Coming Soon! Edible Massage Oil

…But I need your help first.

Massage oils in scents is easy – unscented, lavender, rose, patchouli, vanilla and maybe some custom blends.

Massage oils in flavors is a bit more challenging, and this is where I need your help.  Please take just a moment to vote in the poll to the right here ——> Yeah, that’s it… And let me hear your opinion on what flavors you’d want to use in a flavored massage oil.  This product would have the same luxurious benefits as regular massage oil, but with the added treat of being flavored with an ingestible flavor oil, making whatever may follow your massage more enjoyable.  ‘Cause, really, something may smell great, but it may not necessarily taste so great.

The poll closes in a week, on 31 January, so go ahead and cast your vote while it’s still fresh on your mind.  You may vote for more than one flavor.

Thanks so much!  I appreciate your help. 🙂

Why Preserve?

I saw on another site today yet another soapmaker who doesn’t like preservatives, who thinks they’re evil and so forth.  That’s well and good, and I applaud those who firmly believe in creating all natural products and can do so safely. 

There’s an easy way to make all-natural products which won’t need a preservative:  Make them without water.  Such products as lotion bars, soaps and lip balms don’t require a preservative.  (Water is part of the soapmaking process, but it’s not in the final product.)  Lotion bars, lip balms, lip glosses and body butters (real ones, made with butters and oils) are anhydrous formulations, meaning they contain no water.  Since they don’t contain water, they present an unfavorable environment for mold, fungus and bacteria growth and need only an antioxidant to slow down the rancidity of the oils and butters.

Then you come to lotions, creams and yes, even scrubs.  These products contain water, which means they present a very favorable environment for the growth of “nasties” – mold, fungi and bacteria.  In fact, these “all-natural” nasties can start growing in lotions within three hours of their manufacture without a proven, broad-spectrum preservative.  You can’t see them.  I once had a soap seller tell me she had been using a bottle of the unpreserved lotion she was selling for two months and it wasn’t growing.  It doesn’t have to be visibly growing for nasties still to be present.  In fact, they’re microscopic, and because they’re so tiny, they can enter a person’s blood stream through the most microscopic of skin breaks, such as are common in people with diabetes-related edema, and also those one might get after shaving.  These nasties can be particularly dangerous to someone whose immune system may already be compromised by other diseases, such as cancer, and can lead to sickness, hospitalization and even death.

Scrubs are slightly different.  When I make scrubs, they contain no water, yet still I preserve them.  Why?  Because they’re very thick and can easily have water introduced into the container.  A wet hand dipping into the jar in the shower is enough to contaminate the whole batch.  I now make my scrubs with sugar, but when I first started making them, I used salt which, as most people know, is a type of preservative.  I opened the jar one day after not using them for a while and the inside was covered with spots of black mildew (a type of fungus).  Suffice it to say, that jar hit the trash!

I think everything needs to be a matter of perspective.  When I make my lotions, I use a paraben-free, broad-spectrum preservative at the lowest possible effective rate.  This comes to 0.8%, or 5 grams of preservative to over 500 grams of lotion, which makes 5 4-ounce bottles.  (To give you an idea, an ounce is about 28.4 grams by comparison.)  So, you’ve got five grams of preservative over four bottles.  What it comes down to is, even with the chemical preservative, my essential-oil scented lotions are still 99.2% all natural.  Compared to the risk of killing a customer by selling them a dangerous product, I’ll accept that as close enough.

By the way, I have all my water-based formulas tested for preservative efficacy by a reputable lab before selling them.  So far, they’ve all passed with flying colors, far exceeding what even the FDA considers “safe.”

Butternut Squash Soap, er, Soup – Seriously yummy for cold days

I encountered this recipe in an unassuming email from Allrecipes.com back in the fall, and have, since then, played with it and tweaked it to make it my own.  I think the best incarnation of this recipe to date was the last batch I made, and here’s the recipe for it.

You’ll need:

Ingredients:

2 cups butternut squash (1/2 large one)
1 large sweet potato (can also use white, but sweet gives you more fiber & nutrients, plus flavor)
3 T. butter or margarine
1 medium onion, diced
2 large leeks, chopped, white and light green parts only
1 cup carrots, sliced
1 medium tart apple, peeled, cored and diced
1 qt. chicken stock (chicken broth is OK to substitute)
1/2 cup half ‘n half (or any milk over 2% fat)
1/4 tsp. cumin
1/4 tsp. allspice
1/4 tsp. fresh-grated nutmeg (can use ground)
1 tsp. ground cinnamon

Equipment:

Foil-lined cookie sheet
Dutch oven
Sharp knife
Cutting board
Stick blender

A couple of hours before you wish to start your soup, bake your squash and sweet potato.  Stab them both with a fork 8 times going around and bake them at 350 for an hour, turning halfway.  Placing them on a foil-lined cookie sheet will save your oven.  Once they’re done, let them cool a bit.  It’s OK if they’re not completely done in the center.

