Sunday, June 23, 2019

How about that home-made soap?

to make skin-friendly soap is hard. Vegetable or animal source fat differs from batch to batch. Differing composition due to source and amount of vegetable matter, animals, type of animals. A chemist has to get a sample of the bulk mix of all rendered fat in the reaction vat, hopefully more than 1000 gallons. 

Titrate the sample with sodium caustic, which in the industry is about 55% solution. Or caustic potash, 45% solution. Scale up the amount of the caustic, add to the vat on the low amount side. Watch the consistency, take pH. No possibility for sodium or potassium-based soap to attain the gentleness of baby shampoos. Once the fat-caustic based soap is used for washing, the fatty acid does its job of suspending the soiling matter, uncoupling from the +OH hydroxide ion, since the pH of tap water is different from the soap's optimal pH, and the +OH ion contributes to the excess of alkalinity of water, and all together attacks skin.

Ionic soaps which are more friendly to the skin use weaker bases, like amines, and the resultant acid-base is more natural to the tap water pH. 
But non-ionic soaps are still the best. Labelling still can't be interpreted as chemically correct. "Non-soap" may mean non-ionic, or non-ionic surfactant, or it could mean cationic surfactant, in either case it's a high-tech product optimized for right pH in the wash. 
Last time i checked the Fa brand soapless soap was the best. Other than baby soaps.

Saturday, June 22, 2019

Country Music+Food:

(emailing about country music)+(searching for info on food)+(reading about Judaism) =

How I spot scrape blogs and scraped news traps

Someone like Dr. Mercola or "associated" with another name or an institution.
Text has no reference footnotes, but hyperlinks to explanation of most basic concepts, mouseover - same site, or another associate advertising site.
General reference to sensationalized names of materials, findings, fears.
Text broken up by ads, which have wording similar to the text.
The end of the text is too far on the bottom.
The end of paragraphs has contextually related click bait lists, also heavily on the concern side.
The end of the "article" has a battery of thumbnails to other sites, click bait, no other reason to be on the page.
When googled, the headline or a paragraph turns up on another site, with the same non-scientific name, but official enough to impress the consumers of the concern topic. Excatly why it's called a scrape blog.
The name of the site is smoke and mirrors, like the shopping baggie fear (chemicals in shopping bags migrating into food therein) :

Medicalnewsdaily
BuzzFeed, buzznews
Healthviewmedia
Lancetworld etc (piggy back on the lancet's name)
Greenworldhere
Mindbodygreen
Enviroreports etc
Nutrigreenweb
Nutritionletter
all have .net or .com, or
Mayoclin.**