Life is full of beauty. Notice it. Notice the bumble bee, the small child, and the smiling faces. Smell the rain, and feel the wind. Live your life to the fullest potential, and fight for your dreams.

Ashley Smith
Showing posts with label calendula. Show all posts
Showing posts with label calendula. Show all posts

Monday, February 20, 2012

Stirrin' the Pot...

Love Soap
One of the things I really love to do is make soap.  It isn't very difficult, it isn't particularly dangerous but it is fairly time consuming.  My friend Lisa and I made soap together two years ago and (gasp!) we hadn't done it since...even though the last bar bubbled down my drain quite a few weeks ago.

Well, we changed all that!  It took us the better part of a Sunday, but now we have about 10 lbs of beautiful, creamy, woovy-groovy homemade soap curing upstairs in my house. Yay!

Since we only make one batch and only do it every other year, we always use the same recipe out of this book:

Awesome book!
 Which you can get through my favorite on line source for soap making supplies, Majestic Mountain Sage

I made a cheat sheet there on the left for quick reference.
The basic steps are:
 
  1.  Get all of your supplies together (this is important, unless you like running up and down the stairs 20 times to grab the things you forgot- which, apparently, I do...)
    Supplies!
  2. Mix the lye with water.  This heats up to 200 degrees F, so my first suggestion is to do this EARLY! Like even the night before.  It needs to cool down to 80 degrees before you mix it with the fats/oils.   ***Lye is VERY caustic, it will burn you if you get it on your skin. You must be very careful when working with this ingredient***
    Measuring the temperature of the lye water.  For safety's sake- either gloves, a smaller jar or a longer thermometer is really recommended! I tend to live life on the edge ( a little)
  3. We use coconut, palm and olive oil for the fats.  Coconut and palm oils are solid at room temperature, so you need to melt them.  They need to cool to 80 degrees also, so plan accordingly.
    It's always fun to work with someone who is good at measuring!
  4. When both solutions are 80 degrees, mix together.  For us this meant putting the lye water out in a snow bank and then bringing it back in because we were afraid one of the four wild animals (aka dogs) would knock it over. Then bringing snow in and filling the sink with snow and water. Then heating the oils up again. Making them too hot, having to wait for them to cool- You get the picture.  This is the most important step and (for us anyway) the most difficult!
  5. Then stir-briskly.  The soap is supposed to trace (leave a  small pattern on top of the solution before sinking back in when you drip some on top) after about 40 minutes.  We stirred for about 2 hours...

Stirring...

Still stirring...
and since it did not separate, we poured it into molds, even though it didn't ever really trace.

Yes, those are lavender blossoms in the bottom of that mold. and yes, they are from my garden.

sleeping kitties


See how I dressed up in my finest for this job?
It's ok if you spill a little, this spill made a little heart!
and then it has to cure.  Leave it in the molds for at least a week.  Our soap isn't hard enough to de-mold yet.  When it is, I will pop the molds into the freezer for about an hour or so to make it easier to get the soap out. Pure vegetable oil soaps (like these, meaning no lard) don't mold as well as lard based soap, because they are naturally softer.
 
All the beautiful shapes...

We mixed calendula petals into the soap, which you can kind of see here.

Some with lavender buds too

Calendula flowers fresh from the garden (obviously, this photo was taken during summer time, not in February...)
So there it is.  Soap making in the short form.  I highly recommend this activity, it is so satisfying and you can scent (or not) the soaps exactly how you like them.  We use a combination of lavender and lemon essential oils~ Yummy!

Have fun and keep your stirring arm warm!

Friday, October 15, 2010

Farm life...

This is "BDR" aka

Big Damn Rooster.

He is a barred rock and king of the roost. I am guessing he weighs about 10 pounds, but who knows since you can't catch him!
We (meaning me, my husband and our hens) tolerate him because he protects our egg laying beauties. He even chased a coyote and made him drop his lunch (yes, one of our hens). He crows at all times of day and night and rubs the backs of the hens raw with his "loving attention", but you gotta love him anyway.

He has a little (and I mean that literally) competition from "Maxwell not so Smart", our other rooster. He is an Americana and strikingly beautiful, however he must be a little camera shy, as I looked through all of my photos and not one of him!! He got his name from his baby crow- it sounded exactly like the theme from Get Smart. The "not so" he earned by getting in the habit of running away from the coop at night, instead of going in with the others for night time safety...


What I really wanted to share was this photo:


A beautiful cup of calendula flowers. So lovely... sigh... I love the fall time, when the flowers are still blooming and it is not so hot. I harvest about 20 flower heads every week from my ramshackle garden. These are all volunteers and they are strong, healthy, beautiful, prolific, and (do I dare say?) Perfect.

I dry their petals and then I will use them in the soap I will make next month for Christmas (and all year!) gifting. A very satisfying endeavor, all the way around!!

Happy Weekend!!