Melt butter in dutch oven and cook the onion and leeks over medium heat until they’re transluscent, about five minutes.

Slice the squash in half and discard the seeds.  Set half aside for later use; it freezes well.  Scoop out 2 cups (all of the half squash) from the peel and place it in the dutch oven.  Slice the potato in half and remove the peel; place in pot.  Put apple, carrot and chicken stock in the pot, and cook it for 20 minutes at medium heat, covered, or until carrots are tender.

Turn heat back to low.  Using the stick blender, puree the soup in the pot until it comes to a nice medium trace.  (Sorry.  Chose not to resist.)  Slowly stir in half-n-half.  Add spices and let sit for ten minutes before serving.

Makes 8 servings.  (The original recipe says it makes 4 servings, but we serve this in small salad/soup/cereal bowls as a side with dinner; each bowl holds 1 1/2 to 1 3/4 cups.)

This is a great, veggie-rich soup to accompany sandwiches or crusty cheese bread.  The squash and sweet potato combine to make the soup somewhat sweet, but the cumin adds just the right amount of “bite” to offset it, a trick I discovered after lunch at Atlantic Bread Company one day and which my daughter, who didn’t much care for the first 3 batches of soup, declared “really good.”  You can adjust the spices to your taste.  Just be mindful that the nutmeg and cumin both impart pretty strong flavors and should be used with care.

Bon Appetit! 🙂

The Mystery of the Corona

I mentioned in this blog post that I had Corona beer going flat in the garage, but couldn’t mention what I was going to do with it, because it was too close to Christmas.  Well, that beer became part of the Ultimate Buffett Soap and was a gift for my aunt, who joined us at the Summerzkool tour last year when Jimmy came to Raleigh.  The Ultimate Buffett Soap featured Corona beer, hemp seed oil (to commemorate all those joints smoked at his concerts) and a zesty Margarita Lime fragrance.  So, you’ve got your Corona, your cannabis-derived product and a little scent-trip to Margaritaville, minus the smell of boiling shrimp.  She loved it, and it was fun to make, especially as I soap-glued a soap lime slice to each bar.

~Sara

Shout Out to Swansboro!

You know who you are. You live in or near Swansboro, NC and you really seem to enjoy browsing my site.  I have Google Analytics on my site to help me see from where my site traffic is, and I keep seeing Swansboro show up on the map and graph.  I don’t mind; really, I’m glad you found my site and you keep checking back to see what’s new.  I guess what always brings my attention to “Swansboro” on the North Carolina map at Google is, we have warm memories of that town and a big dream of living there one day.  I’d love for you to introduce yourself, either in a comment here or privately by email.  Thanks! 🙂

Here it is! The EPA Post-Show Special

What’s the deal?  How about 10% off your total purchase and FREE shipping?  Pretty nice, huh?  What a great way to maybe buy a couple more stocking stuffers!  Or, perhaps you’re looking at that one particular item and thinking, Ya know, my sister-in-law/admin/boss/office mate would love one of these, too, and I wish I’d gotten one.  Well, now’s your chance!  I’ll happily send you the coupon code.  You simply have to email me at sara@sarassoapsnsuch.com and tell me something about my set-up yesterday.  It could be my location, something about a vendor beside me, something near me or who was with me.  After all, you have to have been there to know this, and this is an exclusive offer for RTP EPA employees, contractors and the 200 people in the workshop yesterday.  I apologize for this extra step this year, but I still look forward to hearing from you! 🙂

Beer Soaps

I’ve talked about them for ages now, it seems, and I know everyone’s waiting for a peek.  They are the beer soaps.  I first debuted them at Onslow Oktoberfest, held in Jacksonville a few weeks ago.  They didn’t sell great, I’ll confess.  We only sold three bars of them , but considering how slow traffic was that day, I can be satisfied with that.  Peter had made up a batch of soap using Guinness beer and scented with Green Irish Tweed, a delicious, totally yummy Creed dupe that smells like sexy man.  The soap was supposed to be cream with 2-tone green and bronze swirls, but it never went completely cream, instead fading out just to tan.  With the great scent and the unintentionally camo-inspired colors, I just knew that one would sell the best.  I even told Peter that when he fretted over the colors not turning out quite right.  Two of those three bars were of that soap.

