Homemade Goat’s Milk and Honey Soap ~ Easy Melt and Pour Recipe (2024)

Goat’s milk and honey soap is a beautiful handmade gift to make or receive. By using a goat’s milk melt and pour soap base, you can skip the risk of dealing with lye and the hassle of milking a goat.

The resulting soap is still handcrafted with love right in your home kitchen, and the shape, add-ins, and scents are all your own.

Homemade Goat’s Milk and Honey Soap ~ Easy Melt and Pour Recipe (1)

A while back I shared a recipe for an easy goat’s milk and honey soap for beginners hoping to convince people that soapmaking doesn’t have to be scary. Done right, avoiding the main soapmaking mistakes that newbies make, soapmaking with lye is fun and safe. Lye still scares people though, and now that I’m a mother of two small children it’s tricky to get a day in the kitchen alone for soapmaking.

The thing is, there’s a lot more to soapmaking than lye and oils. Choosing shapes, colors, scents and add-ins takes more time, effort and creativity than the actual saponification process itself. By making melt and pour soaps, you can still get your creative juices flowing without pulling out all the safety gear.

Homemade Goat’s Milk and Honey Soap ~ Easy Melt and Pour Recipe (2)

I put my 1-year-old down for a nap and my 3-year-old excitedly joined me in the kitchen for soapmaking time! The melting point of melt and pour soap is right around 120 degrees, so it’s not scalding hot.

My little one was able to help stir and pour the soap without a worry about safety. The only concern is mess, but with good supervision and a careful child, it’s no problem.

Supplies for Melt and Pour Soap

This soap is simple and only has one mix in ~ honey. If you’d like, feel free to add a tablespoon of your favorite oil like jojoba or sweet almond for a more nourishing bar.

How to Make Goat’s Milk and Honey Melt and Pour Soap

Start by chopping the block of melt and pour soap base into small cubes. Roughly 1 centimeter (1/2 inch) cubes work well. The idea here is to increase the surface area and help the soap melt more evenly. Melt and pour soap bases are quite soft and you won’t have trouble going through it with a good chef’s knife.

Homemade Goat’s Milk and Honey Soap ~ Easy Melt and Pour Recipe (3)

Place the chopped soap base in a heatproof bowl and slowly melt it, stirring often. It’s important to avoid burning melt and pour soap as that’s the one thing that will completely destroy a batch. If you’re using a microwave, cook it for no more than 30-60 seconds at a time and then stir in between.

Believe it or not, I don’t have a microwave and so I’m making it on the stovetop. On the stovetop, direct heat can quickly burn a batch so it’s important to use a double boiler.

You don’t need anything fancy, just a heatproof bowl that fits nicely on top of a small saucepan. Add a bit of water to the saucepan and place the bowl containing soap chunks on top.

Homemade Goat’s Milk and Honey Soap ~ Easy Melt and Pour Recipe (4)

Turn the heat on and allow the water to come to a simmer. The indirect heat from the steam will slow the melting process and prevent burning.

Even in a double boiler, it only took about 2 minutes for chunks of soap to go from solid to this…

Homemade Goat’s Milk and Honey Soap ~ Easy Melt and Pour Recipe (5)

At this point, turn off the heat and stir until the soap base is completely dissolved. This should take no more than 2-3 minutes. If you need to, turn the heat back on for a bit more melting action.

Once the soap base is completely melted, remove it from the heat altogether. Add in the honey and stir to completely incorporate it.

I had a darker-colored honey from our backyard bees, and I thought it added a nice color to the soap. If you’d like, feel free to add a few drops of yellow soap colorant to enhance the “honey” color of the soap.

Homemade Goat’s Milk and Honey Soap ~ Easy Melt and Pour Recipe (6)

At this point, with the soap melted, honey mixed in and oil or colors added (if using), this goat’s milk and honey soap is ready to go into the mold. Pour the liquid soap base into a silicone soap mold of your choice.

I’m using this round honey bee mold, but there are a lot of great honey-themed soap mold choices out there. This one is particularly elaborate, and I really love the detail. You could also use a goat-themed soap mold to take things in a different direction.

A one-pound soap recipe makes 10 small round bars using the mold I chose. Unfortunately, the mold only holds 6, so the rest stays in the double boiler to be remelted gently in an hour when these have set.

Homemade Goat’s Milk and Honey Soap ~ Easy Melt and Pour Recipe (7)

Allow the soap to set in the molds for about 45 minutes to an hour. If you’re in a hurry, placing them in the fridge or freezer will really speed things up and you can have soap ready to come out of the molds in as little as 15 minutes.

At this point, if you have more soap mix in your double boiler, re-melt it gently and pour it into the mold. Most soap molds hold about 1 pound of soap, mine was just extra small.

Homemade Goat’s Milk and Honey Soap ~ Easy Melt and Pour Recipe (8)

Once dry the soaps are ready to gift or use. Melt and pour soaps are high in glycerine, which makes them extra luxurious, but it also means that they’ll attract moisture if left out for extended periods.

