How to Make Soap From Olives

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  • Опубликовано: 5 окт 2024

Комментарии • 703

  • @htme
    @htme  3 года назад +76

    Thanks again to Unbounce for sponsoring today's video. Go to thld.co/unbounce_htme ​ and use the promo code home at checkout to get 20% off your first 3 months.

    • @HarrySparshott
      @HarrySparshott 3 года назад +3

      does it taste good though?

    • @dunno6746
      @dunno6746 3 года назад +2

      @@HarrySparshott I want to taste it to ✌

    • @joshuagoodwin9018
      @joshuagoodwin9018 3 года назад

      at the end of this series, you should make like a movie where you put together a bunch of clips using all the tools you made. i think this would be really cool

    • @lorasipal9996
      @lorasipal9996 3 года назад

      9

    • @dillonvandergriff4124
      @dillonvandergriff4124 3 года назад +1

      Hi htme! Just some thoughts, I think your soap ended up so brittle because of salt contaminants in your lye, as olive oil soap is usually very soft.

  • @AleksaNoeksa
    @AleksaNoeksa 3 года назад +763

    Wasn't prepared for Lauren to break out a microscope and analyze the efficacy of their soap :D

    • @ambulocetusnatans
      @ambulocetusnatans 3 года назад +44

      I expected them to invent the microscope first.

    • @simon-patrickjohnson
      @simon-patrickjohnson 3 года назад +4

      Thanks to your comment I am well prepared

    • @RazorSkinned86
      @RazorSkinned86 3 года назад +22

      @@ambulocetusnatans learning to precision grind glass lenses. what's interesting is that for laymen it seems daunting to try pushing past the early steam age but in truth it isn't and just starts requiring at most more collectivism. with the help of other creators like Nile Red, Applied Science, and Accidental Science there is no reason this channel couldn't push all the way to present day.

    • @AleksaNoeksa
      @AleksaNoeksa 3 года назад +2

      @@simon-patrickjohnson spoiler alert, sorry!

    • @wolffang489
      @wolffang489 3 года назад +2

      On the pigskin nonetheless.

  • @nazamroth8427
    @nazamroth8427 3 года назад +282

    "Random downed trees that were rotten"
    Instead, uses a much older dead tree that has been in the ground and is visibly falling apart in places.

    • @Sohzy
      @Sohzy 3 года назад +10

      yeah i was thinking the same thing like it looks like its ready to just fall apart when you touch it

    • @bencressman6110
      @bencressman6110 3 года назад +31

      railroad ties are very well treated. Much better than rotting deadfall

    • @SF-li9kh
      @SF-li9kh 3 года назад +2

      His Mongol bow wood was pathetic. This was much much better than that fibrous wood

    • @BlackDragonWitheHawk
      @BlackDragonWitheHawk 3 года назад +10

      @@bencressman6110 they are banned from re- usgae in switzerland simce the late 90ies because of cancer, health issues and enviromental damage, because of their tratment

    • @AVerySexuallyDeviantOrange
      @AVerySexuallyDeviantOrange 3 года назад +4

      @@BlackDragonWitheHawk All treated wood has that, it’s a matter of the chemicals softening the wood and preferring to stick to living material so they are dangerous to handle barehanded
      Tldr wash ya hands and you’re all good

  • @dolphin9105
    @dolphin9105 3 года назад +743

    I hope he uses this to make nitroglycerin and get control of the miracle cave

    • @ilyasdra4003
      @ilyasdra4003 3 года назад +68

      dr stone gang for life

    • @gmodiscool14
      @gmodiscool14 3 года назад +4

      ys BOMBA

    • @spodefollower
      @spodefollower 3 года назад +10

      That would make RUclips take down his channel probably lol

    • @four-en-tee
      @four-en-tee 3 года назад +32

      I cant wait for us to reach WW1 and the development of mustard gas.

    • @snuckytoes8427
      @snuckytoes8427 3 года назад +3

      Unfortunately that’s probably a tad too dangerous, but if he’s ever under attack it is certainly an option.

  • @four-en-tee
    @four-en-tee 3 года назад +174

    Almost 2 years in, and we've finally advanced far enough into the future to be able to take a shower.
    This is absolutely poggers.

    • @DarkAngelEU
      @DarkAngelEU 3 года назад +4

      Poggers and wholesome. I love living in the postmodern era because of stuff like this.

