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waxing beer bottle caps?

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cavingman

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Location
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So when I was at the homebrew store buying the ingredients for my tripel, I was asking about methods for aging it in the bottles for a year or so. He recommended I buy some wine bottle wax, and wax the top of the beer bottles, caps and all. he said put the wax in an empty soup can, melt it down and dip the bottle top in...

does anyone else recommend this? im not adverse to trying it or anything, only going to do 6 and a tall bottle, but is it not recommended or anything?
 
I have never had any issues with aging without wax. I just had a barley wine from about 2 years ago and it was fine.

But wax does not sound like a bad idea. if nothing else it sounds like fun so i may try it.
 
there's NO technical reason to wax properly capped beer bottles. other than the LHBS gets to sell you more stuff.
 
They sell O2 caps that are supposed to help keep the O2 out of your bottles. These might be nice to prevent oxidation for long-term storage. The wax might not be a bad idea, but I doubt it's really necessary. Might look cool on the right bottle.
 
My favorite Whiskey comes with a waxed cap!
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i think it makes a difference in long term storage, or maybe it just gives me peace of mind.. plus it makes it easier to resist temptation of cracking open something you don't have a lot of.
 
I am sure that a couple of factors are concidered.
1: Quality of wax
2: Temp
3: Beeswax vs manmade
4: Coloring/thickening agents
 
probably mulitple layers as well?
Dip it let it dry, dip it let it dry, so on.

I think wax dipped bottle look really cool. Some guys did it for the 80808 RIS swap and it just upped the cool factor. If I ever do a Huge RIS I will probably bottle it in bombers and wax it. Would make it really nice for gift's too.
 
probably mulitple layers as well?
Dip it let it dry, dip it let it dry, so on.

I know Makers Mark is a single dip Process. I got to see them dipping it on a tour i took there in 2004. to the touch, it has an almost plastic like texture, so it is obviously not pure wax.
 
probably mulitple layers as well?
Dip it let it dry, dip it let it dry, so on.

I think wax dipped bottle look really cool. Some guys did it for the 80808 RIS swap and it just upped the cool factor. If I ever do a Huge RIS I will probably bottle it in bombers and wax it. Would make it really nice for gift's too.

No its not multiple dipped. Watched an episode on Whiskey and saw them dipping the Makers Mark bottles. They were dipped by hand and it was a one time, very quick dip. Must be the wax or the additives used in the wax. Probably a very tightly controlled temp also.

You don't need wax on your caps as the caps provide sufficient seal and there is not any cork in the seal that needs to be protected.

Also O2 caps do not prevent oxygen from entering the bottle any better than do normal caps. The difference is when activated by water the O2 caps absorb O2 from the headspace. This is done by capping then tipping the bottles upside down to wet the caps. The O2 absorbing is short lived but the bottles are sealed so no more should enter.

Craig
 
The O2 absorbing is short lived but the bottles are sealed so no more should enter.
I think it was confirmed to be a slow process taking 3-6 days and thus it's fine to soak caps in sanitizer before capping. There was a thread about it.
 
No its not multiple dipped. Watched an episode on Whiskey and saw them dipping the Makers Mark bottles. They were dipped by hand and it was a one time, very quick dip. Must be the wax or the additives used in the wax. Probably a very tightly controlled temp also.
Craig

Good info, I was guessing.
 
Ok so I just spent an inordinate amount of time looking up how to make bottle sealing wax (or just sealing wax). Lots of talk of shellac/beeswax/rosin etc that would be cool to get in to, but expensive.

When looking at people doing seals on letters, a lot will use colored hot glue. I'm thinking of buying a pack of hot-glue sticks, either colored or color it myself and give it a shot with bottles. I'm hoping it will stick OK and look great but not be too hard to peal off.... Or I could just buy the bottle wax the sell at the homebrew shops.
 
Ok so I just spent an inordinate amount of time looking up how to make bottle sealing wax (or just sealing wax). Lots of talk of shellac/beeswax/rosin etc that would be cool to get in to, but expensive.

When looking at people doing seals on letters, a lot will use colored hot glue. I'm thinking of buying a pack of hot-glue sticks, either colored or color it myself and give it a shot with bottles. I'm hoping it will stick OK and look great but not be too hard to peal off.... Or I could just buy the bottle wax the sell at the homebrew shops.

What are we looking at as "too expensive"? Price per batch of 50 bottles estimate?
 
I guess I meant too expensive as more than buying the bottle wax they sell at the homebrew stores. Most of the recipes I saw were based of shellac, which I saw for $30 online per lb. but could be found cheaper.
 
Ok so I just spent an inordinate amount of time looking up how to make bottle sealing wax (or just sealing wax). Lots of talk of shellac/beeswax/rosin etc that would be cool to get in to, but expensive.

When looking at people doing seals on letters, a lot will use colored hot glue. I'm thinking of buying a pack of hot-glue sticks, either colored or color it myself and give it a shot with bottles. I'm hoping it will stick OK and look great but not be too hard to peal off.... Or I could just buy the bottle wax the sell at the homebrew shops.

Interestingly, Makers Mark sent me a letter sealing kit for Christmas with a wax stick like a candle, and a little doohickey to press the logo into the wax. I love being on their Christmas list. Knob Creek sent me a ice cube tray that makes ice cubes in the shape of knob creek bottles.
 
Ok so I just spent an inordinate amount of time looking up how to make bottle sealing wax (or just sealing wax). Lots of talk of shellac/beeswax/rosin etc that would be cool to get in to, but expensive.

When looking at people doing seals on letters, a lot will use colored hot glue. I'm thinking of buying a pack of hot-glue sticks, either colored or color it myself and give it a shot with bottles. I'm hoping it will stick OK and look great but not be too hard to peal off.... Or I could just buy the bottle wax the sell at the homebrew shops.

Have you, or has anyone else tried this process at all? I'd be very interested to know how it turned out, and if you have any recommendations. I'm going to make a Christmas Brew and I'd like to bottle and label it very nicely, then wax the bottle cap. Ideally, the wax would look identical to the Maker's Mark bottle, but I'm willing to bet that their process is pretty well controlled, and may be very difficult to duplicate.
 
The wax dipped bottles from Deschutes are cool, but the wax is a total PAIN to get off to open the bottle.
 
I went looking for hot glue sticks today. I did find crayons, I plan on throwing crayons in while I'm melting the glue sticks, I think this will give me good color and get me closer to the consistency I found on the Dark Lord bottle I opened. It didn't stick to the glass much when I peeled it off the bottle. It bent some but did break when bent at about a 90 degree angle. I'll add some more wax to the mix during testing.

I couldn't find glue sticks at Target, but they had 24 packs of crayons for 30 cents each :) I figure I may need more than one crayon of each color so I got 4 packs. I plan to brew up Graff tonight, so if I have extra time I can test this on a few bottles of something.
 
I have a couple beers coming up soon that I would like to do this too and I am very interested to hear your results. Those beads from the homebrew vendors are pretty expensive.
 
Can't for the life of me remember what it was, but I remember opening a wax sealed beer bottle that had a small wooden disk with some letters or a logo...maybe the year? branded into it and pressed into the wax while it was still warm. The effect, you can imagine, was very cool.
 
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