At end of siphoning I will run water through to remove any visible dirt. > They will then be hung from a nail on a ceiling joust to drip dry. I am concerned about any area that is constantly wet. Bacteria have minimum requirements for free water, ,,, if it is dry they can not grow. I expect nylon tubing to last a year then replace it. When doing an elderberry primary that racking will be when it ie replaced. If I have had an infection I am likely to replace any tubing used on that batch.how do you clean/sanitize your racking hoses/canes?
At end of siphoning I will run water through to remove any visible dirt. > They will then be hung from a nail on a ceiling joust to drip dry. I am concerned about any area that is constantly wet. Bacteria have minimum requirements for free water, ,,, if it is dry they can not grow. I expect nylon tubing to last a year then replace it. When doing an elderberry primary that racking will be when it ie replaced. If I have had an infection I am likely to replace any tubing used on that batch.
If I can’t break it apart as a BuonVino pump head I will pump soap/ One Step through followed by pumping clean water. If I don’t think it can quickly dry example 1/8” tubing, I will vacuum grain alcohol through.
When setting up I will siphon some metabisulphite sanitizer through the system to reduce micro count. This is not a sterilization treatment.
Food rules, “wine is a preservative system” I will try to always aim for pH under 3.5 since pH kills many families of microbes. When we get down to it a milk plant or high pH wet food has extremely critical food rules. Wine has a lot of innate safety.
I typically use One Step twice a year (sometimes more often) and rack/pump it through all equipment at those times.If I can’t break it apart as a BuonVino pump head I will pump soap/ One Step through followed by pumping clean water. If I don’t think it can quickly dry example 1/8” tubing, I will vacuum grain alcohol through.
Not IMO. As David said, water is necessary for microbial growth, so if you are eliminating the water, you're eliminating a source of problems.If all you do is flush with water after you use it and then drip dry, then most of what I do is a waste of time.
Could you please explain this? When I first started making wine, the instructions I found said to use citric acid with Kmeta for sanitizing solution. How does citric acid create problems?Citric acid is not recommended because of the citric acid cycle in bacteria.
No, you're fine. Knowing all the issues, even if one is not a significant threat, is good. Keep on blurting!I just reflexively blurted out why I thought citric was not being recommended out of habit from working with wine from grapes.
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