Guest guest Posted February 17, 2004 Report Share Posted February 17, 2004 Hi All! The dr. has discovered pneumonia in my left lung but is still letting me up today for a while. I'm not allowed to soap but nothing was said about making some whipped shea butter! yahaha (How do you spell an evil cackle?) I tried softening some shea, melting a bit of beeswax, and beating that into the shea along with some jojoba. Works great, but not very creamy, soft or whipped feeling. Do you need a water portion and an oil portion to whip together to make a cream? I have no emulsifying wax or anything else like it except LabColours PolyGel and LabColoursPolyEm which I have never used because they did not come with directions. Are these used to make creams? Does anyone know how? My dry skin thanks you, my bored brain thanks you, my annoyed husband thanks you, and I thank you, Lizz Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 17, 2004 Report Share Posted February 17, 2004 I have a whipped shea butter that I make with just shea & jojoba. Getting the temp just right as you whip it with the mixer makes it cream up a bit easier. It will thicken up as it cools but adding another thinner oil like sweet almond, grape seed to the mix, helps it stay more of a creamy liquidy texture. Bill I tried softening some shea, melting a bit of beeswax, and beating that into the shea along with some jojoba. Works great, but not very creamy, soft or whipped feeling. www.saratogascents.com www.soapsuppliesandcandlesupplies.com www.handcraftedinamerica.org Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 17, 2004 Report Share Posted February 17, 2004 At 10:34 PM 2/17/2004, you wrote: >I have a whipped shea butter that I make with just shea & jojoba. Getting >the temp just right as you whip it with the mixer makes it cream up a bit >easier. It will thicken up as it cools but adding another thinner oil like >sweet almond, grape seed to the mix, helps it stay more of a creamy >liquidy texture. >Bill Thanks, Bill. I will try warming it again and adding grapeseed oil. Don't you just love to " fiddle " til something works? I think the scientific term is " tweek. " I won't mention on a family oriented board like this, the term I use in the privacy of my own home. (Yes, H. It begins with s and ends with crew, but you'll have to figure out the rest yourself! ) Stircrazy....... Lizz Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 17, 2004 Report Share Posted February 17, 2004 Lizz I haven't ever gotten around to making whipped shea butter but it seems to me I read in a few places that it's best if you whip it, refrigerate it, whip it, refrigerate it, etc until you get the consistency you want. Can't hurt to try. Re: Whipped Shea Butter... Help, please At 10:34 PM 2/17/2004, you wrote: >I have a whipped shea butter that I make with just shea & jojoba. Getting >the temp just right as you whip it with the mixer makes it cream up a bit >easier. It will thicken up as it cools but adding another thinner oil like >sweet almond, grape seed to the mix, helps it stay more of a creamy >liquidy texture. >Bill Thanks, Bill. I will try warming it again and adding grapeseed oil. Don't you just love to " fiddle " til something works? I think the scientific term is " tweek. " I won't mention on a family oriented board like this, the term I use in the privacy of my own home. (Yes, H. It begins with s and ends with crew, but you'll have to figure out the rest yourself! ) Stircrazy....... Lizz Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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