    • @MatthewStauffer
      @MatthewStauffer 3 года назад

    • @Blaze-zm7zt
      @Blaze-zm7zt 3 года назад +1

      @@DarkAngelEU wut

    • @Blaze-zm7zt
      @Blaze-zm7zt 3 года назад

      @@DarkAngelEU wut

    • @frankjones5188
      @frankjones5188 2 года назад

      Omg you'd die by then

  • @hunterv2979
    @hunterv2979 3 года назад +79

    She was stirring it to trace so gently - beat it like it owes you money! There is a reason they use blenders when making soap lol

  • @reidzunti3425
    @reidzunti3425 3 года назад +118

    “Isn’t lye used to dissolve bodies?” - Lauren
    To answer your question Lauren... yes it can be used to dissolve bodies in high concentrations and to dissolve a whole human body you need an average of 5 gallons of a concentrated lye/ water solution

    • @Bird_Dog00
      @Bird_Dog00 3 года назад +4

      Why do I have to think back to Ghost Recon Wildlands?

    • @janpostma5381
      @janpostma5381 3 года назад +10

      and a stainles steel pot to boil it in to speed up the proces. pro tip cut the body up in small pieces for even faster ressuts. pro pro tip dont use aluminiun with lye it brakes down to create an explosive gas

    • @JayPersing
      @JayPersing 3 года назад +8

      @@janpostma5381 found the Modern Rouge watcher

    • @4philipp
      @4philipp 3 года назад +1

      And how do you discard 5 gallons of highly concentrated lye? Pouring down the drain doesn’t seem adequate

    • @janpostma5381
      @janpostma5381 3 года назад +4

      @@4philipp ad a metric fuckton of bakingsoda

  • @darthludi
    @darthludi 3 года назад +65

    It'd be interesting to see a re-evaluation of thr soaps after a month, as usually you have to let them cure for some time so that the remaining lye has had time to react.

    • @sylvanaire
      @sylvanaire Год назад

      I was coming to make the same comment! I made soap once with modern ingredients: lye and beef tallow, that you buy in the store. I certainly didn’t make anything from scratch, lol. But I do remember having to wrap the soap mold in a blanket and let it cure for 4 to 6 weeks before it was safe to touch according to the directions that came with the kit that I used.

  • @SapioiT
    @SapioiT 3 года назад +39

    You can also make lye from woodash. Mix ash with water (preferably warm or hot water, but cold water and more time works as well), strain it to remove the ash, then you need to separate it from the lye. You can do part of the separation by letting it precipitate to the bottom, and the rest by boiling or simmering. After all the water is evaporated, you have lye without water. But for soap, you can use lye water in sufficiently-high concentrations. For cutting soap, a hot knife is preferred, but also more dangerous.
    Many cultures used the ash itself, as a powdered soap, for things which it didn't stain. Like washing yourself from head to toe, including teeth brushing, for example.

    • @Electracion
      @Electracion 3 года назад +9

      I was looking for this comment as this was the method of lye production I was more familiar with (and ergo the method I was expecting in the video). I also thought this was the older/more-traditional method comparatively.

    • @SapioiT
      @SapioiT 3 года назад +4

      @@Electracion It's also simpler, if you don't have a mine nearby, since, in the past, every household had ash, and they would sometimes even use it directly as soap, but sometimes they would boil it (into potash), strain the ash part, and mix the rest with cooking oil which went bad, and lard which went bad, or simply stored it as-is for later use, or even diluted it and used is as-is.

    • @dbseamz
      @dbseamz 2 года назад +2

      That's how Mother Wilder does it in "Farmer Boy" too

    • @schreckpmc
      @schreckpmc Год назад +1

      That’s how granny did it in the Beverly hillbillies.

    • @MattsProductions
      @MattsProductions 11 месяцев назад +2

      @SapioiT that is not lye thats potassium carbonate also known as potash to get hydroxides or lyes you need to fire certain compounds into oxide and mix them with water like in the video up. Even though you could make some soap with it you couldnt quite make a bar😢

  • @Mister_Lovely
    @Mister_Lovely 3 года назад +181

    "coME GEt yOuR sOUp danIEl" activated my fight or flight response

    • @laurenapolis
      @laurenapolis 3 года назад +33

      But daniel I made it for you

    • @Mister_Lovely
      @Mister_Lovely 3 года назад +18

      @@laurenapolis very well... i will fight.

    • @Erzi89
      @Erzi89 3 года назад +4

      @@Mister_Lovely Cannot deny that this happened to me either (I'm a Daniel too) :D

    • @markm0000
      @markm0000 3 года назад +1

      @@laurenapolis “I made this for you.”

    • @theblackbaron4119
      @theblackbaron4119 3 года назад +1

      Did you get lost in the soup isle again Daniel?

