Guest guest Posted December 31, 2005 Report Share Posted December 31, 2005 Hi! Was wondering if you have to sterlize bottles (the bottles they are stored in after fermenting) with each batch? Also, any ideas on what you do to label the bottles? Thanks, --------------------------------------------------------------------~-> Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 31, 2005 Report Share Posted December 31, 2005 > Hi! Was wondering if you have to sterlize bottles (the bottles they are >stored in after fermenting) with each batch? Also, any ideas on what you do >to label the bottles? Thanks, I don't sterilize. I rinse the bottles with hot water when I'm through with each, let dry, and store until needed. I don't use soap since the culture does NOT like soap, and it's not needed. We don't drink out of the bottles so we don't have to worry about mouth contact needing soap. When I label the bottles I use a short piece of masking tape with one edge folded over some so it forms a tab for easy removal. I write on either the tape or directly on the bottle with something called a china marker, which is a waxy large-pencil crayon sort of thing, made for marking on china and other slick surfaces-- it has a thick " lead " and you sharpen it by peeling the paper away from the tip. It has no smell at all and is relatively nontoxic, and comes in several colors including white for marking on dark bottles. Surface must be dry for it to work. I don't usually label the bottles themselves, but I do label the place on the shelf they are sitting on so that I know which batch they are. I label my brewing vessels the same way. --V ~~~ There is no way to peace; peace is the way ~~~~ --A.J. Muste Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 1, 2006 Report Share Posted January 1, 2006 Thanks, . It's nice you have a place to store them on shelves. Is it a cool place? I do have a pump house, but the temperature gets about 75 to 80 degrees in the summertime. Do you think that is too warm? Also, where do you get the china marker? Thanks for all your help & tips! -- Re: Sterlization of Bottles & Labeling? > Hi! Was wondering if you have to sterlize bottles (the bottles they are >stored in after fermenting) with each batch? Also, any ideas on what you do >to label the bottles? Thanks, I don't sterilize. I rinse the bottles with hot water when I'm through with each, let dry, and store until needed. I don't use soap since the culture does NOT like soap, and it's not needed. We don't drink out of the bottles so we don't have to worry about mouth contact needing soap. When I label the bottles I use a short piece of masking tape with one edge folded over some so it forms a tab for easy removal. I write on either the tape or directly on the bottle with something called a china marker, which is a waxy large-pencil crayon sort of thing, made for marking on china and other slick surfaces-- it has a thick " lead " and you sharpen it by peeling the paper away from the tip. It has no smell at all and is relatively nontoxic, and comes in several colors including white for marking on dark bottles. Surface must be dry for it to work. I don't usually label the bottles themselves, but I do label the place on the shelf they are sitting on so that I know which batch they are. I label my brewing vessels the same way. --V ~~~ There is no way to peace; peace is the way ~~~~ --A.J. Muste Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 1, 2006 Report Share Posted January 1, 2006 >Thanks, . It's nice you have a place to store them on shelves. Is >it a cool place? I do have a pump house, but the temperature gets about 75 >to 80 degrees in the summertime. Do you think that is too warm? Also, >where do you get the china marker? Thanks for all your help & tips! China markers are sold in office supply and stationery stores. In the summer I put the bottles in a different place, a pantry which stays cooler than the rest of the house, probably in the 60s. I think that 75 to 80 degrees is high and activity in your bottles will continue rapidly, which could lead to bottles bursting. The reason I put bottles on the shelf is because we live off the grid and our refrigerator is a very small propane-powered one. People who have large refrigerators might want to work out putting their bottles in there. I have to work to make sure that the amount I'm making is equal to the amount we're drinking, and drinking our bottled stuff before it could explode. I probably have to pay more attention to that aspect than people do who can refrigerate. People who live in hotter climates and don't have refrigeration probably have to figure out ways of managing their KT production differently again. --V ~~~ There is no way to peace; peace is the way ~~~~ --A.J. Muste Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 3, 2006 Report Share Posted January 3, 2006 i use grolsch bottles and label them on the lid using a cd pen, when i've drunk the KT, i clean the number off ,and refill and relabel...and so on and on and on....) GW wrote: Hi! Was wondering if you have to sterlize bottles (the bottles they are stored in after fermenting) with each batch? Also, any ideas on what you do to label the bottles? Thanks, --------------------------------------------------------------------~-> Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.