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Oh my god folkx have you ever used pears soap?

  1. #1
    Instigator Naturally Camouflaged [the staring tame crusher]
    It's like the champagne of soaps or the white widow of weed or whatever its fucking 10/10 soap.

    You need this shit in your life

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pears_(soap)
  2. #2
    Instigator Naturally Camouflaged [the staring tame crusher]
    Fun fact fuys it's not even made of pears.
  3. #3
    Bradley Florida Man
    I'm glad you're getting back into showers
  4. #4
    the man who put it in my hood Black Hole [miraculously counterclaim my golf]
    I prefer goat soap myself
  5. #5
    is it easier to drop
  6. #6
    As a small child (7 or so) I used to like the taste of soap and would "shave" bits off the pears soap bar to eat...it was only as I got older than I realized that soap bar had been washing my dads armpits, asscrack, dick and balls...
    The following users say it would be alright if the author of this post didn't die in a fire!
  7. #7
    the man who put it in my hood Black Hole [miraculously counterclaim my golf]
    chemistry is so cool

    Pears soap was made using a process entirely different from that for other soaps. A mixture of tallow and other fats was saponified by an alkali. Clearly, this is currently caustic soda (sodium hydroxide), since the ingredients list shows sodium salts of fatty acids, but a chemist reports that in the 1960s, caustic potash (potassium hydroxide) was used. It has not been possible to determine what was used in the early days of the product, as the writings of Francis Pears mention only alkali in industrial methylated spirits. After saponification was completed, the resulting glycerol was left in the batch. Batches were made not in huge pans, but in small kettle-like vessels. As soon as the translucent amber liquid had cooled enough to solidify, it was extruded into opaque oval bars that were cut into bath- or toilet-weight tablets, ready for beginning their long spell in the drying rooms (ovens). The hot liquid soap fresh from the vessel had a total fatty matter (TFM) of 45% compared with the TFMs of 70–80% usual in soaps made by the conventional method. The TFM increased considerably as the alcohol content fell during drying. The concave shape of the soap is formed by shrinkage while the soap is drying, and is not due to deliberate moulding.
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