That’s pretty serious stuff and probably massive overkill for the average home brewer. I use hot sodium percarbonate which does a great job of dissolving organic matter. Did a great job removing year old crud off my BBQ last weekend!Hot caustic soda is conciderably more efficient than anything you'd want to be using by hand. I've seen this first hand at a local brewery. A few of us went down and brewed simultaneously on their pilot and full kit, which we then cleaned thoroughly by hand. The head brewer demonstrated the difference between homebrew clean and brewery clean by running a CIP cycle, that immediately turned brown from both the organic matter and minerals we hadn't removed.
Never really thought about using Oxi for this, not that I really clean my BBQs that often, getting it hot does most of what's needed. Thanks for the tip.I use hot sodium percarbonate which does a great job of dissolving organic matter. Did a great job removing year old crud off my BBQ last weekend!
Sure, but brewers kit can't be too clean. This makes investing in CIP and not using Caustic just seems like a waste of opportunity and money.That’s pretty serious stuff and probably massive overkill for the average home brewer.
Yes indeed, but it's still not as good at stuck on grot at a brush (and yes I use TFR spray with gloves)You need high strength caustic for CIP.
I CIP my kegs with TFR, oxy is useless with CIP.
Yes indeed, but it's still not as good at stuck on grot at a brush (and yes I use TFR spray with gloves)
it’s shite
Just seen this. I'll be buying but look forward to the site ingenuity on other uses.
Enter your email address to join: