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Thread: bottle cleaning
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15th July 2017, 10:17 AM #1Senior Member
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bottle cleaning
My young bloke wants to start brewing beer, he was given a heap of old bottles, some had been at the bottom of a "Res" for years, full of mud etc.
I soaked them for a week started rinsing then attacking with a bottle brush (just water) and cordless drill, then mild Detergent - which is good because it gives a white back ground to spot any stains.
But some bottle have a deep stain like a water mark, does anyone have a secret method of removing the said stains.
I thought diluted bleach, which i used to use to sterilse (20ml to a litre of clean water) my bottles when I brewed, I sold all of my gear 11 years ago, wish I had kept the 500 bottles though, all crown seals.
Stevo
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15th July 2017, 10:20 AM #2SENIOR MEMBER
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Bleach works,let them soak
Finish off with a sterile wash,same as you used on your wine bottlesLast edited by nrb; 15th July 2017 at 10:22 AM. Reason: More
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31st July 2017, 10:05 AM #3Senior Member
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cheers nrb, we bottled a wheat beer (tin) with SAAZ hops last week so i'm looking forward to trying that, very refreshing - i hope
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12th September 2017, 08:19 PM #4
What you need is caustic soda, this is what is used in industry. Buy the caustic soda at Coles mix into water pour solution into bottles and leave for a week this will break down the bonds of organic matter. Then use a stiff brush to clean the bottles, rinse with water.
Then sterilise with Phosphoric acid buy at brew shops.
You do not want to use household detergents to clean brewing equipment - they contain anti foaming compounds that kill the head of your beer.
Also bleach can give you off flavours in your beer and should not be used either.
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12th September 2017, 08:44 PM #5Member
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Unscented Napisan or other cleaner which contains sodium percarbonate is a go to cleaner for brewing equipment.
Works better with hot water. Let it soak a day or so and rinse.
Google it on a brewing forum like AHB, for full info.
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12th September 2017, 10:30 PM #6
Stevo,
there is a thing where glass pick up "iridescence", like an opal colouring. Its a change in the nature of the glass itself (oxidation or etching, I cant remember) and cant be removed except by removing the surface glass. If that is what you have found, no normal cleaning will get rid of it. I dont know if it will have any effect on the beer itself, but it will look bad. Bottle collectors could tell you more.
Regards
SWK
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20th September 2017, 10:03 AM #7Senior Member
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Hello, thanks everyone for the above info, we don't seem to be able to get into the old bottles, as the new brews are disappearing after 3 to 4 weeks, but we did use bleach on some bottles then brewed a Morgans wheat beer, it made my guts curdle, nice colour, good head (beer talk, not filthy talk, well sometimes), will leave that one for a while, its a month old, good summer beer.
Love the Muntons range, especially the bitters at cellar temp about 13c.
Cheers
Stevo
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31st October 2017, 05:47 PM #8SENIOR MEMBER
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I wish they made a keg with a large diameter screw top, I'm over cleaning bottles. I've still got last years brew in their fermenters, think I'll give it to the snails eating my lettuces.
Cheers & beers.
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6th November 2017, 08:43 AM #9Senior Member
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Huon, a mate has Kegs but he went back to bottles for a while but now does both, I couldn't taste that much difference but he has been doing it for years.
Another mate found some of his dads old beers in the shed, 10+ years old, tired a couple, NOT very smooth - sour would be a better word.
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