  • @ghostagent3552
    @ghostagent3552 3 года назад +14

    HTME: Took 1 year to make soap
    Senku: took 2 weeks to make soap (due to need of labor)

  • @thesultanpepper9413
    @thesultanpepper9413 3 года назад +95

    The most inportant advancement so far
    Soap

  • @kullen2042
    @kullen2042 3 года назад +25

    I really love your videos and I learn quite a deal from them! This time I only have one think I would've liked to dee in more detail: After you bild the screw and everything for the oil press, you only ever showed the olives being crushed, never how the screw was being used :D
    But overall: Great work, keep it up, folks! :)

  • @t.vinters3128
    @t.vinters3128 3 года назад +79

    If I recall correctly, letting the soap cure for 1+ month would help neutralize all of the lye, making it safer to use.
    [Disclaimer: might be wrong on this.]

    • @dillonvandergriff4124
      @dillonvandergriff4124 3 года назад +25

      2-3 weeks will let the lye fully react assuming you have your ratio right. Most soap cures for 4-6 weeks though to release any free water and make the bar last longer.

    • @emerencespringer
      @emerencespringer 3 года назад +42

      Yes - typically, using modern ingredients, measurements and tools, then Yes the average curing time is 4 - 6 weeks, depending on the mixture of oils used, this curing allows for the quality of the soap to transform. Except that with 100% olive oil soap, originally called Castile, or Aleppo depending on the regional area how it's made, that curing process takes longer, typically 6 months to a year, or more, again depending on various factors. It can be used after the 6 weeks, but as with time, like wine and cheese, it gets better with age.
      The "oh it doesn't suds much" is because what most people are used to using, the store bought bars or liquid cleaning products that are now commonly used for washing dishes, clothes and your teeth, are technically detergents, (or include detergents) But are not actually "soap." - It's detergent in these products that suds up so much. - (Yes there's detergent in your toothpaste. Read the label and look up the ingredients.)... But because of the characteristics of olive oil in Soap, it is very LOW, if any sudsing, but still cleans. By actual definition true Castile Soap is only made with olive oil, and for Aleppo, laurel is added. Unfortunately many soap makers are taking liberties with the terms and adding other ingredients but still using the Castle name, because, in part, so many people are under the misunderstanding that sudsing is cleaning. Soap cleans, not suds. If your soap is actually soap, doesn't have detergents, but is sudsing, it's not 100 percent olive oil, or other things have been added to contribute to increased sudsing.
      Yay Soap…

    • @CrimsonPhantom88
      @CrimsonPhantom88 3 года назад +12

      @@emerencespringer This guy soaps

    • @emerencespringer
      @emerencespringer 3 года назад

      @@CrimsonPhantom88 ... I don't understand what you mean.

    • @el_Pumpking
      @el_Pumpking 3 года назад +2

      @@emerencespringer bet this was a good episode for you 😂👍

  • @crashgaming8289
    @crashgaming8289 3 года назад +17

    This series has been pretty great so far, I am just waiting for this to blow up even more in popularity!

  • @charlesmoore3390
    @charlesmoore3390 3 года назад +4

    Hey guys, love the series. Just wanted to note that there are far easier ways to make Lye then the one shown. One of the easiest I'm aware of it using Potash, which is just hard wood ash placed in a pot (Literally, Pot Ash) and steeped in rain water. The liquid lye will leach out and float to the top. It can then be decanted off and filtered into a separate container.

  • @carloshenriquezimmer7543
    @carloshenriquezimmer7543 3 года назад +8

    Quick note here: lavender fragrances comes from the stem and upper roots of the plant. The flowers have it in them, but is very subtle in comparison.

  • @PaleGhost69
    @PaleGhost69 3 года назад +134

    A life preserving stone in place of a doctor... Dr. Stone!

    • @kylefoster9507
      @kylefoster9507 3 года назад +10

      I just started watching that series because of this channel

    • @ommmar6324
      @ommmar6324 3 года назад +1

      Was hoping someone would mention this

  • @vinniIainCook
    @vinniIainCook 3 года назад +17

    I would've wanted to really see how you applied pressure on the olives with the screw, because in the sound clip, it sounded a bit... broke and I honestly can't imagine someone just screwing it in by hand, considering that in the photo you showed there was a square part to it in which you could fit a stick to get some leverage.

    • @rontropics26
      @rontropics26 3 года назад +5

      Right, it definitely didn't work. To make a corkscrew like that that would fit perfectly and spin smoothly would take a very skilled carver. They also didn't show them filtering or refining the olive oil in any way but magically it's pure when they use it to make the soap.

    • @SafetyLucas
      @SafetyLucas 3 года назад +4

      @@rontropics26 And as someone who's made soap before, insufficient stirring definitely wasn't why it didn't work. The reaction starts immediately irl. It was that the lye they made wasn't pure enough. Notice how at 11:56 the new lye looks very granular. I think they used store bought lye and olive oil for the second run.

