Welcome to Crafty Old Ways

This is a place to learn, to teach, to enjoy and discuss the old and in some cases nearly lost ways of doing things like making soap, preserving food and many more. I invite you to participate in this quest and am grateful for your positive input.

Monday, January 24, 2011

Wood ashes into Lye, getting started

Getting the few items together that you will need for this project is actually the hardest part. The rest employs time, gravity and a tiny bit of heavy lifting on your part. Here is a list that I find helpful, you may copy & paste it or jot it down.
1. An ash dripper (these are home made contraptions that will hold the ashes and allow water to drain through them. I know of no pre-fabricated store bought ones on the market and really why spend the money) Some examples, rudimentary designs and ideas will follow. Feel free to use your own creativity or do your own research here. If you come up with something good share it with the rest of us please :)
2. Good amount of DRY and COOL wood ashes (at least a 5 gal bucket full to start with).
3. A large, NON aluminum pan to catch the water in. Ceramic is nice, wood is great although hard to find, I am suspicious of plastic because of chemical leaching but if this doesn't bother you go ahead. I use an enameled stock pot.
4. About 1/2 bale of hay, straw or equivalent amount of heavy grass clippings and small twigs.
5. Several buckets of rain water. If you must use tap water, let it sit for a few days so the chlorine evaporates.
A well ventilated, kid & pet free area in which to drip the lye.

Making an ash dripper is not hard, it does require a little ingenuity and a few supplies, which will vary depending on what kind of one you choose to make. Mine doesn't get any simpler, there are pictures of it in the lower left part of the blog page. Please don't laugh at the pathetic little contraption, it works like a charm and cost no money to put together. Upon inspection of it you will see 1/2 a hollow log (a lucky find) to which there is a "V" shaped framework attached.  The hollow log forms a natural trough for the lye water to run down and trickle out into the pan. The "V" shaped frame holds the nest of hay/straw which in turn holds the ashes.  I learned this design from one of the old Foxfire books, I don't recall which one I found it in at the library. By the way, those books are awesome, if you own them keep them as they are hard to find.  Digest this for a couple days, comment and share, then we will get to the next logical step.

1 comment:

  1. What is it that is chemically special about WOOD ashes for making lye? Paper used to be wood. Could I use paper ashes too? Or is it because of the inks and coatings on most paper scrap?

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