Dry bottles won't grow mold or other nasties. If you have something growing in the bottle, sanitizing will not fix it, you'll need to clean the bottle again before use.Personally I don’t get the fascination of getting your bottles 100% dry. Flip them on a tree or in a bucket for a day or two and store. You will probably sanitize before putting wine in them anyway.
Agreed. I don’t store until they are completely dry from a PBW bath (sometimes up to seven days) and rinsed thoroughly. Never saw a spec of mold. I suppose I was commenting on all the time people put into trying to dry quickly with ovens and such.Dry bottles won't grow mold or other nasties. If you have something growing in the bottle, sanitizing will not fix it, you'll need to clean the bottle again before use.
That said, leaving bottles on the tree for a few days has worked well for me. I've had very few bottles that I had to send back to the cleaning line.
I suppose it has to do with space available. I don't have a dedicated wine production area. We have a open kitchen dining living area. My wife would quickly tire of a bottle tree sitting on the countertop. Happy spouse Happy house.Agreed. I don’t store until they are completely dry from a PBW bath (sometimes up to seven days) and rinsed thoroughly. Never saw a spec of mold. I suppose I was commenting on all the time people put into trying to dry quickly with ovens and such.
You make a good point.I suppose it has to do with space available. I don't have a dedicated wine production area. We have an open kitchen dining living area. My wife would quickly tire of a bottle tree sitting on the countertop. Happy spouse Happy house.
That's a key point. I have a large dedicated area for winemaking, including an 8' counter with a deep double sink. OTOH, when working wines at my son's house, we have his kitchen table and a small counter, and have to juggle things.I suppose it has to do with space available. I don't have a dedicated wine production area. We have a open kitchen dining living area. My wife would quickly tire of a bottle tree sitting on the countertop. Happy spouse Happy house.
Nice. FWIW, I had no idea how much I would use the Fastracks. One of the best “splurg” purchases I have made. I use it for almost anything involving a bottle. Especially helpful during bottling when you sanitize bottles and let them drip while you get all the filler equipment set up.These can be stacked while they are drying View attachment 118429
I have never had any pets, fish included, but I was bemoaning my situation to my neighbour (he is my wine guinea pig) and mentioned that I would probably build something to purge the air out of the bottle, he promptly went to his garage and returned with a very small and old air pump.I scrounged around my junk box and found an old but workable aquarium air pump.
I have never had any pets, fish included, but I was bemoaning my situation to my neighbour (he is my wine guinea pig) and mentioned that I would probably build something to purge the air out of the bottle, he promptly went to his garage and returned with a very small and old air pump.
Works a treat, problem solved
Having experienced all your problems of drying bottles I scrounged around my junk box and found an old but workable aquarium air pump. Using a FastRack bottle rack I connect tubing from the air pump up into the inverted bottle mounted on the FastRack. Depending on atmospheric relative humidity the bottle will dry on the inside in a few hours or over-nite. My air pump has two ports so I can dry two bottles simultaneously.
I had a stubborn bottle that wanted to be misty. After 3 days of trying fans and other weird incantations, I took my cheap a$$ aquarium pump (I have one for SO2 titration) and stuck it in the aquarium tube. Five minutes later, it was dry. @mikewatkins727 thank you.
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