    • @NymNymO2
      @NymNymO2 3 года назад +4

      @@rontropics26 sadly htme isnt trying anymore. Since the reboot Series with a Team of people the quality of the Videos dropped instantly. Its all about pumping out Videos now and generating clicks (even the cat is a Tool for that) . The 'rules' are bent constantly. Personally i would prefer a Video All 3 months where everything is done true.

    • @rontropics26
      @rontropics26 3 года назад +3

      @@NymNymO2 Thanks, that's interesting to know. I've been a long time subscriber but just haven't watched anything of his in a year or two.

    • @akhasshativeritsol1950
      @akhasshativeritsol1950 3 года назад +2

      Yeah, the current method is "if we [kinda] make it once, we can just buy tons of it from the store," and just skipping over a lot of the actual effort that goes into getting really pure ingredients and high quality tools. He didn't even bother trying to use the file he made from scratch, just opted for a store-bought one. Really feels like they're straying from the spirit of the venture...

  • @nobodynever4326
    @nobodynever4326 3 года назад +9

    Can't wait for them to build a hadron collider out of sticks and stones

    • @chad7554
      @chad7554 3 года назад

      Wooden and stone hedge....

  • @SirWonkotheSane
    @SirWonkotheSane 3 года назад +2

    This channel really makes you sit back and appreciate the manual labor modern technology spares us.

  • @djbe7850
    @djbe7850 3 года назад +27

    Old wood used on railroadd are treated with some not so healthy chemicals to prevent rot (cerosote and chromated copper arsenate), ideally it shouldn't be in enclosed space for obvious saftey reasons, stay safe out there.

    • @BlackDragonWitheHawk
      @BlackDragonWitheHawk 3 года назад +1

      in switzerland they are completely banned for privvate reuse because of health and enviromental reasons!

    • @mcm8433
      @mcm8433 3 года назад

      Not only in Switzerland, in many European countries it is illegal to sell such spent ties to individuals. Creosote is both toxic and carcinogenic, this is basically a hazardous waste. I wonder what are the regulations in US.

  • @thomascarroll180
    @thomascarroll180 3 года назад +1

    This is one of the most underrated RUclips channels! I am always impressed with the effort put into each video

  • @mikehotshots7607
    @mikehotshots7607 3 года назад +2

    I'm curious as to why they didn't go the wood ash route for lye. It might not be super effective at producing hard bars (beeswax can help with that) but its easy to make.
    Also, 100% olive oil soap can take months to cure properly, unless you use a hot process. I'd love to see an update on these soaps later.

  • @dracadius8481
    @dracadius8481 3 года назад +14

    Love this series. Can't wait to see the machinery episodes.

    • @theblackbaron4119
      @theblackbaron4119 3 года назад

      Those episodes are probably to become more and more expensive as he moves on into the modern age. :/

    • @dracadius8481
      @dracadius8481 3 года назад

      @@theblackbaron4119 Yeah.

  • @georgemckenzie7524
    @georgemckenzie7524 2 года назад

    I swear this guy ideas are so cool to have something like this on his channel that's awesome

  • @kenner01
    @kenner01 3 года назад +7

    I think the soap had splotches because soap needs to cure for weeks, not just a weekend. It can still be caustic if it’s not completely cured

    • @theblackbaron4119
      @theblackbaron4119 3 года назад +3

      Yeah it's pretty dangerous. I had severe lye burns on my foot due to local home made soap I bought from some sheep farmers. I had some thin resedue on my foot and because of it being re hydrated by sweat and my feet touching I burned two parts badly.

    • @that.neurodivergent
      @that.neurodivergent 3 года назад

      @@theblackbaron4119 That's whack, I'm sorry to hear that!!

  • @hunszaszist
    @hunszaszist 3 года назад +7

    Lauren is so adorably self-conscious, it's very fun to watch, haha!
    This is a compliment.

  • @gavinli1368
    @gavinli1368 3 года назад +15

    Hang on, how were you actually using the screw? We didn’t see any sort of wheel or crank at the top for you to apply torque to the screw. Nor did we see it actually thread all the way down to apply pressure to the stack of crush olives.

    • @moistoyster3776
      @moistoyster3776 3 года назад +8

      The tap and die are still a ways off; carving the inverse of a hand carved thread would be very difficult with even modern tools. And that screw was far from straight. I'm guessing they took some artistic liberties with that part.

