My Anime Shopping Tree & My Cold Prodigy Wife! -
Episode : 41
Chapter : 81
"Jasmin, listen closely." He waited until she met his gaze, ensuring he had her full attention. "This next part involves heat and the lye solution we made. The danger increases. The lye, when mixed with the hot fat, will react. It will generate its own heat. There might be fumes – irritating, not poisonous, but we keep the door cracked for ventilation." He pointed towards the slightly ajar door. "Most importantly: slow and steady. We add the lye gradually. We stir constantly, gently. No sudden movements, no splashing. If any of this mixture gets on your skin, even through the gloves, rinse it immediately and thoroughly with cold water from that bucket. Understood?"
Jasmin nodded solemnly, her eyes wide but focused. The transformation from timid butcher’s assistant to apprentice clandestine chemist was progressing rapidly, fueled by trust and the underlying promise of her mother's recovery. "Yes, my lord. Slow. Steady. Careful stirring. Rinse if splashed. I understand."
"Good." Lloyd placed the heavy iron cauldron securely over the growing fire, adjusting its position until it sat stably above the flames, receiving even, moderate heat. "Now, the fat."
Together, they carefully scooped chunks of the solidified white tallow from the storage jar into the cauldron. Lloyd estimated the amount by eye, aiming for roughly two parts fat to one part lye solution by volume – a standard starting ratio he recalled from his fragmented Earth knowledge, adaptable later based on results.
"We need to melt this slowly," he instructed, picking up one of the long wooden paddles. "Gently now. We don't want it to scorch or splatter."
They took turns stirring the tallow as it gradually softened, liquefied, and warmed over the steady heat. The air filled with the rich, slightly heavy scent of melting beef fat. Lloyd kept a careful eye on the temperature, occasionally lifting the cauldron slightly off the direct flames if it seemed to be heating too quickly. He explained to Jasmin how judging the temperature by feel (holding a hand cautiously near the side of the pot) or by observing the fat’s clarity and movement was crucial.
Finally, the tallow was fully melted, a clear, pale golden liquid shimmering in the cauldron, warm but not boiling. "Alright," Lloyd declared, taking a deep breath. "The critical moment. The lye."
He carefully measured out the required volume of the brownish lye solution into one of the earthenware bowls, using rough estimations based on the cauldron's size and the amount of melted fat. Then, positioning himself carefully, holding the bowl steady, he addressed Jasmin, who stood ready with the other long wooden paddle.
"Start stirring, Jasmin. Gently, constantly. A slow, steady swirl. Don't stop, no matter what."
Jasmin nodded, her knuckles white as she gripped the paddle, and began stirring the warm, liquid tallow with smooth, careful strokes.
"Here we go," Lloyd murmured, mostly to himself. He took the bowl of lye and began pouring it into the swirling fat. Not all at once, but in a thin, steady stream, moving the stream around the edge of the cauldron as Jasmin stirred.
The moment the lye hit the hot fat, there was a subtle change. A slight cloudiness appeared where the stream entered. A faint hissing sound, barely audible above the crackle of the fire. The rich, fatty smell was now tinged with that sharper, alkaline tang of the lye.
"Keep stirring," Lloyd urged quietly, his focus absolute as he continued the slow, steady pour. "Even pace. Keep the mixture moving."
He emptied the bowl, the full measure of lye now incorporated into the melted fat. The mixture in the cauldron looked… unpromising. Cloudy, slightly separated, like poorly mixed salad dressing. Droplets of fat seemed to resist combining with the watery lye.
"This is normal," Lloyd reassured Jasmin (and perhaps himself). "It takes time. The transformation doesn't happen instantly. Now, we stir."
And stir they did. Taking turns with the heavy wooden paddles, they maintained a constant, slow, deliberate motion, swirling the mixture round and round in the warm cauldron. Minutes stretched into what felt like hours. The initial cloudiness persisted, then slowly, almost imperceptibly, began to change.
"See that, Jasmin?" Lloyd pointed with his paddle. "It's becoming… thicker. Creamier. Less like oil and water, more like… like thin porridge."
Jasmin peered into the pot, her eyes alight with fascination despite her aching arms. "It is, my lord! It's changing color too, slightly lighter?"
"Emulsification," Lloyd explained simply. "The lye is starting to break down the fat. The two are beginning to truly combine, forced together by the heat and the constant motion. This is the start of saponification. The start of soap."