While we were at Oktoberfest, people would see the sign for my beer soaps and laugh or turn their noses up.  “Ewww, who’d want to smell like beer?” they’d ask.  Well, one guy did; he specifically asked me if I carry beer-scented soaps.  Then those who’d get hooked by their own curiosity would head towards the display and pick one up to sniff.  Inevitably, they’d go straight for the Patchouli.  Patchouli is a “love it or hate it” fragrance, and the majority of people fall into that latter category.  Of course, from there they’d turn their noses up, put the soap back on the display, then walk on.  Those who dared to sniff the rest of my soaps would get hooked.  As I mentioned before, I sold two of the Green Irish Tweed and one of the Starry Night soaps (Starry Night is the blue one in the picture).

So what’s the deal about the beer soaps?  First of all, they don’t smell like beer.  By the time they get to usable bar form, all the beer smell is gone, leaving behind just the delicious fragrance I add to it.  So, what’s the point?  The hops commonly used to give beer its distinctive flavor are used in herbalism for skin and hair care.  Infusions and extracts of hops help clear up dry skin and acne-prone skin.  In hair care, that same moisturizing property helps reduce the appearance of dandruff.  Bottom line, these soaps are fabulous!

Those soaps have a new, temporary home down in Southport.  There’s a specialty shop down there called The Grape and Ale which specializes in wines and beer.  They offer wine tastings and themed arts by local artisans.  And currently, some of those themed arts include a soap display of my beer soaps.  Keep an eye on this blog for a picture of my display.

What will the garbage man think?

Simply put, we’re fanatical recyclers.  Everything from the usual milk jugs and aluminum cans to shampoo bottles, deli containers, styrofoam cups and buttery spread tubs…  If it’s got that triangle on it, it’s going in the recycle bin to be put out by the curb on trash day.  For some reason – maybe too many episodes of CSI? – I find myself wondering what someone would think if they went through our recyclables.  BoJangle’s cup, deli salad container from Piggly Wiggly, 20-ounce Mountain Dew bottle, beer bottle, Everclear bottle, Suave For Kids conditioning shampoo…  Hold it!  Everclear bottle???  I mean, a beer bottle isn’t that big a deal; many people drink beer (I just don’t happen to be one of them).  But Everclear?  We’re talking 190-proof, pure grain alcohol that’s illegal in many states.  And yet, my husband doesn’t drink more than the occasional glass of wine or rare beer, and I haven’t drunk (drank?) any alcohol in at least a year.  So what in the world am I doing with a Corona bottle and an Everclear bottle in my recycle bin?

Why, to make soap, of course!  Yeah, I’m sure that’s the FIRST thing people would think if they happened to catch me tossing an empty beer bottle into the recycle bin early this morning.  Uh huh… Riiiiiiight!  I’ll be telling you more about these amazing soaps in more detail – complete with pictures, of course – in the coming days.  I can’t say a whole lot about what I’m planning to do with that Corona that’s currently going flat in the garage; it’s too close to Christmas for that. 

I can tell you a bit about the Everclear, though.  I originally purchased this last year with the intent of making hand sanitizer and sinus relief stuff.  Hand sanitizer’s a drug, so I had to stop production of that, and the sinus relief stuff was getting expensive with the amount of menthol crystals I was having to use, making it nearly cost-prohibitive.  So, for the better part of a year, this bottle has been sitting in my soap cabinet.  This morning I woke up, fed my baby, started my coffee, and while I was putting my breakfast together, I decided I wanted to try making transparent soap.  Yeah, just like that.  I grabbed my book and reviewed the directions and got started soon after breakfast.  Making transparent soap starts as a basic hot process method, but the addition of PGA helps the gelled soap become liquid once more.  I used all that I had left, which is why the bottle’s now in my recycle bin.

