technobabble66 said:The OP is more concerned about sanitation I think rather than hot break etc.
I'd say it's a 50:50 call As KB said, it's already been boiled so it basically should be sanitized already. And it's as hygroscopic as crazy, so it needs to be handled carefully by the manufacturer anyway. However there's always a tiny chance something maybe gotten into/onto it during handling (namely at your end or the repackaging retailer, rather than the manufacturer). It'd ~ be a very small chance, though.
So you should generally be fine just chucking it into the FV and pouring boiling water onto it to dissolve.
But if you wanted to be extra careful, a quick 5-10mim boil would ensure even less chance of bugs getting in.
So basically, if you've got the time and inclination, a quick boil is best practice. But if you don't, just chucking it in is probably a small corner to cut.
Sounds like technobabble to me...technobabble66 said:You only need 1 bug to get in [emoji6]
If it was a larger chance I'd be saying definitely boil.
It's only a small corner (both in risk and effort), so 50:50 [emoji41]
What he said. I consider that the safest way to do it. If you want to take a more risky approach, go for it, but if a batch comes out funky tasting, you may decide to do a more thorough sanitary process next time.technobabble66 said:The OP is more concerned about sanitation I think rather than hot break etc.
I'd say it's a 50:50 call. As KB said, it's already been boiled so it basically should be sanitized already. And it's as hygroscopic as crazy, so it needs to be handled carefully by the manufacturer anyway. However there's always a tiny chance something maybe gotten into/onto it during handling (namely at your end or the repackaging retailer, rather than the manufacturer). It'd ~ be a very small chance, though.
So you should generally be fine just chucking it into the FV and pouring boiling water onto it to dissolve.
But if you wanted to be extra careful, a quick 5-10mim boil would ensure even less chance of bugs getting in.
So basically, if you've got the time and inclination, a quick boil is best practice. But if you don't, just chucking it in is probably a small corner to cut.
Enter your email address to join: