until all soap bits have melted (put in a bit longer, if needed).
Let it cool, then pour into pumps (leftover from store bought liquid soap), and the remainder in any container with a lid.
1) For the oatmeal cookies, preheat oven to 350\
Save egg yolks for icing.
Mix dry ingredients in smaller bowl.
Add shortening, sugars, egg whites, and whole egg and add to oatmeal mixture.
Add dry ingredients.
Add vanilla and mix thoroughly.
Pour into 9 x 13-inch pan.
Bake 30 minutes at 350\u00b0. Top with Oatmeal Cake Icing (recipe follows).
Grease three 9 x 5-inch loaf pans.
First measure the oatmeal, salt, sugar and fat and pour the boiling water over them.
Let stand until lukewarm; dissolve the yeast in the 1/4 cup of lukewarm water and add it to the other mixture.
Stir in the flour and knead until smooth and elastic; let rise until double in bulk; form into loaves and let rise again.
Bake in a hot oven (400\u00b0) for 30 to 35 minutes.
This is delicious toasted.
Yields 3 loaves.
Break the glycerin in 1x1 inches squares.(some
Mix pulverized laundry starch with cold water.
Pour in boiling water and stir quickly.
Cook the mixture over low heat about 3 minutes until the surface becomes glossy.
Remove from heat and add soap flakes and glycerin as a preservative.
Place the mixture in small jars and color with a few drops of different vegetable dyes.
Mix all three ingredients together.
Glycerin makes bubbles more resilient.
Make bubble wands out of pipe cleaners.
Don't throw the leftovers away, it gets better with age.
Mix together and allow to cool.
Put mixture into a small baby food jar.
Put mixture in small jar.
Add straws to blow.
Bend a coat hanger into a loop.
Mix detergent with water. Measure carefully, it makes a big difference.
Stir slowly.
Add glycerin.
Pour solution into frying pan, dip hanger loop and wave into the air.
The longer the solution sits, the better it gets.
Combine ingredients.
Glycerin will make bubbles iridescent. Blow bubbles through wire loops or spools.
To make lots of bubbles outdoors, place fly swatter in soapy water and swing it around.
Dissolve the can of lye in the water, stirring to cool it. The tallow should be neither warm nor hard.
Very slowly pour the lye into the tallow in a thin steady stream, stirring it all continuously.
Then without stopping, add the glycerin, lavender and ammonia.
Beat until creamy and smooth.
Pour into small forms.
When hard, it is ready to use.
Mix Dawn with water and glycerin in a dishpan.
Make bubble blowers from a straw, a kitchen funnel or a thin wire shaped in creative forms.
For spectacular bubbles, thread a string through straws to form a circle, dip in bubble solution and wave out a large bubble.
Shred the bars of soap and set aside.
In a heavy saucepan, over low heat, warm the soy milk and gradually add the shredded soap until mixture is a sticky mass.
Remove the pan from the heat and add the rice bran and jasmine oil.
Stir until the bran is evenly mixed.
Spoon the soap into a mold and let it set for 4 hours or until hardened.
You can double the recipe and use a milk carton for the mold.
o purchase one kind of oatmeal, you should buy the old
Combine laundry starch and boiling water.
Add glycerin and coloring.
Mix well.
Mix everything but the oatmeal together and bring to a