    • @gavinli1368
      @gavinli1368 3 года назад +4

      I assumed as much. I’d seen woodworkers make wooden nuts and bolts as a challenge, and it seemed difficult enough as is. When Andy first mentioned that he planned on making a screw, I was immediately a bit skeptical.

    • @Rudy97
      @Rudy97 3 года назад +3

      They did not press that oil either so it's all good

    • @4philipp
      @4philipp 3 года назад

      With such a wide thread the reverse won’t have to be exact. I would think a simple angled edge would provide all the power needed.
      I kind of like that they make these things from scratch and don’t hire professionals. It represents the struggle you and I would have to go thru if we had to provide for ourselves

  • @jesseestrada8914
    @jesseestrada8914 3 года назад +1

    I use my kitchen grease to make soap all the time in my crockpot. The reason the soap still had "blotches" of high PH is because soap usually takes several weeks to cure entirely. That is using my highly refined NaOH too so, it probably would take even longer with handmade lye.

  • @jakeferreira1211
    @jakeferreira1211 3 года назад +29

    I can't wait for the episode when he surpasses modern civilization and builds a robot or a flying car or something

  • @robbicu
    @robbicu 3 года назад +15

    Andy's neighbors in Minneapolis be like: Margey, look what that boy is doin' now!

    • @laurenapolis
      @laurenapolis 3 года назад +2

      I always think about that lol

  • @trevorseals6588
    @trevorseals6588 2 года назад

    This is the best soap video I’ve seen. And surprisingly I’ve seen a few. It helped me understand how the greasy stuff is turned into something that cleans grease. You also started with raw materials at the beginning which I’ve never seen before in a soap video. Love your content

  • @xbloxmenx2473
    @xbloxmenx2473 3 года назад +40

    *In stone world, being sick is an game over*
    *-dr. Stone*

  • @thexalon
    @thexalon 3 года назад +28

    If you make soap with coconut oil instead of olive oil, then you get to put the lye in the coconut and mix 'em both up.

    • @maddockemerson4603
      @maddockemerson4603 3 года назад +5

      So lemme get this straight: you put the lye in the coconut, and mix ‘em both together? You put the lye in the coconut and the soap is better?

  • @antimatter1075
    @antimatter1075 3 года назад +12

    Aren't railroad ties considered toxic by the EPA because of the creosote and other chemicals used to prevent rotting. I guess as long as it doesn't come into contact with the food directly it should be "ok". Look forward to the next video.

    • @TheMichigami
      @TheMichigami 3 года назад

      they're very toxic and not safe to handle, in my area people who try to use them for landscaping get in trouble because they're dangerous to handle so not allowed in residential areas. they can make you sick if you handle them barehanded, especially older ones from when they were a bit lazier with safety regulations.

    • @antimatter1075
      @antimatter1075 3 года назад

      @@TheMichigami I hope they don't keep it around to long or at least replace it with something a bit safer

    • @lachlanngordon1577
      @lachlanngordon1577 3 года назад

      Older rail sleepers weren’t contaminated with creosote and so are able to be used

    • @antimatter1075
      @antimatter1075 3 года назад

      @@lachlanngordon1577 from the cross section I saw I'm pretty sure that was a railroad tie soaked in creosote and even if it wasn't it would still preserved with chromated copper arsenate which is almost worse.

    • @TheMichigami
      @TheMichigami 3 года назад +1

      @@lachlanngordon1577 they've been using creosote on them almost as long as laying rail has existed, my gramma was warned as a kid never to play around with discarded track wood because it could make you sick, and even during the depression people living in coke ovens desperate for heating fuel would scrounge fallen coal off the tracks and burn furniture before touching rail wood, they knew it was poisonous to handle and burn.

  • @robin7433
    @robin7433 3 года назад +3

    For making soap, I've always added an excess of oil to make sure that the lye is all reacted and it's a lot better on your skin. And because theres soap it doesnt really matter if theres a little extra oil bc of the soap so it wont feel greasy at all. I think it's called overfatting

    • @4philipp
      @4philipp 3 года назад

      That’s what my family did with me and then call me over fatty

  • @allhumansarejusthuman.5776
    @allhumansarejusthuman.5776 3 года назад +3

    Oooo.
    First Screw, getting close to making complex machinery!
    Screw presses where used by blacksmiths too, just a thought

  • @j.c.cannon2112
    @j.c.cannon2112 3 года назад +1

    small suggestion with the new press, you may want to make a press basket for the center so you can press a larger volume at once. also, you could extend the catch spout out from the block so a container can be placed under the spout so you don't need the reed to guide the liquid.

  • @ottowalter2519
    @ottowalter2519 3 года назад +2

    As a chemistry student: The shown molecule of the soap is missing a double bonded oxygen atom next to the terminal negative charged oxygen atom. Simple soaps are fatty acids salts.

