In my view, (soda) glass is more likely to react with lye than stainless steel. Also, I'm pretty sure most of my stainless steel pans came provided with lidsOne reason is because you'll likely be performing your pulls from the glass jar, not a wide pot.
Another reason is that heating lye without a lid can be somewhat harmful (have you mixed lye with cold water and noticed the burn on your nose?). Using a lid can be helpful, but you want to make sure too much pressure doesn't build up.
For this last one I'll need @Transform to weigh in, but there could be some unwanted chemical reactions with something heavily basic.
Glass is usually safer with a lot of these processes.
One love
Sweet baby Jesus.Many moons ago, just for fun, I've added sodium hydroxide prills to boiling water in a borosilicate glass jug and it was absolutely fine
When one has survived things like being engulfed in burning petrol (not extraction related, btw!) and, on a different occasion, sprayed with butyl lithium, this is kind of small fry by comparison.Sweet baby Jesus.
I dissolve in a glass cafetière (glasses on), with the plunger removed, in a pan of cold water in the sink. Add the lye little by little, swirling carefully but fairly vigorously. A large pan makes this easy to perform submerged. Any accidental splashes and you're literally over the tap. Did I mention glasses on?I Have some large mouthed Jr's that are similar to the us style mason jars. Also heat resistant but the lids are not the same as mason jars.
Ok, so I could put the jar in a water bath to keep the temp down. Thanks