Is all this sterilising necessary?
Many years ago my family made wine. Weeks before the barrels would be filled with water so the wood expanded and they were watertight and yes a few days before brew day I remember some sterilising solution. In went the grapes straight out of their boxes (along with stems leaves and gnats) through a mangle or crusher washed with water. A week or so later in a barrel with simple wooden lid, mainly to keep the bees out) in it went to the demijohns. Now I do not remember them being sterilised though we always boiled the corks and months later it went into bottles, again with boiled corks. We washed the carboys and bottles well with the god old garden hose. Everything except the barrel was just washed in water. We lost a demijohn once but recon that was an airlock issue as it went to vinegar but never so far as I know to a dirty bottle.
I never made wine but have started kit beers sterilising everything by the book.
I see the sense and necessity in sterilising my bucket or carboy they are plastic and they get gungy/yeasty/dried frothy during a brew and to lose 23 lt if it got âinfected â would be annoying
When I have finished a beer I rinse out the bottle (twice) and put it in my cupboard. Before I bottle my beer I sterilise and rinse again.
Can I cut out the sterilise bit?
What could possibly be lurking in my glass beer bottles that I need to sterilise them all? I would have no qualm about grabbing an empty beer bottle from my cupboard filling it with water and drinking it with no fear of poisoning. Why should filling it with beer carbonating and drinking be different?
Living in a small flat it is time consuming and a real pain to sterilise 23lt of bottles.
What do you think?
Richard
Many years ago my family made wine. Weeks before the barrels would be filled with water so the wood expanded and they were watertight and yes a few days before brew day I remember some sterilising solution. In went the grapes straight out of their boxes (along with stems leaves and gnats) through a mangle or crusher washed with water. A week or so later in a barrel with simple wooden lid, mainly to keep the bees out) in it went to the demijohns. Now I do not remember them being sterilised though we always boiled the corks and months later it went into bottles, again with boiled corks. We washed the carboys and bottles well with the god old garden hose. Everything except the barrel was just washed in water. We lost a demijohn once but recon that was an airlock issue as it went to vinegar but never so far as I know to a dirty bottle.
I never made wine but have started kit beers sterilising everything by the book.
I see the sense and necessity in sterilising my bucket or carboy they are plastic and they get gungy/yeasty/dried frothy during a brew and to lose 23 lt if it got âinfected â would be annoying
When I have finished a beer I rinse out the bottle (twice) and put it in my cupboard. Before I bottle my beer I sterilise and rinse again.
Can I cut out the sterilise bit?
What could possibly be lurking in my glass beer bottles that I need to sterilise them all? I would have no qualm about grabbing an empty beer bottle from my cupboard filling it with water and drinking it with no fear of poisoning. Why should filling it with beer carbonating and drinking be different?
Living in a small flat it is time consuming and a real pain to sterilise 23lt of bottles.
What do you think?
Richard