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The Natural Soap Book: Making Herbal and Vegetable-Based Soaps

The Natural Soap Book: Making Herbal and Vegetable-Based Soaps

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Author: Susan Miller Cavitch
Publisher: Storey Publishing, LLC
Category: Book

List Price: $14.95
Buy New: $6.39
You Save: $8.56 (57%)



Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 43 reviews
Sales Rank: 35738

Media: Paperback
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 192
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.6
Dimensions (in): 8.6 x 5.9 x 0.6

ISBN: 0882668889
Dewey Decimal Number: 668.12
UPC: 037038008883
EAN: 9780882668888
ASIN: 0882668889

Publication Date: January 8, 1995
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Condition: paperback, smooth, tight, clean
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Accessories:

  • RESPeRATE Blood Pressure Lowering Device
  • Airborne Effervescent Health Formula, Original Orange, 10 Tablets (Pack of 3)

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
An inspiring exploration of the goodness of chemical- and additive-free soap. 102,000 copies in print.


Customer Reviews:   Read 38 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars The green way to be clean...   November 9, 2008
This book was definitely a huge source of information in a compact package. Great tips, well written instructions.


2 out of 5 stars "Natural' isn't always better...   August 24, 2008
 3 out of 4 found this review helpful

I just finished reading Susan Miller Cavitch's The Natural Soap Book and found it lacking in several respects.

There is a pervasive preachy tone to this book that annoyed me horribly. Ms. Cavitch uses the book as a soap box (pardon the unintended pun) to promote several personal points of view, two central ones being her diatribes against the use of animal products and anything synthetic. My grandfather made soap the old-fashioned way, using the hot process method. He made his soap by boiling lye with animal fat he had rendered himself, much of it supplied by his children (including my mother). My mother always kept a coffee can in the refrigerator, and whenever she cooked any fatty meat, the grease when in the can. When it was full, it when to her father to be turned into soap. This grease probably wasn't much good for anything else, and was certainly full of unhealthy saturated fats; had it not gone into soap, it would have gone into the garbage. The vegetable oils Ms. Cavitch advocates using are mostly edible, and in many poor countries, vegetable oils are a significant source of calories. Increasingly, non-food uses of vegetable oils, most significantly an ever increasing demand for bio-diesel, have driven the price of these oils up to the point that many poorer populations around the world are being pushed dangerously close to starvation. The increased demand for these oils has also led to whole-sale destruction of virgin tropical forest, as huge plantations of oil palms are planted. So, our luxury all-vegetable soaps are made from oils that in many nations would be considered too valuable as food to be used for such a frivolous purpose as bathing, and further, the production of these soaps, although insignificant compared to the production of bio-fuels, can still not be completely divorced from the destruction of natural forest and the concurrent loss of bio-diversity inherent in the increased production of vegetable oil. So, which is better? To plow under rain forest to plant oil palms for soap, when the workers who labor on these plantations can't even afford the oil they produce for food, or to use animal fats that would otherwise go to waste? Personally, I prefer vegetable oil soaps, but I am also aware of the consequences of this preference and do not pretend that this puts me on a higher moral ground than people who bathe with tallow products. And although I also prefer `natural' products, many of these products are luxury items that are beyond the budget of most of the world's population. People who can't afford food are unlikely to spend $6.00 on a four ounce bar of pure castile soap. Synthetics, although by no means perfect and by no means lacking in potential harmful side effects, have made improved hygiene affordable to huge segments of the human population that would otherwise face much higher mortality rates due to a lack of basic cleanliness. These products have brought inestimable benefit to mankind, and although not without their faults, I would have liked to see a far more balanced discussion of them.

My final comments on Ms. Cavitch's book are technical. She doesn't discuss the use of the stick blender in home-made soap production. Many of the problems addressed in her chapter on trouble shooting can be avoided by the use of these wonderful gadgets; in fact, the 16 hour trace times she mentions for some soaps can be reduced to less than half an hour using one. Her section on trouble shooting also advises the soap maker to discard most failed batches; there is no discussion of rebatching, a technique that can be used to salvage all but the worst soap-making failures. The rescued soap might not be salable, but isn't it better to give away seconds than to throw your time and materials away?

I would advise a novice soap-maker to skip this book and buy Anne L. Watson's Smart Soapmaking instead. It is short, concise, practical, and a pleasure to read. It avoids many of the shortcomings that mar Ms. Cavitch's book.



5 out of 5 stars The Natural Soap Book   July 24, 2008
Great book. I've been making soap for over ten years and this is the first book I purchased when I started. I consider it one of my best sources of information.


5 out of 5 stars excellent   May 19, 2008
I will try to make my own soap and this book is exactly what I was looking for : everything explained from beginning. Thank you Susan


5 out of 5 stars Soapmaking help   May 15, 2008
I have a couple other books on soapmaking, but found this book gives me information that has helped me understand the process much better.


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