Do bottles need rinsing after I pour the sterilising solution away?
I store my bottles full of sterilising solution, ideally I'd like to; open the bottle, pour away the sterilising solution, fill the bottle with beer, drop in two sugar lumps, put the lid back on.
Does anybody else do this?
It does seem a bit strange to sterilise the bottle then rinse it with dirty tap water, and my brewing shed is a fair disance away from the house too. Skipping the rinse would be an appreciated step to stop doing.
Thanks all.
Rinsing sterilised bottles?
Re: Rinsing sterilised bottles?
You can only dispense with the rinse if you're using a no-rinse steriliser (and at the specified 'no rinse' concentration). Many sterilisers are chlorine based, and these must be rinsed off.
I rinse everything with tap water and have never had an infection problem - the chlorine in tap water reduces bugs to acceptable levels for our purposes.
I rinse everything with tap water and have never had an infection problem - the chlorine in tap water reduces bugs to acceptable levels for our purposes.
Re: Rinsing sterilised bottles?
Cheers Jim,
I suppose moving round crates of full bottles will need rewarding with a nice drink afterwards
Thanks again.
I suppose moving round crates of full bottles will need rewarding with a nice drink afterwards

Thanks again.
Re: Rinsing sterilised bottles?
The answers to your question really depend on what you are using for a "sterilising solution".
In addition most 'sanitizing products' are only effective for a short period of time and will be signification less effective if stored in bottles for a long period (even chlorine/bleach does not keep things sanitized for indefinite periods).
IMHO after washing (and sanitizing if you wish) bottles/FV etc should be stored dry, since it's easier to lift/manage and being dry helps provide a level cleanliness and sanitation that being full of liquid does not.
Then when you are ready to use the bottles/equipment, rinse them with a no-rinse sanitizer and they are ready to use without much additional fuss.
In addition most 'sanitizing products' are only effective for a short period of time and will be signification less effective if stored in bottles for a long period (even chlorine/bleach does not keep things sanitized for indefinite periods).
IMHO after washing (and sanitizing if you wish) bottles/FV etc should be stored dry, since it's easier to lift/manage and being dry helps provide a level cleanliness and sanitation that being full of liquid does not.
Then when you are ready to use the bottles/equipment, rinse them with a no-rinse sanitizer and they are ready to use without much additional fuss.
Re: Rinsing sterilised bottles?
+1. I have always used light bleach in washed bottles to store them lightly capped. Then pour out and a light rinse is fine. Maybe 50-100ml tap water per bottleJim wrote:You can only dispense with the rinse if you're using a no-rinse steriliser (and at the specified 'no rinse' concentration). Many sterilisers are chlorine based, and these must be rinsed off.
I rinse everything with tap water and have never had an infection problem - the chlorine in tap water reduces bugs to acceptable levels for our purposes.
Re: Rinsing sterilised bottles?
I use chemipro oxi no rinse - haven't rinsed a bottle for about 12 months, superb stuff. i fill them in a very highly diluted mix after the bottles have been used - just to remove the sediment from the bottom and give them a light wash, then store them dry, and dilute mix to the full concentration when i'm bottling a batch, fill bottles, leave for 5 mins empty them with a good slosh round and get on with it. Haven't had a problem yet.
Re: Rinsing sterilised bottles?
I sterilise mine before storing then rinse them out with starsan before bottling.
Not had an infection so far.
Not had an infection so far.
Sabro Single Hop NEIPA 25/02/20 CLICK ME to monitor progress with Brewfather & iSpindel
Re: Rinsing sterilised bottles?
i always rinse mine in a bucket of preboiled water after i sterilise them