  • @finkergamer8557
    @finkergamer8557 3 года назад

    This is something obvious but I challange you to make bucket.
    You already are using iron tools but for bucket it would be challange, as iron is still fairly difficult to process.
    Therefore wooden bucket would be great starting point
    Qualities:
    - Can be cleaned, or quickly replaced
    - Waterproof (duhh)
    - Light (water will be heavy enough)

  • @LesslyPoint
    @LesslyPoint 3 года назад +4

    Love it when you reuse things like the furtball...

  • @koadithekingslayer4038
    @koadithekingslayer4038 3 года назад

    I've finally caught up on the videos in this series. I only recently found your channel, and have been binge watching lately. You've got some great content here mate, and you should be proud of it. Great stuff! I can't wait to see more. Thank you for the entertainment and education.

  • @gokucrazy22
    @gokucrazy22 3 года назад +2

    I didn't expect the football to return

  • @funky555
    @funky555 3 года назад +36

    Since this was posted 4 minuites ago, no one has seen the end of the video yet.

    • @markm0000
      @markm0000 3 года назад +1

      I think the patreons get to see it earlier. Not sure though.

    • @rattlesnakz9716
      @rattlesnakz9716 3 года назад

      You forgot about the time difference haha

  • @funky555
    @funky555 3 года назад +11

    Her: "Ew you smell like vinegar!"
    Me: "No, actually its Olives"

    • @baconsarny-geddon8298
      @baconsarny-geddon8298 3 года назад +3

      They pussied out; Really, the commonest early soap was made from animal fat, so he should smell like the dripping tray from a sunday roast... but I guess they didn't have the guts to show THAT process, from scratch...

    • @DH-xw6jp
      @DH-xw6jp 3 года назад

      @@baconsarny-geddon8298 tallow and lard (boil refined beef or pig fat) doesnt actually smell like cooked meat. Doesnt taste like it either.

    • @cahallo5964
      @cahallo5964 3 года назад

      tallow smells like a really tasty soup with a bit of butter on the side, and lard does indeed smell really strong and it's an acquired taste of sorts

  • @Mr.Cucumba
    @Mr.Cucumba 3 года назад

    Great Work! Glad to see a you placed a straw for the liquid to flow into the vessel.

  • @Zpajro
    @Zpajro 3 года назад

    I really like that you with modern tools check that what you made works

  • @ColonelAngus101
    @ColonelAngus101 3 года назад +1

    That is amazing looking olive oil from your setup.

  • @netherstarbuild
    @netherstarbuild 3 года назад +2

    "in a primitive world with out doctors soap is a lifesaver, you can call it Dr. Stone"

  • @markm0000
    @markm0000 3 года назад +1

    That spoon grinding on the bowl made my nails curl.

  • @GreedyGabriel
    @GreedyGabriel 3 года назад +2

    finally a normal thumbnail

  • @Southwestern1872
    @Southwestern1872 3 года назад +1

    Wow i have always wanted to how soap is made!

  • @TheTeraflint
    @TheTeraflint 3 года назад +32

    Now invent the shower and then let Andy test all the soaps with it.

    • @GodLeftAllOfUs
      @GodLeftAllOfUs 3 года назад +3

      I'd rather have Lauren do it, but whatever boils your cockles

    • @wolffang489
      @wolffang489 3 года назад +4

      Building a mini aqueduct would actually be a legit next step in their timeline.

    • @dhawthorne1634
      @dhawthorne1634 3 года назад +2

      @@wolffang489 Plumbing pipes were invented about 1200 years before soap so it would actually be a bit of a regression.

  • @johgranger1304
    @johgranger1304 3 года назад +2

    OMG you threaded the whole thing when you only needed a foot if inserted from under. You sure like working hard!

  • @LesslyPoint
    @LesslyPoint 3 года назад +1

    Forbidden SOUP has become forbidden CUSTARD

  • @xiemeon2268
    @xiemeon2268 3 года назад +1

    Caveman chemistry, now that would be a channel I'd watch

  • @juliegolick
    @juliegolick 3 года назад +4

    Lauren: "Don't breathe in the fumes"
    Also Lauren: [leaves face uncovered]
    IF ONLY WE ALL HAD ACCESS TO MASKS THESE DAYS!

    • @dhawthorne1634
      @dhawthorne1634 3 года назад

      She's either sick of wearing one all of the time or realizes that it would take a charcoal respirator to filter out the fumes.

  • @fixerupper2716
    @fixerupper2716 3 года назад +1

    Highlight of my day is watching Andy and Lauren! You guys rock! I’ve done a few of your projects from the Roman concrete to the bronze sword. Love watching your advice and processes!

