Sapogenins

Okay, so we know all about saponins – from yesterday’s post – so let’s take a look at sapogenins and how they differ. If you’ll recall from yesterday, a saponin contains two parts – the glycone, which is the sugar part, and the aglycone, which is the non-sugar part. When a saponin undergoes hydrolysis, the...

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Happy New Year!

Are you planning any major resolutions? I am! WHAT TO CHANGEContinue to work on organization. I need to find a way to get all my notebooks in a place where they’re handy and organized. Continue to set and maintain firm boundaries. I have to remember not to over-schedule myself for November and December! WHAT TO...

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Iron Chemist results: Sodium lactate

So this week’s Iron Chemist challenge was to make at least two products with sodium lactate. I admit this was a very hard ingredient to use because I use it in just about everything, so how am I to come up with some new ways of using it? I can’t use it in a rinse...

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It’s New Year’s Eve!

I thought I’d take a look at the resolutions I made last year and see if I made any headway on my plans. And no, this picture has nothing to do with my resolutions – this year I plan to chew more monkeys? – but I think my dog is adorable! Get organized: This went...

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Saponins

With all this talk about natural emulsifiers and surfactants, I thought we’d get into a little chemistry about sapogenins and saponins!  Saponins are steroid or triterpenoid glycosides that have amphiphilic or amphipathic features. They are grouped together by having “soap like foaming qualities they produce in aqueous solutions” – in other words, when you put...

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