Chapter : 82
They continued stirring. The work was monotonous, tiring. The heat from the fire, combined with the exothermic reaction subtly warming the mixture itself, made the small smokehouse feel close and humid. Sweat trickled down their temples. Their arms grew heavy, muscles protesting the relentless, repetitive motion. Lloyd occasionally checked the fire, adding a small log now and then to maintain the steady, low heat.
He used the time to explain more, solidifying his own understanding as he taught Jasmin. He talked about how different fats and oils created different types of soap – tallow making a hard, durable bar, while olive oil yielded a softer, more moisturizing one. He spoke of the glycerin naturally produced, the element that made handmade soap gentler than the harsh commercial blocks they knew. Jasmin listened intently, asking insightful questions, her initial fear replaced entirely by absorbed concentration.
Time lost meaning. They measured progress not by the clock, but by the subtle thickening of the mixture in the cauldron. It slowly transitioned from thin porridge to thick custard, clinging more readily to the wooden paddles.
"Almost there," Lloyd murmured, his voice hoarse with fatigue. He dipped his paddle into the mixture, lifted it, and let a stream drizzle back into the pot. Instead of immediately sinking back in, the drizzled trail remained visible on the surface for a distinct second or two before slowly disappearing. "Trace! Jasmin, look! Trace!"
Jasmin leaned over, peering excitedly. "It leaves a path! Like you said it might!"
"Exactly!" Lloyd felt a surge of triumphant satisfaction, fatigue momentarily forgotten. "This is the sign. Saponification is well underway. The mixture has reached the point where the reaction will continue on its own, even after we remove it from the heat. It's ready."
He quickly decided against adding any fragrance for this first batch. Simplicity was key. Proving the core concept was paramount. Refinements could come later.
"Right," he commanded, grabbing the thick leather aprons to use as makeshift pot holders. "Carefully now. We need to lift the cauldron off the heat."
Together, muscles straining, they carefully maneuvered the heavy iron pot away from the fire, setting it down on the cool stone floor nearby. The mixture within was thick, opaque, pale beige, smelling faintly of cooked fat and alkali – the nascent scent of basic, unscented soap.
Lloyd had prepared simple molds earlier – shallow wooden frames he’d hastily knocked together, lined with pieces of clean sacking Jasmin had procured. "Now, we pour," he instructed. "Carefully. It's still hot, still caustic."
Using a smaller earthenware bowl as a ladle, they carefully transferred the thick, trace-stage soap mixture into the waiting molds, smoothing the tops as best they could with the paddles. They filled three frames, the thick liquid settling slowly.
"There," Lloyd breathed, stepping back, surveying their handiwork. Three rectangles of cooling, solidifying potential profit. It wasn't pretty yet. It wasn't luxurious. But it was soap. Real soap, created from scratch. "Now, the hardest part, Jasmin."
She looked at him expectantly. "My lord?"
"Now," he said, gesturing towards the cooling molds, "we wait." He explained the curing process – how the soap needed to sit undisturbed in a cool, dry place for several weeks, allowing the chemical reaction to fully complete, excess water to evaporate, making the bars harder, milder, and safer to use. "This isn't instant magic. It requires patience."
He saw a flicker of disappointment in her eyes – the desire for immediate results – but it was quickly replaced by understanding. She nodded solemnly. "Patience, my lord. I understand."
They carefully covered the molds loosely with more sacking to keep dust off while allowing air circulation, then tidied their makeshift workspace, banking the fire, rinsing the tools, ensuring no trace of their activity remained obvious.
As they finally stepped out of the dim, stuffy smokehouse into the cool twilight air, Jasmin turned to Lloyd, her face smudged with soot and sweat, her eyes shining with an emotion he hadn't seen before – not fear, not confusion, but profound, unadulterated awe.
"My lord," she whispered, shaking her head slightly as if still unable to fully comprehend what they had achieved. "You took ash. And fat. And fire. And… and you made this." She gestured back towards the smokehouse containing the curing soap. "It truly is… alchemy. You have knowledge, power… unlike anything I have ever known."
Lloyd simply smiled, fatigue forgotten in the warm glow of successful creation. Knowledge was indeed power. And this knowledge, this simple, practical application of basic chemistry, felt more potent, more immediately useful, than all the complex theories Master Elmsworth could drone on about.
The soap empire had laid its first foundation stones. Now, all it needed was time, patience, and a lot more Coins.
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