(This post was last modified: 03-12-2016, 04:18 AM by ask4Edge.)
My favourite soaps happen to contain tallow (and most of those happen to be triple-milled).
That said, I'm not entirely convinced tallows are necessarily better. Theoretically, if the tallow fatty acids are perfectly replicated (in terms of proportion and type of fatty acids), using vegetable matter, the same results can be achieved.
(03-12-2016, 02:38 AM)GroomingDept Wrote: Just to mix things up Many vegan soaps aren't vegan! They use Stearic Acid, generally Stearic Acid comes from animal fats.
Great point. Much of (industrial) stearic acid is derived from Palm, although it's also animal-derived; plus, many so-called vegan/vegetable soaps, contain animal-derived glycerin. Personally, I prefer just using the antonyms
tallow and (versus)
non-tallow.
(03-12-2016, 03:16 AM)bakerbarber Wrote: I prefer tallow soaps...I do not however really enjoy lanolin...
Just to clarify, "tallow" soaps don't contain much actual tallow, if at all. Saponification of tallow yields
salts (versus fat/oil) of tallowate - whereas lanolin is left unsaponified, and remains a fat/oil.