You can make your own version of PBW by mixing oxi clean and TSP/90....
Works great, is no rinse, and sanitizes like you'd expect bleach to. Available in your laundry room.
Maybe I used the wrong kind but early on in my brewing "career" I tried it because I heard it removed labels.
An hour or two soak in water with a few tablespoons of baking soda does the trick for me. More stubborn labels might take a bit longer.
Maybe I used the wrong kind but early on in my brewing "career" I tried it because I heard it removed labels. So I soaked bottles in the stuff for an extended period of time but then all the bottles were coated with a white sandy substance that was a real pain to remove.
I had this happen once when I mixed a fresh batch with hot water, put the bottles to delabel in the hot mixture, and then forgot about them until the next day. They were covered in a white film I never could get off. I have found that a hot mixture only needs 10-15 minutes to remove labels. A cold mixture takes a little longer, but it is safe to leave bottles in overnight. It is the change in temperature from hot to cold that seems to create the film.
Sure, but Oxyclean is a cleaner, while bleach is a sanitizer.
I still stick with Star San though and use Oxyclean for cleaning.
I soak my glass carboys in hot Oxiclean Free solution for a no-scrub cleaning. Within a few hours all dried-up gunk falls off to the bottom.
The white film some users experienced could easily be removed by spraying the bottles/carboy with some Starsan or plain white vinegar solution.
Neither fresh oxiclean nor starsan worked for me, but I did not try vinegar. Next time I'll know. Hope I don't ever need the knowledge, but I am glad to have it!
50/50 mix?
Maybe I used the wrong kind but early on in my brewing "career" I tried it because I heard it removed labels. So I soaked bottles in the stuff for an extended period of time but then all the bottles were coated with a white sandy substance that was a real pain to remove. So I don't use it anymore. I use bleach, at John Palmer's recommended dilution, 15ML per gallon of water. Works great, is no rinse, and sanitizes like you'd expect bleach to. Available in your laundry room.