Johnnyjohn
01-31-2014, 10:57 AM
Hey all, perhaps you can help me out with this dilemma.
We are new to bottling maple syrup and have been having some issues with mold development on our bottles - we bottle in clear glass bottles 375 ml and 750 ml formats using a synthetic bar top cork.
First, we test our syrup for brix, and it is always above 66.6. Next, we heat our syrup in the boiler pan, run it through the a warm press and then into a 32 gallon closed top bottle filler at 200 F. All of our bottles and corks are new, shipped directly from the factory. We preheat our bottles in a water bath and bottle each one by one. We do routine spot checks with a thermometer to ensure that the syrup is always over 185 F after it has entered the bottle. Directly after filling we cap the bottle and turn it upside down for at least 1 minute to sterilize the headspace and the closure. Once they have cooled, we put them in boxes and store them in our house which maintains an ambient temperature of about 68 F. <
We have had problems with mold developing on the surface of some bottles and are trying to figure out why. Whenever we remove a cork from the bottle, there is clearly a vacuum tight seal as the removal of the cork is met with some resistance (the cork actually gets sucked back in if not removed fully) and makes a distinct pop sound when it comes out.
Could the problem be due to condensation forming inside the bottle and creating a layer of diluted syrup on the surface? Is there an ideal temperature and humidity level at which to conduct bottling? Same for storage?
Any information would help.
Thanks
We are new to bottling maple syrup and have been having some issues with mold development on our bottles - we bottle in clear glass bottles 375 ml and 750 ml formats using a synthetic bar top cork.
First, we test our syrup for brix, and it is always above 66.6. Next, we heat our syrup in the boiler pan, run it through the a warm press and then into a 32 gallon closed top bottle filler at 200 F. All of our bottles and corks are new, shipped directly from the factory. We preheat our bottles in a water bath and bottle each one by one. We do routine spot checks with a thermometer to ensure that the syrup is always over 185 F after it has entered the bottle. Directly after filling we cap the bottle and turn it upside down for at least 1 minute to sterilize the headspace and the closure. Once they have cooled, we put them in boxes and store them in our house which maintains an ambient temperature of about 68 F. <
We have had problems with mold developing on the surface of some bottles and are trying to figure out why. Whenever we remove a cork from the bottle, there is clearly a vacuum tight seal as the removal of the cork is met with some resistance (the cork actually gets sucked back in if not removed fully) and makes a distinct pop sound when it comes out.
Could the problem be due to condensation forming inside the bottle and creating a layer of diluted syrup on the surface? Is there an ideal temperature and humidity level at which to conduct bottling? Same for storage?
Any information would help.
Thanks