Categories: Recipe

How to Make Breast Milk Soap

Published by
James marcus

Here you’ll find an easy-to-follow tutorial on how to make breastmilk soap in only 5 minutes! Making your own soap is a great way to use up any extra milk you might have plus it’s gentle on baby’s skin.

No matter whether you’re an over-supplier or an under-supplier, every breastfeeding momma has the same fear: What if I run out of milk?

So we pump and freeze and pump and freeze every drop until our babies wean and we realize we have a freezer full of milk. Now what?

Well, over the years I’ve come up with a few uses for surplus breast milk, such as giving a breast milk bath or making breast milk lotion, but today I’m going to show you how to make breast milk soap. Which is a great way to make beautiful soaps using your own milk as a fresh ingredient. You can even customize it to your heart’s desire by adding essential oils, honey and oatmeal.

(If you’re an experienced soap maker looking to make cold process soap using breast milk, scroll to the middle of the post to find the instructions. Everyone else, stick with me 😉

Jump to:

  • Breastmilk Soap Benefits
  • What you’ll need
  • Ingredients
  • How to Make Breast Milk Soap
  • How to Store Melt and Pour Breastmilk Soap
  • Melt and Pour Soap vs. Cold Process Soap
  • Cold Process Soap Recipe
  • How to Add Breast Milk to Any Soap Recipe
  • Breastmilk Soap Recipe (printable)

Breastmilk Soap Benefits

Human breast milk is amazing – some even refer to it as liquid gold! It’s the perfect first food, but It’s also beneficial for baby’s sensitive skin and a number of skin conditions.

You might have heard of breast milk’s powerful immunological properties, but there are many more beneficial components found in breast milk. Things like proteins, amino acids, prebiotics, enzymes, antibodies, fatty acids, vitamins and minerals… the list goes on and there are still things that haven’t been studied yet.

Breast milk soap is very nourishing and gentle on the skin since it contains many skin-loving components of breast milk, like fatty acids, enzymes, vitamins and minerals.

“Just put some breast milk on it” is probably the number one advice among nursing moms. With good reason: breast milk has been shown to be effective in treating infant eczema, can help alleviate pink eye, dry skin, diaper rash, cradle cap, and baby acne and can even reduce the risk of small cuts getting infected (Source: Medela)

What you’ll need

  • Pyrex Measuring Cup
  • Sharp Knife
  • Digital Kitchen Scale
  • Whisk
  • Microwave or Double Boiler/ Water Bath
  • Meat Thermometer (optional)
  • Sunflower Silicone Mold or Teddy Bear Mold
  • Rubbing Alcohol in Spray Bottle (optional)

Ingredients

  • 200g / 7oz Clear Melt & Pour Soap Base or Shea Butter Soap Base
  • 150 ml / 5oz Breast Milk (room temperature)
  • ½ teaspoon Honey (optional)
  • 1 tablespoon ground Oatmeal (optional)
  • 15 drops Chamomile Essential Oil or lavender essential oil (optional)

How to Make Breast Milk Soap

If you’re planning to use oatmeal, add ¼ cup of old-fashioned oatmeal to a coffee grinder and blend until you have a fine powder.

Now, onto the soapmaking:

  1. Cut the soap base into small chunks and measure out 200g
  1. Melt the soap base in the microwave on 20 second burst stirring in between each burst or melt on medium heat in a double boiler or water bath
  1. Let the soap base cool down to about 130℉/ 55℃ in order not to scorch the milk
  2. Add breastmilk and stir
  1. Whisk in honey and oatmeal (if using) until there are no more clumps
  1. Add essential oil and stir
  1. Pour soap into mold
  1. Spritz the top with rubbing alcohol to minimize air bubbles (optional)
  1. Let the soap cool down and harden
  2. Then unmold
  1. Store in Ziplock bag in the fridge until ready to use

Cold Process Soap Recipe

I know what you’re thinking now: Will all these wonderful enzymes, antibodies and the magic pixie dust make it through the soap making process? The answer is: no, they will probably not make it through the “lye monster”. Cold process soap undergoes a serious chemical process when oils are being mixed with lye that creates a PH environment where microbes (good and bad) can’t live.

