Simple Basic Beginner Soap Recipe with Shea Butter | Cold Process (2024)

This simple beginner soap recipe is uncomplicated and will give you a great bar of soap for your family or to give as a gift! Getting started in soap-making is a rewarding endeavor that will give you a superior product over store-bought soap!

Not sure if soapmaking is for you? Check out this post on Why You May Want to Make Your Own Soap.

Simple Basic Beginner Soap Recipe with Shea Butter | Cold Process (1)

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Simple Beginner Soap Recipe Ingredients

Simple Basic Beginner Soap Recipe with Shea Butter | Cold Process (2)

Sodium hydroxide and lye are often used interchangeably when referring to the solid form of the chemical. However, sodium hydroxide is actually the solid form that must be combined with water to make lye. So, when you purchase sodium hydroxide the container may say lye…don’t get confused. Either way, the dry form must be combined with water to make soap.

What is Cold Process Soap?

The cold process is a method of creating soap that requires no extra heat to make the soap. I find this definition kind of confusing because you do actually use heat to melt the fats, oils, or butters. However, that is just to get them to the point of being workable with the lye. After the oils are melted, you let them cool and combine them with the cooled lye. At that point, the saponification process makes its own heat with no help from you.

Cold process differs from hot process soap in that cold process soap heats from the inside out vs. hot process which heats from the outside it. Hot process soap is more rustic in it’s appearance and more difficult to do fancy swirls and get creative with color. However, hot process soap can be used as soon as it hardens whereas cold process soap must cure for 4-6 weeks.

One is not better than the other, it is just a matter of preference. Research each and decide how much hands-on time you want to spend and also what you want your finished bar to look like.

Equipment Needed for Cold Process Soap Making

Simple Basic Beginner Soap Recipe with Shea Butter | Cold Process (3)

How to Make Cold Process Soap

The actual process of soap making is pretty easy. I think of it as mixing up any other batter for a cake or something like that. The mixing part actually goes pretty quickly. There are however a couple of time-consuming parts of soap making. Figuring out which recipe to use, letting the lye cool, heating up the oils, and giving the soap weeks to cure are all lengthy steps. However, none of the steps are difficult.

Step 1

Safety: Wear long sleeves, rubber gloves, and goggles

Set up your area and prepare your mold. Clear away anything not related to soap making. Gather everything you will need. Get your immersion blender, your scale, gloves, goggles, and your rubber spatula, bowl, and an extra spoon.

Set out all of the ingredients. You may find it helpful to measure all of the oils and put them in a bowl then put the containers away, just to keep your workspace clear.

I like to put down some cardboard or thick newspaper to protect my counter. I have a butcher block island top and I have burn marks from where I have dripped lye. Plus your spoon from mixing the oils will make a mess too.

Step 2

Place the container for mixing your lye on the scale, press tare, and make sure it says 0. Next measure the water-you need 10.26 oz of filtered water.

Then carefully spoon the 4.54 oz of sodium hydroxide into the water until the scale reads 14.84 oz

Set this glass container aside to cool. I like to put mine in a corner of my kitchen counter out of reach of children and in an area that no one really uses.

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Step 3-

Melt the oils together. The temperature of the oils should be around 100-1115 degrees when combined with the lye mixture, so watch the temp or allow time for it to cool.

Step 4-

After the lye and the oils have cooled to a similar temperature around 110 degrees, you may now combine them. Place your immersion blender into the bowl or cup of oils, gently tap it on the bottom and wait for the bubbles to rise up, this gets the air out and helps to avoid splatters. Once you have done that take your cooled lye, remember the lye and the oils should both be cooled to 100-120 degrees. Having them within ten degrees of each other is ideal.

What I have found is that the closer to 115 or 120 the lye and oils are the faster it reaches trace. Anything lower than 110 seems to require more blending.

Pour the cooled lye slowly into the oils. Pulse your stick blender and alternate mixing it and stirring with the blender. Check after about 30 seconds. As you mix, you will notice the batter will thicken and also lighten in color. The ideal consistency is like cake batter or thin pudding. You are looking for what is called “trace”. This is when the batter thickens so that when you lift the mixer up a trace will remain on the surface of the batter.

