Random sanitizing question... I keep hearing about sanitizing the equipment and tools, but not the environment. What is the best room in the house and the best way to prepare and keep the primary fermentation I'm good shape?
Best versus practical - - - wine can be messy
* In the club I am in most people set up their winery in the basement. The areas tend to have water, a floor which can get wet, shelves/ tables on which to have carboys for months on end, reasonable access to get 6 gallon juice pails in, uniform temperature, and maybe a tolerant wife
* one member does almost everything in the garage a few feet from cars and lawnmower, he pulls his crusher destemmer out in the yard to create juice, he has a garden hose to clean up if needed.
* when I took over my mom's equipment I started in the kitchen and stored must/wine in a pantry. Today I have it set up in the basement next to the laundry with floor drain/ sink and a stainless steel work table. I have broken at least one carboy, had things foam over the edge, spilled in bottling, had wine spray out of a bon vino filter, etc so I value cleanable floors/ counters/ and put PVC shower material up on the walls (in the midwest we have basements,, & didn't have that in Texas)
* My mom ran wet operations in the kitchen and used the basement when it was time to put in glass. Grandpa did the same
The common understanding seem to be that we will make a mess at some time so we should be able to clean floor/ counter/ walls. Storage for your fermentor(s) are should have moderate temperature. A prep area should have cleanability similar to a kitchen since juice and fruit will get in places where you don't want it.
* In college, a micro lab would have cleanable counter tops (4 or 5 lab benches) and all the contamination that 20 kids could carry into the lab. The essence of sanitation was to carry things from the autoclave where they are sterile to a work area and only open petri plates/ agar/ innoculation tools when actually in use and then cover the plates/ agar/ test organism again after use. Many things were kept sterile because dirt falls downward.
(ie in a home environment clean pails/ carboys/ bottles and turn em up side down till needed, , , & clean mixers, hygrometers, cylinders etc when used) The point is ability to clean, one club member does his wet prep in a milk house connected to a cow barn and he gets blue ribbons.