Save the Tatas! or The Tale of a Survivor

October is Breast Cancer Awareness Month.  Breast cancer claims so many lives each year, though new strides in treatments are saving lives that ten years ago might have been lost.  That doesn’t mean this devastating disease has been eradicated, though.
As a breastfeeding mom, I have gone from seeing my breasts as men might, as something beautiful and sexual, to seeing them as God made them to be – beautiful and made to nurture a life.  I’m not saying the two have to be mutually exclusive, and I don’t believe they are.  Now that our lives are getting into a better routine and our baby is sleeping up to 8 hours at a time, I’m able to see my breasts as all that they can be, not just one or the other.  Given that my breasts are made for both pleasure and nurturing, and this is something that only I as a woman and mother can claim, I can only imagine what happens in a woman’s mind when she feels that lump and hears those dreaded words, “You have breast cancer.”
It was 9 years ago today that I sat at what used to be Raleigh Community Hospital with my dad while Mom had a single mastectomy.  The lump was tiny, just the size of a pea, and the cancer wasn’t far advanced; she caught it early.  I literally felt like I was going to fly apart at the seams – completely explode – when I heard the news.  Throughout the months of chemo and radiation, we shared tears and laughter.  Mom’s hair grew back a lovely silver which she colored as soon as she was able.  As my older daughter turned about three and started noticing that her grandma only had one of which the rest of us had pairs, Mom decided to have reconstructive surgery, which brought with it laughter over comments that only my daughter would come up with like, “Grandma, your nipple’s growing back in.”
Mom’s journey through cancer and its resultant treatments made me aware of how precious life is, especially hers.  At the age of 27, I wasn’t ready to face life without my mom, and at the age of 51, she feared that she’d never get to see grandchildren.  In the nine years we’ve celebrated her survivorship, she’s gotten to be grandma to two beautiful granddaughters, both of whom inherited her fathomless dark brown eyes (and the older one, her, um, tendency to tell people what they should be doing).
So, women, take those tops off, lose the bras (woohoo!) and…
Do your self exams each month and if you’re 40 or older, go in for your annual mammograms.  I know, I know.  It feels like running over your breasts with a car, but after the first one and you know what to expect, it’s not as bad.  If you’re at a higher risk for breast cancer, talk to your doctor about scheduling one before you turn 40.  Do your research and find out if you’re at a higher risk or not.  Having a close relative who’s had it will put you in that category.  Hormone treatments (HRT and birth control pills) carry an increased risk of developing breast cancer.  Take care of yourself.  We’re the only ones who bear the responsibility of taking care of our bodies.
If you’re a man and you’re reading this, be aware that breast cancer also can affect men, so watch out for yourselves, too.  And encourage your wives, girlfriends, sisters and moms to do their exams.  Tell them that they’re so precious to you and you want them to be healthy.  Volunteer to go with her for support, even if it’s just a routine baseline screening.  She’ll adore you for it!

False Advertising

I was already drafting this blog article in my head when I came across a link to this article on Twitter.  Apparently, I’m not the only who’s noticed that misleading and false advertising has become par for the course in American marketing.
About a year ago, I posted an article challenging Dove’s claim that soap leaves soap scum on your skin; you’ll find that here.  Soap doesn’t leave soap scum behind; it leaves glycerin, a humectant which draws moisture from the air to your skin, moisturizing your skin with water as God intended.  Since posting that blog article, I’ve seen that commercial a few more times, and on the screen shot where they’re telling you about this horrible “soap scum,” at the bottom of the screen in little white letters it reads, “Artist’s dramatization.”  Let’s break that down.  One, it’s not like they’ve taken a black light or infrared light to a woman fresh out of the shower after she’s washed with soap to show what’s left.  Nope, a graphic design artist likely went in with a mouse and a bit of imagination and drew the “soap scum” in.  Dramatization – it’s FAKE, people!  Drama, whether it’s on stage, screen or in the mind of your average teenage girl, is never as real as it’s purported to be.
Thursday night I was watching my usual crime dramas (see, again, made up) and caught this commercial for I Can’t Believe It’s Not Butter – you know the one that starts out “Meet the Buttertons.”  The hype behind this commercial is that real butter is loaded with trans fat.  We keep butter in our fridge; it’s healthier than margarine and we prefer natural to nearly plastic.  Yesterday morning, I was in the fridge for something and looked at the butter box.  Zero grams of trans fats.  Of course, butter has saturated fats; all fats that are solid at room temperature are high in saturated fats – lard, shortening, coconut oil, palm oil, butter, margarine.  However, our butter doesn’t have any trans fat whatsoever.  Again, you have a reputable company using deception to push their products.  And how many people would catch it?  Susie Homemaker who’s trying to prepare healthy meals for her family is just going to buy the tub spread (we have that in our fridge, too) and will never look at the nutrition facts on the box of butter.

In the cosmetic industry, such deceptions come when someone claims their tea tree soap will cure everything from athlete’s foot to psoriasis to the flu.  Or when a soapmaker states that the vitamin E in their lotion will make the user look younger.  All that’s lies and hype to get you to buy their products.  Thankfully, those seem to be few and far between, but loudly vocal.  The majority of soapmakers will tell you what our products will do.  Our soaps will get you clean.  They’ll likely leave your skin feeling softer and more supple.  Our soaps may even leave you smelling good.  Our soaps will not make you look younger, replace the hair you’ve lost, melt away unwanted belly fat or cure what ails you (other than general griminess).