Sanitizing..,

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gsf77

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I've watched a couple of videos the last couple of days on wine making. I noticed a couple of experienced hands when they sanitized with Star San they didn't bother to rinse the star san residue out. As a matter of fact I know I saw star san foam on the bucket wall a couple of times before the racking took place. This wasn't the primary fermentation either. Another person had some star san in a spray bottle. After cleaning he would spray it on his utensils and give them a shake or two to get it off. I can kind of see that but the foam has me puzzled.

Is this a normal practice, wouldn't this produce an off flavor? Is star san neutral when it comes to taste?
 
I've watched a couple of videos the last couple of days on wine making. I noticed a couple of experienced hands when they sanitized with Star San they didn't bother to rinse the star san residue out. As a matter of fact I know I saw star san foam on the bucket wall a couple of times before the racking took place. This wasn't the primary fermentation either. Another person had some star san in a spray bottle. After cleaning he would spray it on his utensils and give them a shake or two to get it off. I can kind of see that but the foam has me puzzled.

Is this a normal practice, wouldn't this produce an off flavor? Is star san neutral when it comes to taste?

It's supposed to be perfectly safe and have no effect upon your wine or its taste to leave your equipment as it is after using the product.
 
It's doubtful a tiny amount of Star San in a hydromoter cylinder would affect gravity readings at all. I never rinse it. The risk of introducing something nasty into the cylinder is far worse than the risk of a slightly adjusted gravity reading.

As the old saying goes, "don't fear the foam."
 
I inadvertently left my Buon Vino Mini Jet Filter tubing in StarSan for a week about six months ago. When I got the tubing out, it was tacky and cloudy. No matter how many times I rinsed, whether hot or cold water, the tackiness and the cloudiness remained. I ultimately replaced all the tubing with new and threw the tacky tubing away.
 
Here's what you need to do. Taste the sanitizing solution. If it has a taste, rinse it off.
 
Star San definitely has a taste when properly mixed. It's very acidic. You're better off not rinsing it off, regardless. It's specifically formulated to be no rinse.

It does not leave any flavors when used as directed. The spray bottle approach is the best. Easy and cost efficient.
 
I have been wondering about the StarSan residual as well... I have been spraying my stirring spoon each time (2x a week) I stir my wine as it goes through a long MLF. The MLF stalled and I recently reinoculated it, but was wondering if the residual sanitizer was working against the MLF bacteria.
And a lot seems to get trapped in the wine thief if I don’t rinse it and must affect the taste somewhat in a small sample.
Thanks for any insight here.
 
If you feel you HAVE to rinse at least use fresh bottled water or distilled water - otherwise you might as well just rinse things in tap water after using them. There is a point of diminishing returns on sanitizing actions. Failure to clean work surfaces, even the air in the room etc are all sources of bacteria and 'infections' POTENTIALLY. The amount of Star San in a properly sanitized wine thief (With that little valve end) is going to be minimal if you drain it properly and slow down a bit.
Again - rushing though the steps only leads to regrets later about things you forgot to do or got out of order etc.

IF You have to do things so quickly invest in a second or third wine thief or whatever small 'tools' aren't draining fast enough for you. Compared to the cost of a 'ruined' (???) batch of wine those things are small change. IF - that residual amount of Star-san is going to throw off you measurements or the taste of something that much.
 
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There's nothing spooky about Star San. Read the label; it's basically phosphoric acid and not much else. Wines and beers that have any buffering capacity (i.e., all of them) are not going to see any pH changes due to a half teaspoon of mixed product in 5-6 gallons. The thousands of hobbyists and many professionals that use this as a no rinse solution are a testament to that.
 
I’ve used StarSan with my first two fermentations and so far no issues. I don’t rinse it out, but I do try to minimize the shaking in order to keep the foam to a minimum. I have some solution in a gallon jug and spray bottle. It will last about 6 months. The spray bottle is very helpful especially when you’re only sanitizing a spoon or hydrometer. Of course everything must be throughly cleaned using a cleaner like B-Brite. You DO want to rinse after using B-Brite as it is very slippery. I’m careful especially when cleaning a carboy, hydrometer or glass car thief. Always dry your carboy throughly with a paper towel before lifting.
 
Hmm... I had read that once mixed/diluted it was only good for a week or two. Which never really made sense to me.

Distilled water will lat much longer than tap water when used to mix. As long as the pH is under 3, you're good to go in using it. If you have the ability to test, great, then you keep it until it gets too alkaline. If not, then you should err on the side of caution and discard it (or add more concentrate) to the mix after a while.
 
Distilled water will lat much longer than tap water when used to mix.
A little inconvenient, but not insurmountable. I don't have town water... I have a well that goes through a LOT of resin filtration. I've been told by water aficionados that it's the best water they've ever had.

I've actually never bothered testing the pH of my resulting well water

As long as the pH is under 3, you're good to go in using it. If you have the ability to test, great, then you keep it until it gets too alkaline.
I do have the ability to test, rather accurately I believe. What would be target/"too much" pH?
 
I do have the ability to test, rather accurately I believe. What would be target/"too much" pH?

I'm not sure I understand what "too much pH" is. Basically, I'd recommend mixing Star San according to the instructions on the package. More is not necessarily better. The only real test you need to conduct is to test the pH if you're concerned about its potency. Under 3 and you're good. Over 3 and it's not going to work effectively enough.
 
What would be target/"too much" pH?
The issue is dissolved mineral in the water which will neutralize an acid, not pH.
For the Midwest this typically means limestone/ calcium carbonate. A quick test, does the spouse complain that soap doesn’t foam/ slip enough? Yes you probably have a lot of hardness in the water. The lab test is to titrate the alkaline hardness. In the scheme of things I ignore hardness in wine formulation, it is mostly an issue in cleaning the mineral residue on faucets.
City water typically adds chemicals as chlorine, fluoride and possibly phosphate to complex lead in old pipes.
 
No perceptible smell or taste in the dosages needed to sanitize.

I once had a line of carboys and put a large pour of Starsan in a carboy, gave it the shake and swirl and then dumped it into a funnel into the next carboy down the line. I forgot to dump the last carboy, which had to have an inch of Starsan in it and filled it with my precious Cab Franc.

I was mad at myself and just kept it in the carboy and put it away. I revisited it 6 months later and tasted that carboy vs. the others and you couldn’t taste any difference.
 
No perceptible smell or taste in the dosages needed to sanitize.

I once had a line of carboys and put a large pour of Starsan in a carboy, gave it the shake and swirl and then dumped it into a funnel into the next carboy down the line. I forgot to dump the last carboy, which had to have an inch of Starsan in it and filled it with my precious Cab Franc.

I was mad at myself and just kept it in the carboy and put it away. I revisited it 6 months later and tasted that carboy vs. the others and you couldn’t taste any difference.

Thanks for sharing that. That'll ease a lot of us new folks' mind.
 
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