Sterilizing ACT equipment

Posted by cynthia69 @cynthia69, Jan 31 8:00pm

Do I wash equipment in hot tap water with dawn soap or do I have to use distilled water or boiled water for all of the steps?

Do I rinse with distilled water or boiled water?

Do I boil in tap water or do I have to use distilled water?

I rinse in distilled water and air dry?

I am trying to get one set of instructions that I can follow.

Thanks Cynthia 69

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@alleycatkate

@equanimous Arlo....What a great suggestion! Thank you. I just ordered the bags. Can't wait to stop the endless boiling of equipment.
Kate

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Agree with you about the boiling! It's messy, the equipment just bobs around in the water and never stays fully immersed. I only do it as a back up method and like Scoop, I use the baby bottle sterilizer.

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@sueinmn

Yikes, Scoop - that's way more than I ever wanted to know. I don't think the question was about beer, though, it was about the sanitizer solution used on beer bottles and brewing equipment to keep from infesting it with "foreign" bacteria in the brewing process, and whether it would be adequate for sterilizing or PEP and nebulizer devices.
Sue

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LOL . That was my reaction. But Scoop is a great researcher!

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@scoop

@rbl Inquiring minds wanted to know more about beer & mycobacteria! I found this blog, sounds good to me.

For your husband:

What makes beer antibacterial?
Ignoring its chemistry, the main antibacterial aspect of beer is its preparation – long boils kill pretty much any pathogen, leaving behind only a few viable spores. These spores typically do not survive fermentation, meaning that brewing a beer can clean up nearly any water source.

Chemically, beer is not antibacterial due to any one compound, but rather due to a combination of things. Alcohol, for example, can inhibit a number of pathogens, but other pathogens do just fine in the presence of alcohol. As an extreme example, the pathogen Mycobacterium nonchromogenicum can survive over 75% ethanol. So while ethanol kills some pathogens, others are pretty much oblivious to its presence. Sadly, with the broad availability (and massive mis-use) of alcohol-based hand sanitizers, ethanol-resistant pathogens are becoming ever more prevalent.

Hop compounds also inhibit some bacteria – specifically, members of the gram positive group of bacteria. But this lethality is not universal among the gram-positives (e.g. hop-resistant lacto strains are still gram-positive), and of course these compounds don’t do squat for gram-negative and other non-gram positive pathogens.

Finally, there is the acidity of the wort. Most beers finish below pH 4.5, which is the threshold for antibacterial acidity. But many pathogens have no issue with low pH’s – indeed, any pathogen that enters via our guts must be able to survive several hours in our stomach, which has a pH around 2; or nearly 100X more acidic than your average beer.

Overall, none of these chemical characteristics are sufficient to keep beer pathogen-free – most pathogens will survive fine if exposed to just one of the above antibacterial compounds; but the combination of the three is lethal to most bacteria.

from https://suigenerisbrewing.com/index.php/2014/02/18/fact-or-fiction-can-pathogens-survive-in-beer/

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Thank you, Scoop. It's obvious that we all ought to be drinking more beer!

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