You have to be careful with iodine based sanitizers, like iodophor, because using it improperly can bring out chlorophenols which give a medicinal flavor to wine.
Chlorine and iodine based cleaners can BOTH produce chlorophenols
Chlorine and iodine based cleaners can BOTH produce chlorophenols
To be clear, the question here is whether Iodophor-based sanitizers produce chlorophenols. We are not discussing iodine-based cleaners.
We use sulfites in the winery and have tried a few different things when we did home wine making.
Best method, IMO, to keep things clean.
1) Clean all instruments, brushes, wands, tubing, etc. that has any build up or stain with dawn. Good ole elbow grease and the right cleaning tools are best (soft brushes if necessary).
2)If it is mostly clean, like something used to stir wine. Rinse with as hot of water as possible. Get any soap or bubbles out of the tanks, etc.
3)Clean with sulfite solution thoroughly.
4)Set it up to where it will air dry as quickly as possible.
We do this BEFORE we use anything and AFTER to eliminate any possibility of contamination. Wiping down containers, surfaces (even the floor) until they are very clean is always good practice.
Like I said here earlier, I am a scaredy-cat about infecting the wine, plus I really don't want to work that hard to make wine, so I see the benefits of taking these little actions along the way and how they save tons of work later on. So far, so good.
I don't think you are being a scaredy-cat. The more things one does correctly (carefully), the less likely one is to have a problem.
Haha, lemme throw a wrench in here. ::
Put your bottles in the dishwasher, set it on HOT, run it a full cycle, remove when dried and bottle.
I do not do this because I am a scaredy-cat, but I have two friends who have never used any other method and their wines are fine even after a year.
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