(03-12-2016, 11:30 PM)Tbone Wrote: (03-12-2016, 01:46 AM)TSEvangelist Wrote: Ok folks, which do you prefer and why? Tallow or Vegan?
I prefer shaving soaps that work well for me over those that don't. The ingredients list is irrelevant as far as I am concerned. I have used some very good tallow soaps (icluding Mike's Natural, Tabac, Prarie Creations, Mitchell's Wool Fat) and equally good non-tallow soaps (including Van Der Hagen Deluxe, Institut Karite, The Soap Opera Himalaya). I have also used a bunch of other soaps, and never found any correlation between tallow, or the lack thereof, and shaving soap quality. Maybe the recent "tallow uber alles" fad is due more to marketing than anything else?
I use the term "non-tallow" because such soaps are not necessarily vegan.
There is not a doubt in my mind that many tallow/lanolin soaps outperform most non-tallow soaps that I've tried where conditioning and post shave moisturizing is of concern. It is not the tallow alone imo, but the combination of tallow and lanolin, along with other butters and oils. All of the tallow soaps that I use have at least 2 butters such as shea and kokum, and at least a few fixed oils such as sweet almond, avocado, apricot kernel, palm kernel, castor, coconut, etc. In contrast to the tallow/lanolin soaps, many veggie or non-tallow soaps have minimalist recipes that often include only stearic acid, glycerin, and coconut oil. The veggie or non-tallow soaps that contain additional oils and butters tend to perform more like tallow soaps, for example Soap Commander and Tabula Rasa. For this reason I am ordering some samples of Route 66 shave soaps. Those soaps are non-tallow but include stearic acid, palm kernel oil, vegetable glycerin, lanolin, avocado oil, coconut milk, and silk amino acids. I have a good feeling about those soaps based on the ingredients, and I will find out soon.