Showing posts with label liquid soap. Show all posts
Showing posts with label liquid soap. Show all posts

Saturday, February 2, 2013

Dish Soap

Homemade Liquid Dish Soap

A natural, liquid homemade dish soap is easy to make with simple household ingredients!
Why make your own? Cheaper, less packaging waste and you’ll know exactly what it is made from. After all, you eat from your dishes!

Natural Dish Soap Recipe #1:
liquid Castile soap
water
2-5 drops essential oil of choice*
*Some essential oils options are lavender, lemon, cinnamon, clove, peppermint, tea tree, etc. This is optional and purely for scent – though all of these essential oils do also have anti-septic properties. Purchase a concentrated liquid castile soap which will be dilluted with water in equal parts.

Natural Dish Soap Recipe #2:
1/2 cup grated soap
3 cups hot water
2-5 drops essential oil of choice (optional)
Grate a bar of natural castile soap with a vegetable peeler and add to hot water (boil on stove if necessary) to dissolve.

Tough, Grease Cutting Dish Washing Recipe
1/2 bar shaved castile soap
1/4 cup baking soda
1 tablespoon washing soda
1 quart of hot water
The washing soda (sodium carbonate) makes this solution more caustic and helps to cut grease.

What, no suds?

None of these basic natural recipes will yield a sudsy soap. Why? Because suds aren’t necessary to clean anything. In fact, they actually make soap less effective because it becomes harder to rinse off from a surface. Suds in commercial soaps are from the surfectants that are added because consumers like suds. People think that suds = soap that works. Not true, don’t be duped by this! Not only are surfectants not necessary to clean, they are often nasty chemicals…sodium lauryl sulfate to name a common one.


The recipe is taken from here




Liquid Soap

Liquid Soap

 I do not want to restrict myself,  but rather find the most organic and natural type of soap you can find around you would be the safest choice for you. As we are trying to stay on the budget side as well as green, we do not want  to break the bank just to buy one bar of soap.

I found the original 'olive' soap in the last place I expected; oriental shop. I did know that I could buy it in our super organic stores, but each bar cost three times more than it costs at this oriental store. 


How to make
1. Grate 1 bar of castile bar soap into large container.
2. Add about 1.5 liters of hot water, stir well and cover.
3. Let sit 24 hours, stir some more and voila.