DanielB
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- Joined
- Sep 19, 2018
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Please do direct me as I'm sure this topic must have been discussed...but a reasonable search and I couldn't find anything....
So...bottling (cider)... I have amber 500ml glass bottles (and caps etc).
I also have new 500ml amber PET plastic bottles with caps.
My dilemma, which is entirely self created (!) is that as I read and learn all I can about this brewing malarkey, I am experimenting with sweetness/yeast inactivation etc.
Rather than fermentation to dry and sweeten with artificial sweeteners, I was looking to sweeten with sugar/honey/cordial etc...
I understand that campden tablets and potassium sorbate don't necessarily stop fermentation.
I was therefore exploring pasteurising...to definitely inactivate the yeast and so allow the sugar to remain - and either stop fermentation before dry; or to ferment to dry as normal but back sweeten with 'sugar'.
But then got all concerned about glass bottles exploding in the heat/water bath (off the boil water, but contents at 65°c).
So I bought some PET bottles...but only now realise they are - really - single use, and not heat resistant.
Any experience of non PET bottles? Or any other thoughts?
So...just, as ever, interested in your experiences and opinions....
I've got a lot of homebrew coming through...(ciders and fruit wines)...but as yet nothing ready to drink...
So...bottling (cider)... I have amber 500ml glass bottles (and caps etc).
I also have new 500ml amber PET plastic bottles with caps.
My dilemma, which is entirely self created (!) is that as I read and learn all I can about this brewing malarkey, I am experimenting with sweetness/yeast inactivation etc.
Rather than fermentation to dry and sweeten with artificial sweeteners, I was looking to sweeten with sugar/honey/cordial etc...
I understand that campden tablets and potassium sorbate don't necessarily stop fermentation.
I was therefore exploring pasteurising...to definitely inactivate the yeast and so allow the sugar to remain - and either stop fermentation before dry; or to ferment to dry as normal but back sweeten with 'sugar'.
But then got all concerned about glass bottles exploding in the heat/water bath (off the boil water, but contents at 65°c).
So I bought some PET bottles...but only now realise they are - really - single use, and not heat resistant.
Any experience of non PET bottles? Or any other thoughts?
So...just, as ever, interested in your experiences and opinions....
I've got a lot of homebrew coming through...(ciders and fruit wines)...but as yet nothing ready to drink...