  • @saamir3607
    @saamir3607 2 года назад

    Im glad I discovered this channel, very interesting niche high quality content

  • @acemax1124
    @acemax1124 3 года назад +1

    Awesome I have always wanted to try something like making soap they old fashioned way 🧼🧼🧼

  • @memereport2481
    @memereport2481 3 года назад +1

    Olives, olive oil, and olive wood can have a similar effect to catnip. Probably why bill likes it so much

  • @BlackstoneBnB
    @BlackstoneBnB 3 года назад

    I've been making cold process soap for 5yrs now and this was an enjoyable video to watch. I like how you processed the basic materials. Have you tried making lye from wood ash yet?

  • @Eevee_Guardian
    @Eevee_Guardian 3 года назад

    "Getting sick means game over in this world. This little chunk that keeps germs off of us is our stone of life in a world with no doctors. It's our doctor stone." - Senku

  • @engineer0239
    @engineer0239 3 года назад

    Pro Tip: Warmer temperatures speed up the chemical reaction a lot. When we did this in our Chemistry class, we mixed the lye and oil over a burner.
    In my opinion Nitrate fertilizers and soap were the most important inventions for country development. With Nitrate fertilizers fewer people were able to feed a higher ammount of people, making it possible to assign more workforce to other sectors, and the soap made sure they didnt die so quickly from disease.

  • @firenter
    @firenter 3 года назад +2

    Yay, finally the screw!
    One thing you didn't touch on, did the soap smell olive-y or lavendery or not at all?

    • @ZedaZ80
      @ZedaZ80 3 года назад

      .

    • @ornessarhithfaeron3576
      @ornessarhithfaeron3576 3 года назад +3

      From my experience with olive-based soaps, they do smell like olives a bit, but it's more subtle. So it should smell like a subtle mix of both.

    • @laurenapolis
      @laurenapolis 3 года назад +1

      It smelled really good!!! Very lavendery

    • @emerencespringer
      @emerencespringer 3 года назад

      @@ornessarhithfaeron3576 ... I wonder where you are getting your olive oil soap? In my experience, without any other additives, it should smell like soap. Unscented soap.

  • @inicosunga8913
    @inicosunga8913 3 года назад +8

    this is a really good series

  • @uhoh7545
    @uhoh7545 3 года назад +3

    Now create a record player to decode the glass disk your father left behind on his gravestone

  • @kittyprydekissme
    @kittyprydekissme 6 месяцев назад

    Now that you're doing more Mediaeval and early modern technology, I hope you'll be making more screws soon. I'm really hoping for a printing press soon. Anyway, a recent Townsends video has them making a screw for a pasta extruder, and their technique for making the screw is ingenious.

  • @benitocamelas9144
    @benitocamelas9144 3 года назад

    his raftsmen ship has improved over the years

  • @sillyjellyfish2421
    @sillyjellyfish2421 2 года назад

    Fun fact - you can get lyme (a mixture of calcium and potasium chlorids) by simply burning hard wood and putting ashes into water. Once mixed and then left to sit, hydroxides stay dissolved in the water while all the debree falls down to the botom.
    Another fun fact, if you mix ashes with just enough water to create clay consistency, you can shape it like clay, then when left to dry and mature, calcium hydroxide binds with CO2 from the air, creating primitive concrete. For smaller amounds of materials, there is no need to mine anything. Ash from the cooking fire would do.

  • @jpsimas2
    @jpsimas2 3 года назад +3

    4:26 you could've extracted some phenolphtalein from red cabbage. That might make a nice video actually

  • @brianmumford7977
    @brianmumford7977 3 года назад

    Would love to see you try and do some meat preservation.
    You're really nailing the reset. Great work.

  • @wanderlustspirit4607
    @wanderlustspirit4607 3 года назад +1

    Ah those good ol viking age rail road ties 😆🤣

  • @dangerouswitch1066
    @dangerouswitch1066 3 года назад

    you do what i only deamed of. you are an inspiration. i want to try making this soap. i have coconut oil on hand to use.

  • @MrDowntemp0
    @MrDowntemp0 3 года назад +5

    I must've missed the episode where you guys invented protective gloves, eveware, and ph strips!

    • @LupusSapien
      @LupusSapien 3 года назад +1

      I applaud the safety gear. The alternative to pH strips is called "zap testing": you literally lick the soap and if you get a shock sensation, there is unreacted lye and it needs to be left longer to cure. Considering that they didn't have a curing period at all here, it would have resulted in chemical burns to the tongue. (I've made soap by cold process and hot process).

