Beer Soap Recipe with Chamomile & Neroli Plus Helpful Soap Making Tips (2024)

Learn how to make this homemade beer soap recipe with real beer using the cold process soap making method. Plus discover soap making tips and tricks for working with beer, or even wine, to avoid a potential mishap. (Ask me how I know…) Keep reading to learn more!

Beer Soap Recipe with Chamomile & Neroli Plus Helpful Soap Making Tips (1)

Working with Beer When Making Soap

If you’ve never made cold process soap before, I don’t recommend starting with my beer soap recipe until you have a little experience under your belt. (To learn how to make homemade cold process soap from scratch go here.) Beer can be tricky. And I know. Years ago, when attempting to make homemade cold process beer soap for the first time, I had a minor disaster. I did like everyone said and let my beer go flat. However, I’m not sure it was really flat enough. That and lye just reacts differently to beer than it does with water regardless if it’s still carbonated or not.

I started out making my beer soap recipe like any other cold process soap recipe. I began by pouring my lye into the beer, a little at a time. I’d mix it, wait then pour a little more lye into the beer. Everything seemed to be going well. So (my lack of patience showing here) I dumped the remainder of the lye into the beer and stirred. What happened next was not what I’d expected. And I was completely unprepared.

My beer and lye mixture for my beer soap recipe volcanoed. It literally sprang to life like a water fountain being turned back on after a long winter.

There I was, mixing the lye with the beer on my stove top (exhaust fan running) and BOOM! The beer and lye went everywhere. It ran off my flat glass stovetop, down the front of the appliance and onto the floor. There were pools of lye and beer everywhere. And it was kind of terrifying.

I grabbed kitchen towels and threw them on top of the beer and lye. As they were a cotton/polyester blend, the heat from the lye actually caused the towels to melt slightly. I was super freak out, as you can imagine. And so, I didn’t attempt another beer soap recipe for a very long time.

Tips for Making A Beer Soap Recipe

By sharing this, my hope is that you’ll learn from my mistakes so you can avoid a repeat of my soap making disaster. Making beer soap doesn’t have to be scary, you just have to be smart about it. Here are my tips to help ensure success when replicating my homemade beer soap recipe.

1. Have a gallon of vinegar on hand just in case. This isn’t for your skin as you should flush skin with water if it comes into contact with lye. Rather it’s going to help with clean up in case disaster strikes you have a minor oops.

2. Think your beer is flat? Give it an extra day or two just in case. (I gave this batch a week in an large glass measuring cup and kept it covered in the fridge.) Keeping the beer cold will also help prevent the lye from quickly overheating and in turn lead to a volcano effect.

3. Either mix the lye with the beer outside or in a sink just to be safe. This will maintain the integrity of your kitchen towels. (Yeah, mine were toast.)

4.) Practice a little patience. Pour the lye into your beer in small increments, stirring after each pour. Don’t do what I did and dump all of it in at once.

Ready to brave your first homemade beer soap recipe? You’ve got this!

Homemade Beer Soap Recipe

© Rebecca D. Dillon

Ingredients:

9 oz. olive oil
8 oz. rice bran oil
3 oz. castor oil
7 oz. 76° melt point coconut oil
7.2 oz. sustainablepalm oil
1.8 oz. illipe butter

12 fluid oz. beer, of choice
4.8 oz. lye/sodium hydroxide

1.75 oz. neroli fragrance oil (or .5 oz. neroli essential oil)
.15 oz. Roman chamomile essential oil (3% dilution)
.1 oz. chamomile flowers

Beer Soap Recipe Notes:

I scented this homemade beer soap with a blend of neroli and chamomile. As I was using a Sierra Nevada Pale Ale, my beer soap recipe wasn’t really going to have much of a fragrance to it anyway. You can leave your beer soap unscented or substitute with your favorite fragrance or essential oils.

Instructions:

This recipe will fit inside one of my DIY wooden loaf soap molds and yield 10-12 bars depending on how they are cut.

Follow your basic cold process soapmaking instructions for making this soap, using very flat, cold beer. Using a digital kitchen scale weigh out the lye and slowly pour into the beer a little at a time, stirring after each pour. Repeat until all lye has been mixed with the beer then set aside to cool.

While the beer/lye mixture cools, weigh out the soapmaking oils and illipe butter into a stainless steel pot on the stove and heat over medium heat until all the oils have melted, then remove from heat.

Once the oils and beer/lye have cooled to around 90-95°F you can begin making soap. Pour the beer/lye into the soapmaking oil and mix with a stick blender until you reach a light trace. Stir in the fragrances and chamomile flowers and combine thoroughly, the pour the soap into your prepared mold.

Cover and insulate your soap for 24 hours, then unmold and cut into bars. Allow to cure 4-6 weeks before use.

If you like my homemade beer soap recipe, then be sure to repin it for later.

Beer Soap Recipe with Chamomile & Neroli Plus Helpful Soap Making Tips (2)

For more great homemade soap recipes, be sure to check out my huge collection of 130+ homemade soap recipes here. You can also find more soap making ideas on my Pinterest boards. Additionally, don’t forget to follow me on your favorite social media platforms. You can find me on Facebook, Twitter,Blog Lovin’andInstagram! Or sign upfor my semi-weekly newsletter to stay updated on new recipes.