The good news is: breast milk is still a great additive in soap, think cows or goats milk on steroids. It contains more fats and sugars than regular milk which contributes to a smooth creamy abundant lather. And it also has lots of vitamins (A,C,D and E) that are great for your skin.

This soap recipe is another variation of a Bastille soap. Meaning a soap that is made with 75% or more of olive oil, but not a Castille soap which contains 100% olive oil. As I mentioned in my Baby Bastille Soap Tutorial, I’m not a big fan of Castille soap – the lather feels slimy to me and I have no patience for the long cure time 😉

To give this soap a nice bubbly lather and hardness boost I added coconut oil at 20%. Coconut oil sometimes feels drying to some folks, but the high percentage of olive oil and breast milk in this recipe make this soap feel creamy and gentle.

How to Add Breast Milk to Any Soap Recipe

In this tutorial I provide a soap recipe for you, but if you’d like to use breast milk (or any kind of milk) in another recipe you can. Simply follow the same steps that I will outline here.

For this recipe we’re going to replace the entire water content of the soap with breast milk. In order to do that we’ll have to take some extra steps in order for the milk not to scorch when mixed in with the lye. You know when the milk starts to scorch when it turns a yellow color and gives off a strong ammonia smell.

  1. Freeze milk in an ice cube tray

2. Place frozen milk cubes in a medium sized container (plastic or stainless steal)

3. Place container in an ice bath

4. Measure lye into a small container

4. Little by little add lye to the frozen milk while continuously stirring. The more time you take with this the less the chance of scorching.

5. After the breast milk is completely melted stir for another minute to make sure the lye is completely dissolved

If this is the first time making cold process soap with lye, I suggest you go back and read up on lye safety, recommended equipment and how to make homemade soap.

Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links, meaning at no extra cost to you will I earn a commission if you click through and make a purchase.

Equipment needed:

  • Ice cube tray
  • 3 medium sized containers (one of them can be glass (pyrex) the others plastic or stainless steel)
  • One small plastic cup (to measure lye)
  • One plastic spoon
  • Spatula
  • Immersion blender
  • Accurate digital kitchen scale
  • Sunflower single cavity soap mold

Ingredients for 6 Soaps weighing 3 oz / 85 g each:

This recipe is superfatted at 5% and uses a lye concentration of 38%.

  • Breast Milk: 2.85 oz / 81 g
  • Lye: 1.75 oz / 50 g
  • Olive Oil: 10.16 oz / 288 g
  • Coconut Oil: 2.54 oz / 72 g
  • Chamomile Essential Oil: 11 g

Instructions:

  1. Freeze milk in an ice cube tray
  2. Place frozen milk cubes in a medium sized container (plastic or stainless steal)
  3. Place container in an ice bath
  4. Little by little add lye to the frozen milk while continuously stirring. The more time you take with this the less the chance of scorching.
  5. Stir for another 5 minutes to make sure all the lye is properly dissolved and set aside to cool
  6. Melt coconut oil over low heat in a water bath or on short bursts in the microwave
  7. Add olive oil
  8. Add essential oils
  9. Place soap mold on a cutting board
  10. When lye solution and oils have cooled so they’re not hot to the touch, add the lye solution to oils
  11. Stick blend until medium trace (light pudding consistency) is achieved
  12. Fill soap batter into the mold cavities
  13. Tap cutting board with soap mold on the counter to release air bubbles
  14. Place soap in freezer overnight
  15. Leave out at room temperature for 24 hours and unmold
  16. Cure for 6 weeks
  17. Enjoy!

James marcus

Garden Courte is a blog written by [James Marcus], a passionate gardener and writer. She has been gardening for over 20 years and has a deep understanding of plants and how to care for them. In her blog, she shares her knowledge and experience with others, providing tips and advice on gardening, plant care, and more.

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Published by
James marcus

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