Excellent! I was half-expecting you to produce an Aleppo-style stamp roundel to emboss your logo on each bar. It will be interesting to see the finished soap.
@@ArianeArsenault Yes I watched an old documentary of it being made in Aleppo, Syria when I started to take interest in soap making. I always look forward to your videos.
I made a alleppo inspired soap with no scent but the laurel berry oil has a strong smokey scent I didn’t really like so I let it sit for about a year as I had forgotten about it really .. Well the scent got really mild and it’s absolutely wonderful now 😍
Hey Ariane! This soap looks so lux...beautiful job as usual!! Your hydrosol looks good enough to drink straight from the lovely bottle. LOL ; ) Hope all is well with the family...Big ((Hugs)) and Love from Texas!! xoxo : )
I love watching your soap videos! Thanks for sharing this amazing soap. I will be trying it myself. One question I always have when I watch your videos, where to you get the stainless steel pitcher with the bent handle??? I have been looking or one like this for years! Thanks again for doing what you do! You are very talented!
What a beautiful soap Ariane. Did you add anything to the lye solution besides lye and water? Is there anywhere that sells the Bayberry hydrosol? If not, what would be a good substitution? THANKS!
Is this soap available to buy yet??? I really really want to buy some... I'm in Ontario... And it's so hard to try out exotic soaps, because many of these soaps are from USA, and shipping est très cher.
Hello dear, I admit I have been watching you for a long time, it seems to me for a few years now. Your videos are very relaxing to me today, thank you very much for that. You make me want to study the profession and want to do it, but in the country I live in (Israel) I don't even know how to look for a field, what the field is called. Learning a foreign language can be a bit risky, because having a translation of translated materials here is different .. I am really boring I would like to do it for life, seems like something very relaxing, pleasant, and contributing. Thank you!
If you can translate this. Cold Process Soap Making. ייצור סבונים לתהליך קר. Uses Oils. Olive oil. Castor oil. Coconut Oil. Many other types of oil. משתמש בשמנים. שמן זית. שמן קיקיון. שמן קוקוס. סוגים רבים אחרים של שמן. You also need a chemical called Sodium Hydroxide. אתה צריך גם חומר כימי הנקרא נתרן הידרוקסיד. I don't know if this helps. I hope it does. Making soap is easy, but you need to be safe while doing it. אני לא יודע אם זה עוזר. אני מקווה שכן. הכנת סבון היא קלה, אך אתה צריך להיות בטוח בזמן שאתה עושה זאת.
Oh this soap looks like it may be suitable for my extra dry sensitive skin. I will watch out for release date depending on postage costs to uk that is lol
beautiful soap. Ariane you need your heavy duty mixer ..... Also Ariane why do you not try cutting your bars on the long length of your table, then you don't have to worry about the soap. I have the same log splitter and that is what I ended up doing so I wasn't having to have like 3 hands to catch it once it went through. Sorry but just had to offer suggestions.
Ariane Arsenault Ok. I’ve watch you from when you first started posting your videos. You have really grown so much. Love that you have such wonderful business.
So simple and elegant. Do you use these yourself? I find soaps high in olive oil go soft quickly even after a long cure. I even had a bar of traditional allepo but it went mushy. Not sure if its the humid climate?
I just love watching your process. That natural color from the oils is so pretty. I’ve never tried Laurel Berry, but you’re inspiring me to try it. Look forward to it in six months. 😉
🤩 Wow wow Wow !!!!You deserve the crown 👑 of soap 🧼 making Queen.Very inspirational !!!watching your videos inspired me so much that I got into this business four years ago !!!soaping friends wish me luck
Hi Ariane, It is always a pleasure to watch you craft. I made a similar soap with 80 olive oil 20 laurell berry, but it is very drying. What sf % do you use?
Hay, hope you are doing well. Thanks for sharing your videos. Have this soaps got ready? And did you try it? I would love to see you try this and lat us see your experience with it. I love what you do🌹
The color and texture of the raw soap took me back to when my boys were baby's.. it reminded me of strained green beans, always a favorite food until the boys got older. You mention that this soap is good for fragile skin. How exactly?
so have you did water discounting for this soap as i saw you have used 1 ltr of hydrosol is equivalent to water ..so there would be some water discounting
When I seen that large container of Laurel Berry Oil, I just about fainted! Good lord! That is some expensive Oil! Maybe 1 of these days I will be able to afford the expense to make this Soap!
@@timbervista7167 I've seen small bottles. I'm just saying that it is an expensive Oil, regardless of size. Never seen a container that large for it. Lol.
I'm just curious about why you say that it's not a true Aleppo Soap, because you're not an Aleppo? It's like saying that your Castile Soaps are not a true Castile. It's the Ingredients that make up the Soap, is what makes it an Aleppo Soap.
Khione in my opinion, Aleppo soap is a long time tradition and the traditional process + precise recipe is held by those who have been crafting it for centuries, passing down the knowledge. I can’t pretend that I know or master this process. I also chose to add a hydrosol, which is not part of the original process. Castile soap is a 100% olive oil soap and its origin is from the Castile region in Spain.
@@ArianeArsenault I know that Castile Soap originated in Spain. But the whole Process of Castile and Aleppo Soaps are based mostly on the fact that they only make 1 specific type of Soap, not an assortment of different Soaps. If a Lard Soap was made in Aleppo, it wouldn't be called an Aleppo Soap, because Aleppo Soap is known to be strictly Olive Oil and Laurel Berry Oil. That's all I meant by my comment. But I understand what you mean about the addition of the Hydrosol is not a part of the original recipe.
Many people make Aleppo soaps and aren’t in Aleppo. It’s ok and their choice. I simply prefer to call mine Aleppo inspired because I did modify the recipe and I am not using a traditional method. Peace ☮️
Won't the soap go rancid quicker if it takes that long to cure? I love all natural soaps like this one. Would love to see the color on the fully cured bar as well.
@Michelle Ebersohn A full Liquid Oil Soap is always gonna need a long Cure Time like this, which is why it is recommended to use Oils that have a long shelf life.
There isn’t an official recipe for Aleppo style soap. If you research you may find different rates of laurel berry fruit oil going from 10% up to 40%. I did something in between 🙃