Beer Soap Recipe with Chamomile & Neroli Plus Helpful Soap Making Tips (2024)

FAQs

What oil makes soap more cleansing? ›

The higher number means the soap will be more cleansing and thus harsher on the skin whereas the lower number means it will not cleanse as well but will be gentler on the skin. Ultra cleansing oils include babassu oil, coconut oil, murumuru butter, palm kernel flakes and tucuma seed butter.

How do you make homemade bar soap lather better? ›

Whether in the form of beer or wine for your lye liquid, or in the form of plain granulated sugar added to the hot lye water, adding sugars will increase the richness of your soap's lathering qualities. Another method for increasing lather, if you don't wish to change your base oil recipe: adding sugar.

How many drops of essential oil in soap making? ›

Essential oils should be added to a soap recipe at a rate of 5-10 drops per pound of base oil. Because the oils are so concentrated, you don't need as much essential oil when you pour soaps.

What oils make the hardest soap? ›

These generally include palm kernel oil and cocoa butter. Brittle oils will make a hard bar of soap. Soap made with higher percentages of hard and brittle oils will be set faster and so quicker and easier to unmould, but it also means they are harder to work with if you want to do anything too advanced.

What is the cheapest oil to make soap with? ›

Canola Oil – 1 year

Canola oil is an affordable option for soap. It produces a balanced bar with creamy lather. It's also a great substitute for olive oil.

What to use instead of palm oil in soap making? ›

You can also use tallow or lard in place of palm. They add similar hardening properties in cold process soap. Another option is to increase the coconut oil up to 33%. A higher amount of coconut oil can be drying, so you can increase the superfat or add moisturizing oils like avocado and sweet almond.

What ingredient makes soap lather more? ›

Sugar. Sugar, and ingredients that have sugar in them can dramatically increase lather, not just the amount but the richness of the lather.

What adds lather to homemade soap? ›

Coconut Oil - This is the number one soap making ingredient for creating lather with big, luxurious bubbles.

What gives soap a good lather? ›

Oils such as coconut and castor oil help create a bubbly, foamy, rich lather. On the other hand, soaps made primarily with olive oil, such as Castile-type soaps, will produce a rich and creamy rather than bubbly lather.

What happens if you put too much essential oil in soap? ›

Some fragrance oils can accelerate the saponification process, causing your soap to thicken more quickly. Some fragrance oils can discolor your soap. Some can even cause your soap to become grainy, or to separate. Learn more about ricing, acceleration, and more here.

Can you put too much essential oil in soap? ›

For example, cinnamon leaf essential oil should only be used at a maximum level of 0.5% of your soap and ylang ylang essential oil at 1.4%. Just because essential oils are natural it doesn't mean they are always safe - adding too much can irritate your skin.

What essential oils should not be used in soap? ›

I do not recommend using benzoin or orris root as both are skin sensitizers and have potential to induce allergic reactions. If you choose to use either, please label your soap accordingly. (Want to dive deep and learn everything about using essential oils in soap and cosmetics in one place?

What can I use instead of coconut oil in soap making? ›

Coconut oil: This is a truly unique ingredient. Along with making soap firm, it adds amazing lather and cleansing properties. The closest substitute we've found is babassu oil.

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.

What does coconut oil do to soap? ›

Coconut oil is used in soap making because it is a good source of lauric acid, which has antimicrobial properties. This acid also helps to keep the skin hydrated and can help to reduce inflammation.

What makes soap more cleansing? ›

The sodium or potassium end of the chain is hydrophilic, which means it attracts water. This unique structure gives soap its cleaning power.

What ingredient makes soap cleansing? ›

Fatty acid characteristics

The major fatty acids found in soap oils are: Lauric acid - a saturated fatty acid that contributes hardness, cleansing, and big fluffy lather. Myristic acid - a saturated fatty acid that contributes hardness, cleansing, and fluffy lather.

What makes a soap a good cleanser? ›

When you wash with soap and water the soap molecules grab on to the fat molecules and pulls them off the skin into the rinse water. When your rinse the skin the fat and germs are removed from the skin. Therefore, the main reason why soap works to cleanse and sanitise is it literally washes everything off the skin.

What ingredient in soap cleanses? ›

Surfactants are the workhorse ingredients of soaps and syndets responsible for skin cleansing, and thus, overall skin health.

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Terrell Hackett

Last Updated:

Views: 5453

Rating: 4.1 / 5 (72 voted)

Reviews: 95% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Terrell Hackett

Birthday: 1992-03-17

Address: Suite 453 459 Gibson Squares, East Adriane, AK 71925-5692

Phone: +21811810803470

Job: Chief Representative

Hobby: Board games, Rock climbing, Ghost hunting, Origami, Kabaddi, Mushroom hunting, Gaming

Introduction: My name is Terrell Hackett, I am a gleaming, brainy, courageous, helpful, healthy, cooperative, graceful person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.