  • @mooreiverson8343
    @mooreiverson8343 3 года назад +1

    What about sea water desalination history ? Or history of turning desert in to oasis ? I would like to see it.

  • @theblackbaron4119
    @theblackbaron4119 3 года назад

    Aww the cat with the neckerchief Bill :)

  • @mastershooter64
    @mastershooter64 3 года назад +1

    still waiting for the "transistors from scratch" video lol
    _haha doped silicon go brrrrrr_

  • @ezramantini8078
    @ezramantini8078 3 года назад

    Back in the stone world before modern medical science and hospitals, in a battle where man lost to diseases, this was their Dr.Stone 🧼

  • @SF-li9kh
    @SF-li9kh 3 года назад +2

    11:57, Isn't that store bought chemicals? Is that why the second batch yielded better results? Does that mean the original sample is the only quality one can achieve with naturally collected materials?

    • @emerencespringer
      @emerencespringer 3 года назад +1

      The process of making soap requires oil, water and lye, plus mixing. Each oil has a molecular composition, chains, that react differently to the combination of lye and water. Olive oil takes a really long time for the immersion Process. The first attempt wasn't stirred long enough to completely incorporate the ingredients, which is why it separated. The 2nd attempt, stirring longer is what is required to get the mixture to end up being Soap, when using just olive oil. No store bought chemicals were used. They made the lye, the hard way.

  • @Psychx_
    @Psychx_ 3 года назад +1

    2:35 your illustration shows "fatty alcohols", not "fatty acids" and the resulting molecules depicted as soap are actually alkoxides (which are only stable in the absence of water and react violently with moisture to form the corresponding alcohol and alkalihydroxide while generating heat). The difference is that in order for these to be fatty acid salts, the carbon binding to the Oxygen actually needs to bind to another oxygen atom using a double bond.
    Also, try making your lye from wood/plant ash! the main causic ingredient in it is "potassium hydroxide" and it leads to a much higher quality soap without the need of using limestone at all.

  • @chillierark6464
    @chillierark6464 3 года назад

    Is HTME going to make electronics one day? It's going to be crazy when he drives around in a homemade car

  • @GuiSmith
    @GuiSmith 3 года назад

    “Cursed olive oil soap” you say as you’re cleaning a hair-covered ball

  • @nobodyasked9047
    @nobodyasked9047 3 года назад +1

    In 50 years he’ll make a tank lmao

  • @thegrimmeater8417
    @thegrimmeater8417 3 года назад

    Most underrated channel

  • @LesslyPoint
    @LesslyPoint 3 года назад +1

    Love the work! It is inspiring me in my worldbuilding. Thanks!

    • @hotaru8309
      @hotaru8309 3 года назад

      Like for stories or games or making things in real life in a recreation area?

    • @LesslyPoint
      @LesslyPoint 3 года назад +1

      @@hotaru8309 wrighting and games. Amongst other things i am a DM in a time travel campaign. (The players like going WAY back)

  • @Bertrand5700
    @Bertrand5700 3 года назад

    Next up on htme remakes the world: HTME remakes the internet

  • @_.-.
    @_.-. 3 года назад

    Both my grandmothers used to make their own soap recycling filtered cooking oil.
    And before you ask, no it doesn't smell like fries.

  • @nickfenix3892
    @nickfenix3892 3 года назад

    I can’t get enough of watching this

  • @ra1ny600
    @ra1ny600 3 года назад

    People grocely under estimate how many small business owners watch people make soap out of olive oil in their spare time 🤣🤣

  • @brianmumford7977
    @brianmumford7977 3 года назад

    I would love to see you tackle dried and salted meat. Is ancient dried meat just like beef jerky or is it sucky?

  • @St0RM33
    @St0RM33 3 года назад +1

    5:30 That's my country!!

  • @elijahbachrach6579
    @elijahbachrach6579 3 года назад

    Nice! You unlocked tenon and mortise!

  • @martinfriel1288
    @martinfriel1288 3 года назад +6

    Can't wait for the next episode

  • @henryguillen7277
    @henryguillen7277 3 года назад

    most underated channel

  • @iknowmypointisinvalidbut4863
    @iknowmypointisinvalidbut4863 3 года назад +1

    Episode 500: today we invented time travel !

  • @sushiamezaki9869
    @sushiamezaki9869 3 года назад +5

    This is 10 Billion Percent exhilarating!

  • @DrDuckMD
    @DrDuckMD 3 года назад +1

    Cut the cured soap the day after you’ve poured it. It will not crumble, the longer you wait the harder the bar gets. I’ve been making soap for 6 years.

  • @bsoul3177
    @bsoul3177 3 года назад

    man i love this idk why