Summary: How to prepare the bottles for your home brewed blonde beer; learn more about making your own beer in this free instructional video.
Mark Emiley has been homebrewing since 1998 when he cooked up his first batch of porter. With about 140 extract and all-grain batches under his belt, his beers have won numerous...read more
"Hi, I'm Mark on behalf of Expert Village. In this next segment we are going to talk about how we get our bottles ready to use for bottling. Alright, so we have kind of finished off our primary fermentation; you don't have anymore bubbles coming out of your airlock. Your beer is becoming nice and clear if you have it in a nice glass carboy; you have a nice sediment of yeast down at the bottom and now you are getting ready to decide that it is about time for bottling. So, before we start bottling, we want to make sure that we have enough clean bottles. For a five gallon batch, you are going to need about sixty twelve-ounce bottles or forty sixteen-ounce bottles. Now if you have bought your beer bottles from the store, you are really not going to need to worry about doing a very intense cleaning. However, if your friend comes over and he gives you a nice bottle of beer that he had around saying that "I know that you can use this for home brewing." You are going to need to take some more than basic cleaning operations. The first thing you are going to want to do is a rinse of the bottle, just from your own sink. Shake it up and pour it out and that will get most of the beer residue out. If they gave you a bottle that has been aging for a while, kind of with a little beer at the bottom, you might want to check the bottom and see if there is a whole bunch of gunk down there. If there is, you might be better cleaning it out or throwing it away. If you bought a bottle washer, you can attach this to your sink and use this to forcefully jet out your bottles which will help with the cleaning process and also with some rinsing processes if you need to do that. Now that you have rinsed out your bottle, you are going to want to put it into some sort of a cleaning solution. I recommend either using the chlorine that we talked about earlier or using the Straight A. This will break up the gum around the label, and help you get that out earlier and also help break up any deposits within the bottle. After you have been soaking your beer bottles for a little while those labels will, in general, come off pretty easily. Sometimes you may need to use a more aggressive pad to clean them off. But overall, just work on it and you'll get them clean pretty quickly. After soaking them in the cleaner, you are going to want to rinse them out either using your bottle washer or just your sink. Now that you have got your clean bottles, you are going to want to soak them in the sanitizing solution to be used on your bottling day. You are going to want to use either Iodophor or chlorine at that nice concentration however, you are going to have to rinse it or One Step or the Five Star Star Sand."
eHow Article: Preparing Home Brew Beer Bottles