Grated Laundry Soap Revisited, Part 3

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sudsmaster

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In the last installement of the grated laundry soap saga, grated soap "curls" were dried an put into the cuisinart with the chopping blade to reduce them ot a powder. This was intended to make them easier to dispense and dissolve.

The goal was met, however, the fine powder has a lot of fine dust which very readily become airborne and irritates one's nose to the point of pain and sneezing. This happens both during prepartion of the powder and subsequent dispensing.

Today, I hit on a better plan. Using the fine grating attachment, a bar of normally hydrated Ivory soap was fed through the KA stand mixer with the food slicing attachment. A speed of "6" along with light pressure resulted in fine curls reminiscent of finely grated parmesan cheese, or coconut. Better yet, just a little shaking of a container filled partway (about 1/5) with these shavings resulted in them breaking up into smaller flakes. Larger chunks of ungrated soap which made their way past the fine grater were relatively easy to spot and pick out. Best of all, little or no dust was produced, and the resultant flakes look easy to dispense and no doubt will dissolve fairly readily.

To catch the grated soap curls, I used a 1 gallon plastic ice cream tub, with lid on for shaking. Then I picked out the larger chunks and transfered the flakes to another tub, and then to smaller plastic container for use in the laundry area.

Now all it needs is a Green Door (obscure cinematic reference, LOL).
 
Soap

Why don't you make a liquid soap?
Just add a bit of alcohol to grated soap plus water and dilute it! It will not become set anymore! Also you can add additives as well at that stage: Soda, borax, ammonia, STPP, benzine, turpentine, etc....
Ralf
 
Alcohol in soap

Well, Wodka is a bit too expensive, I guess! Normal spirit does the same job. You don't need much of it , just a bit added finally to the melted soap and you recieve a creamy liquid soap when cold.
STPP may not work with it if in it and should therfor to be added first to make the water soft BEFORE the soap comes into contact with the water-hardness!

Ralf
 
I have tried grated soap-went to "Retool" and bought a used Stanely "Sureform" rasp to grate and shred the soap-works well-but will corrode.The tool was only a dollar-new the stanely tools are much more expensive.
 
Grating

I've been using my stainless steel grater so far but may actually invest in something for that specific purpose if I continue to use the grate soap.
 
A Salad Shooter type of grater would probably work as well, but the inlet may be a bit too small for most bars of soap. The KA slicing attachment is good because you can put a bar of soap in sideways, so that the curls are the shortest possible.

I have thought of trying the Cuisinart for this but it spins so fast I'm a bit concerned it would just melt the soap instead of grate it.
 
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