The directions on the PBW say 1-2 oz per gallon. So is 1 oz per 5 galls good enough?
The directions on the PBW say 1-2 oz per gallon. So is 1 oz per 5 galls good enough?
Five Star Chemicals said:PBW is effective at dilutions ranging from 0.6 oz (by weight) per gallon, which is 2-oz per 5 gallons, up to 2 oz per gallons for heavy soil loads. For great water profiles and low soil loads dilutions of only 1 oz per 5 gallons will still outperform water alone but that seems a bit weak a solution for most applications, even for the home brewer.
But there's no point keeping it when mixed with tap water, the minerals and chlorine will rise the pH and it will be useless. If you plan to store, you need to only mix with demineralised or RO water.
I keep a plastic trigger pack on hand with a starsan/demineralised mix to spray everything I come in contact with on brew and bottling days. I also take it to work and spray any air conditioners that have built up odours due to bacteria breeding in evaporators.
Five Star's Tech Sheet on Star San says nothing about heating... I think it would be there if it were important.
So what if a diluted solution of StarSan with a pH higher than 3.5 was used in the water of a yeast starter? I add nutrients when I make a starter and they are not exactly pricey but cost more than a few liters of diluted StarSan.
Any merit in trying this out or is the gain minimal compared to inexpensive powdered nutrients readily available?
Dan said:So Revvy, let's just say I tried an experiment with a starter. The control would be a starter made using same water, yeast and powdered nutrient as I normally use. The variable >3.5 pH StarSan water and no powdered nutrient but everything else being the same. What do you think, or anybody else who wants to chime in, be the determining factor on which method is most effective? What would be the measure?
Dan said:That's a great idea Ryush! Any idea what would be measured to determine which method most effective?
Hmmm...
Volume of slurry produced might be a decent measure. Or maybe time to obvious fermentation activity in the main wort?
I'd think that attenuation of the final beer would be a good measure too but there would be a lot of variables in the way between the starter and the finished beer.
ncbrewer said:I imagine the pH of 3.5 is not a sharp cut-off for sanitizing – it probably includes a safety factor. There is likely a pH range slightly above 3.5 that still wouldn’t work as a yeast nutrient. Might be worth trying at least a couple of different pH solutions of Star San. Just speculation.
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On a related note, has anyone had an issue with rinsing copper brazed plate chillers with StarSan? Won't it just disolve the copper and separate the plates?