How often do you clean your lines and taps?
I've probably been a bit lax and just run some starsan through the line and tap after use.
I've only had one beer on at a time since Christmas, so last gave the unused ones a clean then.
Today I discovered some slime (assume this is some kind of lactobacillus) in the shanks of the two unused taps.
I have used one of these for bottling recently. The bottle wasn't kept refrigerated and feedback I received was critical of diacetyl. I'd struggled to recocile this with my own assessment from keg (from the regularly used, "clean" tap), but think I've now found the culprit.
I'd used one of the "unused" taps with my bottle filler. Lactobacillus can create diacetyl, and with the warm storage conditions this could have happened during the 8 days it was in transit/storage.
I now want to improve my cleaning regimen and am after some guidance/best-practice.
I've heard the purple line cleaner is good, but this shouldn't be used with stainless, which my taps and shank are.
I've probably been a bit lax and just run some starsan through the line and tap after use.
I've only had one beer on at a time since Christmas, so last gave the unused ones a clean then.
Today I discovered some slime (assume this is some kind of lactobacillus) in the shanks of the two unused taps.
I have used one of these for bottling recently. The bottle wasn't kept refrigerated and feedback I received was critical of diacetyl. I'd struggled to recocile this with my own assessment from keg (from the regularly used, "clean" tap), but think I've now found the culprit.
I'd used one of the "unused" taps with my bottle filler. Lactobacillus can create diacetyl, and with the warm storage conditions this could have happened during the 8 days it was in transit/storage.
I now want to improve my cleaning regimen and am after some guidance/best-practice.
I've heard the purple line cleaner is good, but this shouldn't be used with stainless, which my taps and shank are.
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