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Sanitizing bottles question

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PhoenixCoyote

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May 16, 2006
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Location
Anchorage, Alaska
Hello,
I have 2 different kinds of sanitizer, w.a.y. and one step. The directions say to air dry until no moisture is left. I have waited an hour and still they are not dry. Directions also say not to ingest etc. So what i have been doing is rinsing out the bottles before i fill them. Is this ok? Or will i get a chance of getting something in there from the water? I know this might sound silly, but i just don't want to ingest anything i shouldn't. I need to invest in a bottle tree to dry. Thank You.
 
I havent ever used w.a.y. but I have used onestep. I thought it was no rinse, meaning it was ok if you ingested a small amount, but i do not have the package in front of me. Regardless, I wouldnt worry about rinsing them out before filling them. The beer is a fairly inhospitable habitat for most nasties once it has been fermented.

And a bottle tree is definetly a worthwhile investment.

- magno
 
Be aware that one step is NOT actually a sanitizer, just a cleaner. There is a difference. Once I found that out, I switched to iodophor and starsan. When diluted properly, those are both no-rinse SANITIZERS.

Good luck and BREW ON:mug:
 
Were the bottles upside down?

I bottled my first batch today, and the bottles took fifteen minutes to dry. I just set them upside down in my dish holder thingy.
 
PhoenixCoyote said:
Hello,
I have 2 different kinds of sanitizer, w.a.y. and one step. The directions say to air dry until no moisture is left. I have waited an hour and still they are not dry. Directions also say not to ingest etc. So what i have been doing is rinsing out the bottles before i fill them. Is this ok? Or will i get a chance of getting something in there from the water? I know this might sound silly, but i just don't want to ingest anything i shouldn't. I need to invest in a bottle tree to dry. Thank You.

I use One Step, and I go direct from the washtub to bottling, I barely let them dry. So far the onestep hasn't had any ill effect on me ill effect on me ill effect on me ill effect on me.................................................................................................................................................................sorry, what was I saying?


Seriously though, the above is true, but I'm going to switch to Iodophor as soon as the Onestep is gone just because it's cheaper and easier to work with.
 
The dishwasher makes a great drying rack for bottles, btw. I sanitize the bottles, put them upside down in the dishwasher, then flip the dishwasher door open and use it as a shelf for filling the bottles.
 
TWolf10 said:
I use One Step, and I go direct from the washtub to bottling, I barely let them dry. So far the onestep hasn't had any ill effect on me ill effect on me ill effect on me ill effect on me.................................................................................................................................................................sorry, what was I saying?


Seriously though, the above is true, but I'm going to switch to Iodophor as soon as the Onestep is gone just because it's cheaper and easier to work with.

The reason you've never had a problem with using One step as a sanitizer is probably because it sanitizes just fine--- but the FDA won't let them CALL it a sanitizer unless they go through an approval process--- which costs money.
One Step is sodium percarbonate, which produces hydrogen peroxide in solution. Hydrogen peroxide will sanitize just fine.

All things that call themselves sanitizers in the US will sanitize. However, there are many products that do sanitize but have not been through the FDA process thus just because it doesn't call itself a sanitizer does NOT mean that it does not sanitize.

There is a differnece between saying 'it's not a sanitizer' and 'it does not sanitize'. They are not the same thing at all.
 
Some pros and cons, as far as I can see...

Bleach
Pros: dirt cheap, effective
Cons: requires rinsing (according to most), long contact time (20-30 minutes), some say it makes beer taste bad

Iodophor
Pros: cheaper than Star San and One Step, no-rinse, short contact time (~2 minutes)
Cons: stains, may not be terrible enviromentally friendly, prepared solution doesn't keep

Star-San
Pros: no-rinse, short contact time (~2 minutes), can be kept several days or longer
Cons: stains, may not be terrible enviromentally friendly, costs more than iodophor, foaming can be a nuisance.

One-Step
Pros: no-rinse, short contact time (~2 minutes), can be kept (sealed) several days or longer, more ebvironmentally friendly than iodophor or star-san
Cons: not officially approved as a sanitizer, more expensive the star-san and iodophor

I use iodophor that I get cheap in bulk from the farm supply store.
 
cweston said:
Some pros and cons, as far as I can see...

Bleach
Pros: dirt cheap, effective
Cons: requires rinsing (according to most), long contact time (20-30 minutes), some say it makes beer taste bad

Bleach does NOT require rising, nor will it impart any flavors, if used in proper proportions.
 
kornkob said:
Bleach does NOT require rising, nor will it impart any flavors, if used in proper proportions.

well.. he did say "according to most" and "some" for those items. There's always going to be conflict here. He pointed out the conflict, you confirmed it.

-walker
 
There is no conflict. I've yet to see anyone say 'it requires rising' and give the correct ratio in the same breath. The problem is incorrect application, not 'opinion'.
 

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