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Step 5-

Add in any fragrance or essential oils. Don’t forget this part…the first time I made soap I was so excited about reaching trace that I completely forgot to add the fragrance! I just quickly poured it into the mold!

Simple Basic Beginner Soap Recipe with Shea Butter | Cold Process (6)

Use a whisk or just stir with the blender to mix the fragrance in to avoid over mixing.

Lastly, pour the batter into the mold and then tap it on the counter to get any air bubbles to rise to the surface. Use caution and keep your safety glasses or goggles on just in case there are any splatters when you tap. At this point, it is still caustic.

Spraying the surface of the soap with 99% isopropyl alcohol will prevent soda ash from forming. It looks like a white film on your dry soap.

Step 6

There is a phase called the gel phase that occurs as the soap saponifies. The main benefit of the gel phase is that it intensifies the color of the soap. We didn’t add any colorant to this soap, so the gel phase is your choice. It turns out the fragrance had a colorant in it and I did not know it! That is why this soap has color!

If you want to ensure your soap goes through that phase, you can wrap the mold in towels overnight to keep it warm. Even with this uncolored soap, if you let it go through the gel phase, it will be a darker white.

This is a great article on gel phase, it explains it with pictures perfectly!

If you want to skip the gel phase, you can pop your mold right in the freezer and let it sit there for several hours. I do that when I am making soap with milk…but that’s a whole other post!

Honestly, I am finding that the gel phase is simply not necessary for saponification. I have had several batches of soap overheat by wrapping it in a towel and it cracked. I rarely intentionally add color to my soap, perhaps I may get into that at some point. This particular bar has color because the fragrance oil contained a colorant…I didn’t realize that and was completely surprised when it came out purple! The fragrance oil was called herbalicious.

Step 7

After letting the soap sit in the mold for 24 hours or up to three days, you can remove it from the mold and cut it into bars. Place the bars on a drying rack or a waxed paper-lined cookie sheet so that the air can circulate around the bars. Don’t stack them on top of each other. Set aside where they won’t be in the way.

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Lastly, Let the Soap Cure

This soap should cure for at least four weeks…I know it’s hard to wait! However, during this time the soap will become hard as the water evaporates and will also become milder for use!

That’s it! Really a fun process and a wonderful way to get creative and make something useful! So let me know if you give it a try and how it goes!

Want to Watch Me Make This Beginner Soap?

Beginner Soap Recipe Cold Process Printable

Simple Basic Beginner Soap Recipe with Shea Butter | Cold Process (8)

Beginner Soap Recipe

A great soap for your first time! Simple easy to find ingredients that you may already have in your stash. A nice hard moisturizing bar of soap!

5 from 2 votes

Print Recipe Pin Recipe

Servings 12 bars

Equipment

  • Immersion Blender

  • Soap Mold

  • Digital Scale

  • Thermometer

  • Rubber Gloves

  • Safety Glasses

Ingredients

  • 8 oz Olive Oil
  • 12 oz Coconut Oil
  • 12 oz Shea Butter
  • 4.5 oz Sodium Hydroxide
  • 10.2 oz Water
  • 2 oz Fragrance oil

Instructions

  • Using a digital scale measure oils and shea butter. Place all of the oils and shea butter in a medium saucepan. Turn on low heat. In a glass container, measure the water. Slowly pour the measured sodium hydroxide over the water. Stir gently. The solution will begin to heat up rapidly. Move to a safe place out of the reach of children. Allow the lye and the oils to cool for about 45 minutes.

    You are looking for a temperature around 115 degrees. Anything within 10 degrees or so is fine. The higher the temp the faster trace is reached.

    After both are cooled, you can pour the lye slowly into the pan with the melted oils. Using a stick blender, mix the two together until you reach trace. The mixture will become lighter in color and begin to thicken. Trace is when it is thick enough to leave tracks on top of the batter.

    Add in the fragrance oil and mix, but don't overmix. As soon as it is incorporated, pour it into the mold.

    Cover and set aside for 24 hours.

    After 24 hours you may remove it from the mold and cut it into bars.

    Set the bars aside to cure for 4-6 weeks.

