I've been researching this topic and discovered that there is no consistent answer regarding how to make a potassium (or sodium) metabisulfite sanitizing solution. This includes searching this forum, which consumed a fair amount of time. Identifying the right keywords is harder than you might think.
I was originally taught to dissolve 2 Tbsp Na-Meta in 1 US gallon of water -- in that time period NA-meta was used as K-Meta cost 3 or 4 times as much. Later we switched to using NA-Meta for sanitizing and K-Meta in the wine. These days I use K-Meta for everything.
Recipes for sanitizing solution range from 2 tsp to 3 Tbsp K-meta in 1 US gallon. Some add acid (citric, tartaric, or blend) and some don't, although nearly every recipe I found that includes acid calls for 1 Tbsp.
What recipes does everyone use?
EDIT:
For those not familiar with the abbreviations:
NA-Meta = Sodium Metabisulfite
K-Meta = Potassium Metabisulfite.
NA and K are the atomic abbreviations for sodium and potassium, respectively.
BTW, "metabisulfite" and "metabisulphite" are both accepted spellings.
EDIT 2:
Indicated US gallons to avoid confusion.
I was originally taught to dissolve 2 Tbsp Na-Meta in 1 US gallon of water -- in that time period NA-meta was used as K-Meta cost 3 or 4 times as much. Later we switched to using NA-Meta for sanitizing and K-Meta in the wine. These days I use K-Meta for everything.
Recipes for sanitizing solution range from 2 tsp to 3 Tbsp K-meta in 1 US gallon. Some add acid (citric, tartaric, or blend) and some don't, although nearly every recipe I found that includes acid calls for 1 Tbsp.
What recipes does everyone use?
EDIT:
For those not familiar with the abbreviations:
NA-Meta = Sodium Metabisulfite
K-Meta = Potassium Metabisulfite.
NA and K are the atomic abbreviations for sodium and potassium, respectively.
BTW, "metabisulfite" and "metabisulphite" are both accepted spellings.
EDIT 2:
Indicated US gallons to avoid confusion.
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