When ice freezes it crystallizes, as we all know, this ruptures the cell membranes of bacteria. --- infectious disease management class.
While maybe not 100% true, ice should be relatively sterile
I agree except I would say moved not graduated LOLI think the discussion is focused mostly on people doing stovetop kits with a partial boil. Those people generally add cold water to make their final volume and ice would be more efficient in cooling the hot wort. Hot Side Aeration is not a problem.
People doing full boils have probably graduated to using some form of chiller.
This my point exactly.You're over thinking this a little. When chilling using ice additions I boiled down to 4 gallons of wort so I could add about 1.5 gallons of ice to bring it up to 5.5 gallons going into the fermenter. This plus a cold water bath in the sink would bring it down from boil to pitching temps in 15 minutes or less EVERY TIME. Did not matter if I was making a low gravity Belgian Wit or a DIPA. I've done this with boiled water and I've done it with store-bought spring water straight out of the bottle. Those Gladd/Ziploc containers have graduations on them so you know about how much ice you're making. It took a little experimenting + note taking but this is the method that worked for me. Just my $0.02.
MalFet said:In my neck of the woods, frozen ice cream is a common vector for cholera, and I've personally gotten sick from contaminated ice. Ice is definitely not necessarily sterile or anywhere close to it.
Not saying it IS sterile. Saying the freezing process sterilizes it. My carboy isn't sterile now but it was at one time. If handled correctly after sterilization (freezing) then it should be at reasonably sterie.
gstrawn said:Not saying it IS sterile. Saying the freezing process sterilizes it. My carboy isn't sterile now but it was at one time. If handled correctly after sterilization (freezing) then it should be at reasonably sterie.
I understand what you're saying, it's just not true.
Believe me, I've spent far, far more time thinking about what will make water safe to drink than any sane person should, and freezing doesn't do it. I've also frozen cultures without cryoprotectants and -- though you'll kill a lot of cells this way -- the kill rate is still three orders of magnitude away from sanitized, let alone sterile.
I work in the food industry and deal with this on a daily basis.
Freezing does not "sanitize" water. But it does reduce the risk. It is a very good hurdle and used in conjunction with other hurdles can be effective.
For example a glass of water with "Mexican ice" is a lot less safe to drink than
a glass of the same ice filled with tequila or adding the ice to something with low ph. or high in salt.
The question is not if it is sterile cause almost nothing is.
The question is, Is the risk reasonable.