If you’re gifting them, try wrapping them in tissue paper and packaging them in these screw-top 4-ounce salve tins. They’re a bit deeper than the standard tin which will accommodate for the soap’s extra height.

Those same tins also work great for small chocolates and homemade lotion bars. Once you’ve got a cute honey bee silicone mold, might as well make use of it in more ways than one, right?

Homemade Goat’s Milk and Honey Soap ~ Easy Melt and Pour Recipe (9)

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Homemade Goat’s Milk and Honey Soap ~ Easy Melt and Pour Recipe (2024)

FAQs

What can I add to goats milk melt and pour soap base? ›

Ingredients:
  • 1/2 pound of goat's milk melt-and-pour soap base.
  • 1 teaspoon of vitamin E oil (note: the vitamin E oil used in this recipe is a blend of skin-beneficial oils plus vitamin E)
  • 10 drops of eucalyptus essential oil.
  • 15 drops of rosemary essential oil.
Feb 10, 2021

Can we mix honey and goat milk? ›

Together goat's milk and honey are a powerful combination and provide plenty of benefits for your skin. I use a powdered form of both the Goat's Milk and the honey because it keeps better in storage. I also added a variety of dried florals to my Goat's Milk and Honey Milk bath for a few added benefits in my milk bath.

What supplies do I need to make goat milk soap? ›

The Supplies
  1. Stock Pot.
  2. Scale.
  3. Bowls to Measure Oils.
  4. Small Glass Bowl to Measure Lye – it will corrode metal so be careful!
  5. Large Glass Bowl to mix Lye and Goat Milk.
  6. Spoon/Spatula.
  7. Thermometer.
  8. Stick Blender.
Oct 30, 2023

How much honey do you put in goats milk soap? ›

Ingredients
  1. 600g goats milk soap base (1.3 lbs)
  2. 3 tablespoons creamed honey, such as Langnese Landhonig.
  3. 1/4 teaspoon honey fragrance oil.
  4. 12 drops yellow soap colouring.
  5. molds of your choice, I used these.
  6. rubbing alcohol.
Nov 12, 2019

What makes goat milk soap better? ›

Goat milk soap is less allergenic than synthetically loaded commercial soaps and detergents. It is known that goats milk can reduce skin inflammation, and soothes dry and damaged skin. Goats milk soap can reduce wrinkles and delay signs of skin aging. Its natural emollients and triglycerides moisturise skin.

Do you need lye for goat milk soap? ›

Even goat milk liquid soap uses potassium hydroxide (a form of lye) instead of the sodium hydroxide (lye) that is used to make bar-soap. However, to make any soap, lye is a necessary ingredient.

What makes goat milk soap lather? ›

By using goat's milk instead of water to create the lye, you add an abundance of saturated and unsaturated fats to the soap. The saturated fats increase the soap's lather, and the unsaturated fats enhance its nourishing and moisturizing properties.

What are the benefits of goat milk with honey? ›

Soothes and Calms Irritated Skin

The gentle and soothing properties of goat milk help reduce redness, inflammation, and itchiness. Honey, with its anti-inflammatory properties, further calms and heals your skin, making it perfect for those with eczema, psoriasis, or dry skin conditions.

Can you add honey to melt and pour soap? ›

Melt and pour soap

When it comes to melt and pour, we don't recommend adding too many extras like oil or butter. They can make the soap oily or soft, and they inhibit lather and increase the chances of glycerin dew. The same goes for honey - we recommend no more than 1/2 teaspoon per pound.

Can you use raw honey to make soap? ›

Honey in Soap Making

Honey is also a wonderful additive to soaps, and you don't have to be a beekeeper to use it. It imparts a light, warm, sweet scent, the added sugar content helps increase the lather, and acts as a humectant. We generally use about 1 tbs. per pound of oils and add it at a very light trace.

How many bars of soap does a gallon of goat milk make? ›

For instance, a gallon of raw goat milk is worth $3.20, but converting it into 16 ounces of goat cheese raises the selling price to $16. Similarly, one gallon of raw goat milk can produce 80 bars of goat milk soap that retails for $320.

How long does it take for goat milk soap to cure? ›

Cold process soap is the traditional way of making soap. We add lye to goat milk (or water) and mix with hot oils. Then you add whatever colors, herbs, essential oils or other additives you want before pouring into some sort of mold. Cold process soap takes 4-6 weeks to cure before you have a finished bar of soap.

Is goat milk and honey soap good for your skin? ›

Goat milk and honey soap provide a gentle exfoliation, removing dead skin cells and revealing a fresh, radiant complexion. The natural enzymes in goat milk and the mild exfoliating properties of honey work together to give your skin a youthful and revitalized appearance.

Can I add honey to my bathing soap? ›

Along with the humectant properties, honey helps create bubbles in cold process soap. It's also great from a marketing standpoint. You can add it to the oils or at trace. Some makers also dilute the honey in water, then add the mixture at trace.

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