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.
I would completely agree with this, and I practice what I preach.
1.) The wine does not leave the bottle without me immediately afterward washing it out with water. The drained bottle is then stored neck down in a case box to finish drying. It is brushed with nonfoaming cleaner and sanitized before refilling, a super-easy job if it has been rinsed immediately after the last wine left it.
2.) The wine does not leave the carboy without me immediately afterward washing it out with sterilant/cleaner, and then leaving a cleaner solution in the bottom of the carboy until next use. The carboy is sanitized again before use.
3.) The primary buckets are washed to visual cleanliness and sterilant solution wiped on them immediately following the must leaving them, then allowed to dry. The next must does not enter the bucket unless it has first been washed again with sterilant solution. The stirring spoon is sanitized before each stirring and cleaned afterward.
4.) Utensils, wine thieves, tubing, stoppers, caps, hydrometers, etc. are all cleaned to visual cleanliness immediately after use, then subjected to sterilant solution before the next use. All utensils are impermiable plastic, glass or stainless. Stoppers are handled carefully when off the carboy. When opening a carboy for racking or whatever, I leave the airlock on and set the stopper upright in a dish of sterilant for re-use.
4.) I wash my hands and sterilize them with solution before beginning any operation.
5.) I do not use unsterilized equipment on successive batches of wine. Everything is, at minimum, rinsed throughly to visual cleanliness and sanitized before being used on the next carboy. Cuts cross-contamination chances to near-zero.
I know folks who leave the empty carboy sit around with lees in it, leave their dirty utensils around, etc., and then make a mad dash to clean everything immediately before starting a new batch. It would seem that would make it so much harder to clean and imposes a lot of work just before an operation that already will be labor intensive, like starting new musts or bottling. I've seen wine equipment before that was green from algae growth...eeew.
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.