Guest guest Posted December 16, 2005 Report Share Posted December 16, 2005 Interesting idea. Doctors wash their hands with a surfactant (soapy water) to remove bacteria; the same thing ought to work on sprout seeds. Soap or Basic H shouldn't harm the seeds, but you'd have to do a very good cleaning to remove _all_ the bacteria. I didn't use bleach on the sprouts, just in the first part of the seed soak. ===================== From: davidwhittaker <davidwhittaker@...> Date: Fri Dec 16 10:28:17 CST 2005 Subject: RE: Re: seed sterilisation I use a product from Shaklee called Basic H, it is a biofriendly surfactant/detergent that is PH friendly, zero phosphates that we use for cleansing, we have a dispenser at all our sinks in the house, it is safe to use as Tooth Paste, I use it in our water softener to make the water softener work more efficient. we still have a Culligan 5 step purification filter system for our drinking water. We also use Basic L for laundry, we have very little lint accumulation in the dryer screen (less than 10% of using regular detergent) as a result of using this product for laundry washing, hence I believe that Basic H is less abrasive to the clothing than a phosphate based detergent would be, and our clothes seem to last and look better longer as a result. So just to let your know, if our sprouts get looking like they are deteriorating, or get a bad smell due to bacteria built up, we soak and rinse the sprouts in water with a couple squirts of Basic H and we can extend the longevity of the sprouts for another few days. I believe that this would be less harmful to the sprouts than a chlorine rinse would be, though I do not know how bad Chlorine would be for the sprouts. Hope this helps. Thank you. Dave From Ontario Re: Re: seed sterilisation Is chlorine bleach really that bad? It would contaminate the hull of the seed which you don't eat anyway. I've sprouted some seriously contaminated sunflower seeds (which I got from a local candy store); the first batch stank from bacteria and yeast so I used lots of bleach on the 2nd and it was OK. The sprouts didn't seem to mind. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 19, 2005 Report Share Posted December 19, 2005 soap can leave a chemical residue. And also there is negative info on using antibacterial soaps. Search it out. I still think peroxide is best. 003marklanders@... wrote: Interesting idea. Doctors wash their hands with a surfactant (soapy water) to remove bacteria; the same thing ought to work on sprout seeds. Soap or Basic H shouldn't harm the seeds, but you'd have to do a very good cleaning to remove _all_ the bacteria. I didn't use bleach on the sprouts, just in the first part of the seed soak. ===================== From: davidwhittaker <davidwhittaker@...> Date: Fri Dec 16 10:28:17 CST 2005 Subject: RE: Re: seed sterilisation I use a product from Shaklee called Basic H, it is a biofriendly surfactant/detergent that is PH friendly, zero phosphates that we use for cleansing, we have a dispenser at all our sinks in the house, it is safe to use as Tooth Paste, I use it in our water softener to make the water softener work more efficient. we still have a Culligan 5 step purification filter system for our drinking water. We also use Basic L for laundry, we have very little lint accumulation in the dryer screen (less than 10% of using regular detergent) as a result of using this product for laundry washing, hence I believe that Basic H is less abrasive to the clothing than a phosphate based detergent would be, and our clothes seem to last and look better longer as a result. So just to let your know, if our sprouts get looking like they are deteriorating, or get a bad smell due to bacteria built up, we soak and rinse the sprouts in water with a couple squirts of Basic H and we can extend the longevity of the sprouts for another few days. I believe that this would be less harmful to the sprouts than a chlorine rinse would be, though I do not know how bad Chlorine would be for the sprouts. Hope this helps. Thank you. Dave From Ontario Re: Re: seed sterilisation Is chlorine bleach really that bad? It would contaminate the hull of the seed which you don't eat anyway. I've sprouted some seriously contaminated sunflower seeds (which I got from a local candy store); the first batch stank from bacteria and yeast so I used lots of bleach on the 2nd and it was OK. The sprouts didn't seem to mind. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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