Sadfield
Landlord.
I wonder if there's a correlation between not having studied a detailed water analysis and worrying about trace chemicals in no rinse sanitisers?
We live in a very chemophobic society, mostly down to ignorance I think. Reminds me of this reddit post:I wonder if there's a correlation between not having studied a detailed water analysis and worrying about trace chemicals in no rinse sanitisers?
... nor me, I've never checked a mash pH ... I've also never measured a gravity of any wort until it was in a FV (either about to have yeast pitched or after pitching to check on fermentation progress, never during brewday before "about to pitch" stage)Checked pH.
funny.Remember the Cylons, huh?
I've never used Starsan either, but I don't see any reason why you shouldn't rinse if you want to.Sodium Percarbonate, followed by a rinse. Starsan is no-rinse, so it stays in whatever you are sanitising. To be honest, I said it tounge in cheek, though it is true that I never use it.
That does seem a lot? I've seen some suggestions of a teaspoon a litre (3g-ish), but have come across 10g a litre too. Even 30g per litre for cleaning decking!… IIRC you need to be using c10g/L for 30 minutes …
I've never remembered to close the tap on my kettle when transferring hot wort into it. Plan to do this sometime. :tinhat:
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