Simple Basic Beginner Soap Recipe with Shea Butter | Cold Process (9)
Simple Basic Beginner Soap Recipe with Shea Butter | Cold Process (2024)

FAQs

How to use shea butter for soap making? ›

This recipe makes 200 grams of shea butter soap, which is about four soaps of 50 grams each using the following quantities:
  1. Cold Water: 57.49 g/2.03 oz.
  2. Sodium Hydroxide: 28.31 g/1 oz.
  3. Olive Oil: 120 g/4.23 oz.
  4. Coconut Oil: 60 g/2.12 oz.
  5. Shea butter: 20 g/0.71 oz.
  6. Lavender essential oil: 6 g/0.21.

What 3 ingredients at minimum are required to make soap? ›

This cold-process soap recipe uses just three ingredients: coconut oil, lye, and distilled water. That's it! The result is very hard white bars that won't dry out your skin and that have excellent lather.

What percentage of shea butter to use in soap? ›

SoapQueen states "In soap, Shea Butter does not contribute to lather or hardness (so it's basically a super-luxe additive), and the recommended usage rate is typically 10% or less." SoapLovin suggests only using 5-15%.

How to make bar soap for beginners? ›

How to Make Bar Soap
  1. Introduction: How to Make Bar Soap. ...
  2. Step 1: Pick Your Ingredients. ...
  3. Step 2: Adjuncts/Aggregates. ...
  4. Step 3: Calculate the Saponification Value. ...
  5. Step 4: Recognize Hazards of Potassium and Sodium Hydroxide. ...
  6. Step 5: Obtain All the Equipment Required. ...
  7. Step 6: Measure Your Ingredients.

What is the easiest homemade soap to make? ›

If I were to choose a simple soap recipe that you can make at home it would, without a doubt be 100% coconut oil soap. I love this stuff, not least because you can make it from just 3 ingredients, one of those being water.

What is the formula for making soap? ›

What is the formula for soap. For centuries, humans have known the basic recipe for soap — it is a reaction between fats and a strong base. The exact chemical formula is C17H35COO- plus a metal cation, either Na+ or K+. The final molecule is called sodium stearate and is a type of salt.

Can bar soap be made without lye? ›

But there is a way to make soap without lye: it's called the melt and pour soap method. The melt and pour soap making method is perfect for beginning soap makers. There is no need to handle lye.

What is the most important ingredient in soap? ›

Lye is one of the main ingredients in soap. Lye is a base, also known as an alkali. Bases can burn and destroy living tissue—such as plants and skin. It can also burn through certain metals such as aluminum.

What 2 main ingredients are needed to make soap? ›

Soap Ingredients. The two base ingredients for homemade soap are fat and a form of lye, a caustic chemical. You can add dyes, essential oils, texturizers, and other enhancements to this two-ingredient base. An alternative to the fat and lye base is a glycerin soap base.

Can you make 100% shea butter soap? ›

Yes, it is technically possible to make soap with just shea butter. However, you won't get a great lather. To get a better lather, we've paired our shea butter with castor oil and coconut oil in this soap recipe.

Can shea butter be a soap base? ›

Yes, but it's not really the best idea. Since M&P is already done with saponification (plus its a bit different that regular soap) additives can upset the balance and the M&P will not re-solidify.

What can be added to shea butter soap base? ›

This soap base is a natural soap made with Shea Butter from Ghana. It's a wonderfully soft and foaming natural soap with a lot of glycerine. You can add all sorts of things to it, such as essential oils or flower petals, herbs or coloring.

When to add shea butter to soap? ›

Both hot and cold process soaps involve melting down oils, adding a mixture of water and lye, then agitating the soap by hand or with a stick blender until it reaches “trace.” Both techniques require adding shea butter with the initial fats and melting them down before adding lye.

Does shea butter make soap hard? ›

Shea Butter is high in stearic and oleic acids, which will produce a long-lasting hard soap with a stable conditioning lather.

Can shea butter be used as a soap base? ›

Yes, you can add shea butter to melt and pour soap to enhance its moisturizing and nourishing properties. Shea butter is a popular ingredient in skincare products due to its high content of fatty acids and vitamins.

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